




已阅读5页,还剩8页未读, 继续免费阅读
版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领
文档简介
。Steve Jobs, 19552011: Mourning Technologys Great Reinventor Steve Jobs, whose death was announced Wednesday night, Oct. 5, 2011, wasnt a computer scientist. He had no training as a hardware engineer or industrial designer. The businesses Apple entered under his leadership from personal computers to MP3 players to smart phones all existed before the company got there. But with astonishing regularity, Jobs did something that few people accomplish even once: he reinvented entire industries. He did it with ones that were new, like PCs, and he did it with ones that were old, like music. And his pace only accelerated over the years. He was the most celebrated, successful business executive of his generation, yet he flouted many basic tenets of business wisdom. (Like his hero and soul mate, Polaroid founder Edwin Land, he refused to conduct focus groups or other research that might tell him what his customers wanted.) In his many public appearances as the head of a large public corporation, he rarely sounded like one. He introduced the first Macintosh by quoting Bob Dylan, and he took to saying that Apple sat at the intersection of the liberal arts and technology. Jobs confidence in the wisdom of his instincts came to be immense, as did the hype he created at Apple product launches. That might have been unbearable if it werent the case that his intuition was nearly flawless and the products often lived up to his lofty claims. St. Louis Cardinals pitching great Dizzy Dean could have been talking about Jobs rather than himself when he said, It aint bragging if you can back it up. Jobs eventual triumph was so absolute in 2011, Apples market capitalization passed that of Exxon Mobil, making it the planets most valuable company that its easy to forget how checkered his reputation once was. Over the first quarter-century of his career, he was associated with as many failed products as hits. Having been forced out of Apple in 1985, he was associated with failure, period. Even some of his admirers thought of him as the dreamer whod lost the war for personal-computer dominance to Microsofts indomitable Bill Gates. Until the iPod era, it seemed entirely possible that Jobs most lasting legacy might be the blockbuster animated features produced by Pixar, the company he founded after acquiring George Lucas computer-graphics lab in 1986. Instead, Pixar turned out to be, in Jobs famous phrase, just one more thing. Born in 1955 in San Francisco to an unmarried graduate student and adopted at birth by Paul and Clara Jobs, Steven Paul Jobs grew up in Silicon Valley just as it was becoming Silicon Valley. It proved to be a lucky break for everyone concerned. He was only 21 when he started Apple officially formed on April Fools Day, 1976 with his buddy Steve Woz Wozniak, a self-taught engineer of rare talents. (A third founder, Ron Wayne, chickened out after less than two weeks.) But Jobs had already done a lot of living, all of which influenced the company he built. Hed spent one unhappy semester at Reed College in Portland, Ore., and 18 happy months of dropping in on Reed classes as he saw fit. Hed found brief employment in low-level jobs at Silicon Valley icons HP and Atari. Hed taken a spiritual journey to India and dabbled with both psychedelic drugs and primal scream therapy. Woz wanted to build computers to please himself. Jobs wanted to sell them to make money. Their first creation, the Apple I, was mostly a warm-up act for 1977s Apple II. The insides of the II were the product of Wozs technical genius, but much about it from its emphasis on ease of use to its stylish case design reflected Jobs instincts in their earliest form. In an era when most computers still looked like nerdy scientific equipment, it was a consumer electronics device and a bestseller. In 1981, Woz crashed his V-tail Beechcraft and spent months recuperating, returning to Apple only nominally thereafter. From then on, Jobs was the Steve who shaped Apples destiny. In 1979, he visited Xeroxs PARC research lab in Palo Alto, Calif., and was dazzled by what he saw there, including an experimental computer with a graphical user interface and a mouse. Within 10 minutes . it was clear to me that all computers would work this way someday, he later said. At Apple, PARCs ideas showed up first in the Lisa, a $10,000 computer that flopped. They then reappeared in improved form in 1984s Macintosh, the creation of a dream team of gifted young software and hardware wizards led by Jobs. Launched with an unforgettable Super Bowl commercial that represented the IBM PC status quo as an Orwellian dystopia, the $2,495 Mac was by far the most advanced personal computer released to date. Jobs said it was insanely great, a bit of self-praise that became forever associated with him and with Apple, even though he retired that particular phrase soon thereafter. The Mac was insanely great but it was also deeply flawed. The original version had a skimpy 128 KB of memory and no expansion slots; computing pioneer Alan Kay, who worked at Apple at the time, ticked off Jobs by calling it a Honda with a one-gallon gas tank. In a pattern Jobs would repeat frequently in the years to come, he had given people things they didnt know they needed while denying them at least temporarily ones they knew they wanted. Just as Jobs intuitively understood, PARCs ideas would have ended up on every computer whether or not the Mac had ever existed. But theres no question that he accelerated the process through sheer force of will. He wanted you to be great, and he wanted you to create something that was great, said computer scientist Larry Tesler, an Apple veteran, in the PBS documentary Triumph of the Nerds. And he was going to make you do that. Whether Jobs was coaxing breakthroughs out of his employees or selling a new product to consumers, his pitches had a mesmerizing quality. Mac software architect Bud Tribble gave it the name it would be forever known by: the Reality Distortion Field. Jobs may have been inspiring, but he was also a high-maintenance co-worker. He dismissed people who didnt impress him and they were legion, inside and outside of Apple as bozos. He was not a master of deadlines. He tormented hapless job candidates and occasionally cried at work. And he was profoundly autocratic. (Jef Raskin, the originator of the Macintosh project, said Jobs would have made an excellent King of France.) Among the people whose buttons he increasingly pushed was Apples president, John Sculley, the man he had famously berated into joining the company with the question, Do you want to sell sugared water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world? Frustrated with Jobs management of the Macintosh division and empowered by the Macs sluggish sales, Sculley and Apples board stripped him of all power to make decisions in June 1985. In September, Jobs resigned. Decades later, the notion of Apple deciding it would be better off without Steve Jobs is as unfathomable as it would have been if Walt Disney Productions had sacked Walt Disney. In 1985, though, plenty of people thought it was a fabulous idea. I think Apple is making the transition from one phase of its life to the next, an unnamed, overly optimistic Apple employee told InfoWorld magazine. I dont know that the image of a leader clad in a bow tie, jeans and suspenders would help us survive in the coming years. Using his Apple millions and funding from Ross Perot and Canon, Jobs founded NeXT, a computer company that was even more Jobslike than Apple had been. Built in a state-of-the-art factory and sporting a logo by legendary designer Paul Rand, the NeXT system was a sleek black cube packed with innovations. Unfortunately, it was aimed at a market that turned out not to exist: academic types who could afford its $6,500 price tag. After selling only 50,000 units, NeXT refocused on software. For a while, Jobs second post-Apple venture, Pixar, also looked like a disappointment. Its $135,000 image-processing computer was a tough sell; Jobs kept the company alive by pumping additional funds into it. As a sideline, however, it made computer-generated cartoons that started winning Oscars. In 1995, Disney released Pixars first feature, Toy Story; when it became the years top-grossing movie, it gave Jobs his first unqualified success in a decade. (By the time he sold Pixar to Disney for $7.4 billion in 2006, his career had reached such dizzying heights that the deal was merely a delightful footnote.) Jobs later called the NeXT-Pixar years one of the most creative periods of my life and said his dismissal from Apple had been awful-tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it. It was also the time when he went from high-profile bachelorhood he had fathered a daughter out of wedlock and dated Joan Baez to family man. He married Laurene Powell in 1991; by 1998, they were the parents of a son and two daughters. Meanwhile, Apple sans Jobs was failing on an epic scale. Sculley had given way to a vision-free German Apple executive named Michael Spindler, who was replaced by Gil Amelio, a veteran of the computer-chip industry who was spectacularly unsuited to run Apple. He presided over $1.8 billion in losses in Apples 1996 and 97 fiscal years and failed to sell the company to interested white knights IBM and Sun MicroSystems. The possibility of Apple running out of cash and ceasing to exist was not unthinkable. Amelio did make one smart move during his 500 days at Apple. Just before Christmas in 1996, he paid $430 million to buy NeXT, thinking its software could serve as the foundation of a next-generation Mac operating system. It did. (Every operating system Apple created from 2001 onward, including the one on the iPhone and iPad, is a direct descendant.) NeXTs software came with a bonus: Steve Jobs. In a touching sign of naivet, Amelio apparently thought Jobs would cheerfully serve as a figurehead for the company he had co-founded. Instead, six months after the merger, Jobs orchestrated Amelios ouster and accepted the position of interim CEO iCEO for short splitting time with his Pixar duties. Im here almost every day, he told TIME in 1997, but just for the next few months. Im really clear on it. He finally ditched the i in iCEO in 2000. Jobs return cheered up beleaguered Apple fans, but few industry watchers expected miracles. The odds arent good that he can do more than slow the fall, perhaps giving Apple a few more years before it is either gobbled up by a bigger company or finally runs out of customers, wrote Jim Carlton in 1998 when he updated his 1997 book Apple: The Inside Story of Intrigue, Egomania, and Business Blunders to reflect Jobs comeback. During his first months back at Apple, Jobs dumped board members, cut staff, slashed costs, killed dozens of products and accepted a $150 million lifeline from perennial bte noire Microsoft. (When Bill Gates made a remote guest appearance at the 1997 Macworld Expo keynote, looming on a video screen over Jobs, the audience booed.) Jobs rolled out an advertising campaign Think Different that got people talking about the company again. And he presided over the release of the striking all-in-one iMac, which came in a translucent case crafted by Jonathan Ive, the British industrial designer who would be responsible for every major Apple product to come. In 1998, it became the best-selling computer in America. Little by little, Jobs started acting less like a turnaround artist and more like a man who wanted, once again, to change the world. Victory in our industry is spelled survival, he told TIME in 2001, when Apple was still on the rebound. The way were going to survive is to innovate our way out of this. In May of that year, Apple had opened retail locations in McLean, Va., and Glendale, Calif., the first of hundreds it would build. Big-box merchants rarely did a good job of explaining to consumers why they should choose a Mac over a cheaper Windows computer; now Apple could do the job itself, in the worlds least cluttered, most tasteful computer stores. The single most important moment in Apples and Jobs redemption came six weeks after the 9/11 attacks. At a relatively low-key press event at Apples Cupertino, Calif., headquarters, Jobs explained that the company had decided to get into the MP3-player business. Then he pulled the first iPod out of his pocket. All of a sudden, Apple was a consumer-electronics company. Soon it was an exceptionally successful consumer-electronics company. The iPod wasnt much more than a tiny hard drive with a headphone jack and slick software, but it became a cultural touchstone, especially after Apple made it work with Windows PCs as well as Macs. Even its white earbuds became iconic. iPods gained the lions share of the digital-media-player market and never lost it. At first, iPod owners got music by ripping their own music or sharing tracks via peer-to-peer networks like Kazaa. Apple, seeing a need for a simple, legal source of music, introduced the iTunes Music Store in 2003. Unlike earlier music services, iTunes offered a proposition of Jobsian elegant simplicity: songs were 99 cents apiece, and you could play them on up to three devices and burn them to CD. Music companies werent thrilled they would have preferred higher prices and more restrictions but consumers bought a million songs in the first week, and by 2008 they had purchased 4 billion of them. Five years after Apple entered the music business, it surpassed Walmart to become the U.S.s largest music retailer. By that time, iPods had screens capable of displaying video, and Jobs company was a major distributor of movies and TV shows as well. As important as the iPod was, it was ultimately just a high-tech Walkman. The iPhone, unveiled at a Macworld Expo keynote in 2007, was something far more: a powerful personal computer that happened to fit in your pocket. Every once in a while, a revolutionary product comes along that changes everything, Jobs said in introducing it, a statement that unlike some of the claims hed been known to make at keynotes turned out to be factual rather than fluffy. It instantly made every other smart phone on the market look antique. For Jobs, it was a do-over: a chance to prevail in the PC wars that Microsoft had won the first time around. Typically, he responded not by aping the strategy that had worked so well for Microsoft but by being even more like Steve Jobs. Like the first Mac, the first iPhone had obvious deficiencies. For instance, it shipped with a poky 2G wireless connection just as 3G was becoming pervasive. But its software was so radically better than anything anyone had ever seen that it didnt really matter. In 2008, Apple introduced the App Store, which seamlessly delivered programs created by third-party developers for iPhones, giving Apple a 30% cut of all developer revenue along the way. The App Store was the only authorized way to get programs onto an iPhone; Apple regularly rejected programs that it deemed unsafe, offensive or disturbingly competitive with its own efforts. And yet the iPhone ended up with both the most apps and the best apps, making it hard to argue that Jobs tight control had stifled the creativity of app developers. The iPhone had serious competition, especially from handsets that used Googles Android operating system. But the iPhone ecosystem phone plus apps, movies and music delivered through Apple services contributed to Apples success in a way no other company could match. By 2011, Apple was selling more than 220,000 iPhones a day and, according to one analyst, capturing two-thirds of the industrys profits. In 2010, Apple followed up the iPhone with the iPad, its first effort in a category tablet computers that had existed for two decades without a single hit product. Apple sold 14.8 million iPads in 2010, a number that dwarfed the predictions of Wall Street analysts. (It also flummoxed competitors, who rushed into the market with iPad competitors that were far less appealing, and sometimes much more expensive, than the real thing.) By then, it wasnt surprising that Steve Jobs had surpassed almost everyones expectations; it would have been more startling if he hadnt. Apples business model at this point bore little resemblance to those of other computer makers. The rest of the industry was deeply decentralized: a consumer went to Best Buy to purchase an Acer computer running Microsoft software and then used it with Rhapsodys music service and a SanDisk MP3 player. Tech support was typically outsourced to some nameless firm halfway around the world. Apple had long ago stopped building its own stuff one of its contract manufacturers, Chinas Foxconn, earned its own measure of celebrity but otherwise, it controlled what Steve Jobs called the whole widget. It wrote its own software, designed its own hardware and delivered such services as iTunes. It sold Macs, iPods and other products at its own stores, where face-to-face support was available for free at a genius bar. Once you owned an Apple device, you filled it with movies, music and apps from Apples online stores. The company even started designing its own processors for the iPhone and iPad. In short, it came as close as it possibly could to fulfilling the Jobs vision down to the last detail. Jobs remained the difficult, demanding, sometimes unreasonable perfectionist Apple had thought dispensable a dozen years earlier. But the NeXT and Pixar experie
温馨提示
- 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
- 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
- 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
- 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
- 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
- 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
- 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。
最新文档
- 梅州市事业单位引进笔试真题2024
- 2025年中国教育史知识试题
- 高一地理自然地理环境教学设计(含例题讲解及答案)
- 医疗器械企业经营管理方案
- 建筑垃圾全过程管理的意义与作用
- 全域无废城市建设中的跨行业协同机制
- 2025至2030年中国甲基丙烯酸锌行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国玉米种衣剂行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国焊管模具行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025至2030年中国烟感型摄像机外壳行业投资前景及策略咨询报告
- 2025年宁夏银川灵武市选聘市属国有企业管理人员招聘笔试冲刺题(带答案解析)
- 机关内部制度管理制度
- 2025年高纯硫酸锶项目市场调查研究报告
- 广东省广州市天河区2023-2024学年七年级下学期期末考试英语试题(含答案)
- 净水机服务合同协议书
- 古城煤矿压风系统远程监控改造技术协议
- 2025年上海市公务员录用考试《行测》真题及答案解析(B类)
- 村务管理岗面试题及答案
- 湖南兴湘资产经营管理集团有限公司招聘考试真题2024
- 电力企业应急预案评审与备案细则
- 院感各类应急预案培训
评论
0/150
提交评论