From the category archives:

Apple

MacBook Air confuses airport security

by danu on March 8, 2008

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The MacBook Air may have the whole world talking, but apparently airport security haven't heard of it. A programmer and frequent flyer explains on his blog how he was detained and missed his flight because security were suspicious of his 'device' which didn't have an optical drive.

I'm standing, watching my laptop on the table, listening to security clucking just behind me. "There's no drive," one says. "And no ports on the back. It has a couple of lines where the drive should be," she continues.

A younger agent, joins the crew. I must now be occupying ten, perhaps twenty, percent of the security force. At this checkpoint anyway. There are three score more at the other five checkpoints. The new arrival looks at the printouts from x-ray, looks at my laptop sitting small and alone. He tells the others that it is a real laptop, not a "device". That it has a solid-state drive instead of a hard disc. They don't know what he means. He tries again, "Instead of a spinning disc, it keeps everything in flash memory." Still no good. "Like the memory card in a digital camera." He points to the x-ray, "Here. That's what it uses instead of a hard drive."

The senior agent hasn't been trained for technological change. New products on the market? They haven't been TSA approved. Probably shouldn't be permitted. He requires me to open the "device" and run a program. I do, and despite his inclination, the lead agent decides to release me and my troublesome laptop. My flight is long gone now, so I head for the service center to get rebooked.

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Steve Jobs: a wonder and a worry

by danu on March 6, 2008

As well as the interview with Steve Jobs and the profile piece on Apple, Fortune have also published an interesting story on Steve Jobs himself, called The Trouble with Steve Jobs. Writer Peter Elkind suggests

Jobs likes to make his own rules, whether the topic is computers, stock options, or even pancreatic cancer. The same traits that make him a great CEO drive him to put his company, and his investors, at risk.

It is an in-depth and well-researched piece, providing insights into Steve's personal and business background, his personality and treatment of staff, and most interestingly, the way he handled both a stock-options scandal and a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer.

An excellent read for anyone interested in what makes geniuses tick. Read the full article here.

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Steve Jobs interview with Fortune

by danu on March 6, 2008

Steve Jobs is my hero. Earlier this year I fulfilled a dream of many years by travelling halfway around the world and camping out from 3am on a freezing cold winter's night in San Francisco just to hear him give a 90-minute product launch. And you know what? I wasn't alone. There were hundreds there like me, from all around the world. (You can watch a video of the queue line here, or the speech that I went to see here.)

Steve Jobs inspires. He and a friend founded Apple together in their garage 30 years ago and look what it has become today. He founded Pixar too and look what that has become. Here is a man who does what he believes, and makes a difference to millions of people's lives.

Steve Jobs

He doesn't do interviews very often, but they're always great to get hold of when he does. If you run a business this interview is a must-read, but even if you don't and you're just someone who cares about quality and doing things right, I believe you'll find this inspiring.

On finding staff:

"When I hire somebody really senior, competence is the ante. They have to be really smart. But the real issue for me is, Are they going to fall in love with Apple? Because if they fall in love with Apple, everything else will take care of itself. They'll want to do what's best for Apple, not what's best for them, what's best for Steve, or anybody else."

On hitting roadblocks:

"At Pixar when we were making Toy Story, there came a time when we were forced to admit that the story wasn't great. It just wasn't great. We stopped production for five months.... We paid them all to twiddle their thumbs while the team perfected the story into what became Toy Story. And if they hadn't had the courage to stop, there would have never been a Toy Story the way it is, and there probably would have never been a Pixar.
"We called that the 'story crisis,' and we never expected to have another one. But you know what? There's been one on every film. We don't stop production for five months. We've gotten a little smarter about it. But there always seems to come a moment where it's just not working, and it's so easy to fool yourself - to convince yourself that it is when you know in your heart that it isn't.

"Well, you know what? It's been that way with [almost] every major project at Apple, too.... Take the iPhone. We had a different enclosure design for this iPhone until way too close to the introduction to ever change it. And I came in one Monday morning, I said, 'I just don't love this. I can't convince myself to fall in love with this. And this is the most important product we've ever done.'

"And we pushed the reset button. We went through all of the zillions of models we'd made and ideas we'd had. And we ended up creating what you see here as the iPhone, which is dramatically better. It was hell because we had to go to the team and say, 'All this work you've [done] for the last year, we're going to have to throw it away and start over, and we're going to have to work twice as hard now because we don't have enough time.' And you know what everybody said? 'Sign us up.'

"That happens more than you think, because this is not just engineering and science. There is art, too. Sometimes when you're in the middle of one of these crises, you're not sure you're going to make it to the other end. But we've always made it, and so we have a certain degree of confidence, although sometimes you wonder. I think the key thing is that we're not all terrified at the same time. I mean, we do put our heart and soul into these things."

Read the full interview here.

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What makes Apple golden

by danu on March 4, 2008

For years the mainstream press have given Apple a hard time, depicting it as beleaguered and only ever one step away from inevitable collapse, even as Apple posted record profits quarter after quarter, introduced wildly successful new products and outpaced the rest of the industry in growth. Now it seems they've come around.

Fortune have posted a great article today about the decisions and business culture that makes Apple so successful. As you may know, Apple and Pixar are the two companies I admire the most as a businessman, and both owe their success in large part to founder and CEO Steve Jobs.

For anyone interested in technology or doing good business, this is an article worth reading.

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