Thanks for your post. BTTT...
The way I've been putting it for a while now is that for Jobs/Apple the technology is not the product, the product is the product and the technology is just a means of getting there.
If you go to any of Apple's competitors and ask them why you should buy their product instead of Apple's, 99 times out of 100, the first they're going to hit you with are technical specifications. And while specifications do matter, they are only a small part in the end -- it what the device/system does with those specifications and, more importantly, what the user can do with the device/system that really matters.
As an analogy to your comments regarding marketing, a favorite expression of mine for many years is: "style without substance is worthless, but substance without style is often overlooked".
Steve Jobs was a visionary. He lived a life that many of us would dream of, be wealthy, work a kind of job you would really love and so on, basically “gained the world”.
But yet, one thing in the end that counts, what did he do with Jesus Christ and with his decision, where is he now spending eternity ?
Here's another great (although somewhat shorter) tribute from Kevin Williamson at National Review Online:
Great post. I, too, have been there since the Apple IIC up to the MacBook Pro, iPod Touch, iPad 2 and iPhone 4.
People marvel that I can produce movies, slideshows, DVD’s, presentations, and even create a website with no technical training whatsoever. I just fearlessly and persistently pushed buttons until I ended up with what I wanted.
Not that it was a piece of cake, but I could never have done those types of things without OS X unless I had taken a programming course.
Apple’s WYSIWYG approach has made it possible for a novice like me with just some ideas and courage to dive in and create wonderful things.
May Jobs rest in peace.
When I left that company I was forced to go over to the dark side and PC's. It was actually a good time to learn the Microsoft world, as some years did lag in the Apple universe. So for a decade I got into new and different software and got up to speed with MS Office, etc. Oh, and I learned how to defrag and update anti-virus software and the other list of computer drudgery.
Then in 2007 I returned to Mac in a big way, with a new MacBook Pro, large LCD screen, and an iPod Touch. Now iPhones that keep my family in touch and informed!
It has been a wonderful return to the best tech devices created for the common folk and all thanks to the man who passed on yesterday. May Steve Jobs RIP. I will pray for his salvation and hope he found Christ before he died. He did a lot of good for many, including me, and also taught me how to listen to, and appreciate, music again.
Thanks again for your post and experiences. Also gratitude to Swordmaker for regularly keeping us up to date on the latest news re: Macs here on Free Republic and his diligence in "the positive."
Just another greedy evil rich person who made us all richer and more prosperous whether we ever used an Apple product or not. Created more jobs directly and indirectly than all politicians combined.
Excellent vanity. Thanks.
You brought back some memories -- nice and not so -- of my travels with technology.
A couple hours a day wasted on computer crashes. Imagine that.
R.I.P. Steve Jobs.
Bump
Best Vanity Ever.
This should be published. I honestly kept thinking: “I must have read the author wrong, because this can’t possibly be a vanity. It must be from Wired, or WSJ, or NYT Magazine, or The New Yorker.”
But I couldn’t pull myself away from it to double check until I finished reading every word.
My journey was similar to yours and the time frame was the same. I started with a machine, The Classic, I think, with the 20 MB external drive running OS 6. I well remember the extensions managing bit and the transition for OS 8 to OS 9 to OS X. I also remember Hypercard which was so simple it made programmers of us all. What ever happened to that?
It is easy to forget that the Mac was the easiest to use word processor at the time and that MacPaint was revolutionary. Wang was a very successful company selling a machine that was strictly a word processor. Apple put them put of business. Word processing had a bigger impact on the success of Apple than most people realize. That and not having to be a semi programmer/computer guru were the keys. Yes, DOS required some programming skills and many didn’t care to learn it.
Thank you for such a wonderful post.
We will all miss him......
Yours was a well done post. While I don’t own any Apple products beyond an iPad I bought for my wife, (who doesn’t let me use it - grin), there is no doubt in my mind that Steve Jobs made a tremendous mark on technology. His vision and eye for design will be missed in this world. As someone else upthread mentioned, we’re all richer for his success even if we haven’t personally been customers of his.
Thank you for sharing your Apple journey. This is probably one of the best vanity posts I have ever seen on FR....a great way to honor a man that was on the cutting edge of technology.....
Well done. Thanks for posting.
RIP Steve Jobs.
I discovered the iPod in much the same way you discovered the Macintosh. A co-worker of mine, who had recently bought a newer iPod, let me borrow his original iPod for a trip I was going on. Even though I had to listen to his music (that version iPod would only work on a Mac), it only took me about 30 seconds to realize I must own one for myself.
Fortunately the newer iPods were PC-compatible and I can still remember taking home my first iPod - a 40GB model that had no problem sucking the thousands of digital music files I already had on my PC into it. I was hooked from day one and as with yourself, I started re-discovering music in my collection that I had long forgotten about.
I should comment also on the way that Apple packages their products. My first iPod was so carefully packaged that I immediately became obsessed with cleaning it of all fingerprints so that it would always have the same pristine appearance of when it first came out of the box. The packaging for Apple products is so perfect that I was never able to throw it away. In the back of my closet are still the original boxes that all my iPods, iPhones and MacBook Pro came in.
This is a contrast to how most electronics products are packaged - in that horrendous hard plastic packaging that require knife and scissors to open (with potential injury to both yourself and product).
So over the course of the past 7 years, I have gradually replaced all my PC-based products with Apple products and have become convinced of the superiority of the OSX operating system over Windows and iOS over Windows Mobile (which is a joke, by the way).
With respect to Steve Jobs, it is sad to see him pass on. He has been very ill for a number of years now and it just goes to show that wealthy and successful people know what they are talking about when they say they will happily trade in all their millions for good health.
I've read some biographies on Steve Jobs over the past few years and in general was never that impressed with him as a person. However, as a businessman, a perfectionist and a visionary, he had no peer. It is a rare thing for all those traits to come together in one person and for those who worked at Apple since the early days, it must have been one hell of a ride.
Well done. Extremely, WELL DONE!