Showing posts with label mark zuckerberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mark zuckerberg. Show all posts

Imagine...




From a passer-by in Steve’s neighbourhood, March 2010:

…and there he was in his kitchen window, black turtleneck and all, washing dishes. He just looked up at us, maybe 15 feet away. Nothing in between us but a window, no tall fence (a short, decorative, waist-high one). And we just walked on and proceeded to admire the apple orchard he has in his front yard, and even walked up his driveway a little to see his tulip garden.  [1]


Steve is sitting in his favourite rocking chair in his kitchen. A half-finished bowl of granola doused in apple juice left on the bench. Everything in his home is snow-blind white except for a small Indian drum that Steve picked up a long, long time ago. It rests beside the Apple Time Capsule.
Steve opens an advance copy of Tron Legacy that Disney sent him on his iPad. This is one of the perks of owning the biggest share of Walt’s company. He keeps playing back one particular scene. He streams it across space to the Apple TV unit. The gadget blinks once and sends the video to his seventy-inch Sony Bravia LCD. Steve reminds himself that all of these flat screen TVs in American homes are looking like that flat screens that broadcasted Big Brother in George Orwell’s novel.
He watches the film’s hero, Flynn. He wants to change the world, but he needs help. He creates a copy of himself called Clu. Flynn thinks because he made Clu that he can control him. The copy betrays him and banishes Flynn from the electronic Eden. Steve wonders how long it’s been since he last spoke to John Sculley. He ends play with a single gesture across the iPad’s surface.
He begins browsing through informationweek.com. His finger glides down the article. The headline reads, “Apple iPhone Use Shrinks, Android Grows" (Gonsalves, 2010).  The iPad navigates swiftly from one window to the other. He then touches a New York Times app and reads about his new nemesis, Android Andy:
It’s a numbers game. When you have multiple O.E.M.’s building multiple products in multiple product categories, it’s just a matter of time” before sales of Android phones exceed the sales of proprietary systems like Apple’s ... As to when that would happen, Mister Rubin said, “I don’t know when it might be, but I’m confident it will happen ....

... Open usually wins.[2]
Steve touches his YouTube app. He plays a clip from an L.A nightclub where blind-from-birth performer, Stevie Wonder, takes a break from his set to thank Steve for his iOS:

His company took the challenge in making his technology accessible to everyone. In the spirit of caring and moving the world forward, Steve Jobs… there's nothing on the iPhone or iPad that you can do that I can't do.[3]

Whereas, Android Andy had dropped the ball on accessibility.

Steve clicks on a four-year-old clip of himself at Macworld showing off his iPhone for the first time. The definition is sharper than any other iPad, or Apple product for that matter. The unit Steve is cradling a prototype iPad with “retina display”. The tech rumour mills argue over whether it’s possible or not - but there it is, in his hands.  He’ll hold back on the release of this technology for as long as is prudent. Apple has always been able, but not willing, to give their customers more bang for their buck; but, , of course it’s more profitable to sandbag the market.

The audio is loud and crystal-clear: “We have designed something beautiful for your hand”, the little Steve says. He sees an LED back-lit image of himself opening a pristine menu on the phone. He watches the Steve-image select and open a song...

“I walk a lonely road.
The only road that I have ever known.”

He gazes at himself painted in sixteen million electric colours. He watches himself become less of a man and more of a myth. Well, isn’t a myth simply a mirror? Steve has become a reflection of American hopes and delusions.

He opens his phonebook on his iPhone 4, rapidly finds a number not many people have, and dials it.

"Hey, four-eyes," Steve says to Bill.
"You can't call me that anymore. You have glasses too now", Bill laughs.
Steve looks down at his spectacles on the coffee table. They were designed to mimic his idol John Lennon.
"Yeah, but mine are cooler"
"You are fond of saying that".
Steve starts singing:
"I began to lose control,
I didn’t mean to hurt you,
I’m just a jealous guy,
I’m just a jealous guy."
"Oh jeez, Steve stop it. That’s terrible!" They both laugh.
Steve's iPhone 4 starts losing reception. Bill says,
"You're holding it wrong”
“Shut up, shut up, smartass,” Steve swaps his grip on the phone and then his tone changes from mirth to gravitas.
"Bill, I just wanted to tell you I appreciated what you said at the D5 conference a few years back."
"What’s that?"
"You know how you said about me, 'People come and go in this industry. It’s nice when somebody sticks around'".

Of course, Steve doesn't know where Bill is standing at the moment. Bill looks around at the Nigerian hospital ward. He sees a little girl receiving a polio vaccine paid for by Bill's foundation. He retired from the industry some time ago. Bill is not really 'around' anymore. However, he hasn't the heart to spoil Steve's epiphany.

"Hey, that's cool, Steve". Steve's smile is a little sad around the edges.
"Gotta favour to ask you. I’ll talk to you ‘bout it next week.”
"Okay. Bit busy right now; but look forward talkin’ again."
“Gotta go four-eyes. Got an empire to maintain.”
“Ha ha …”
Steve touches ‘end call’.

Lisa as she walks into the room wearing a smile with just a touch of curiosity. Lisa Brennan-Jobs is now a thirty-two year-old journalist. Her occasional observations can be found in Vogue
and The Oprah Magazine, among others. Lisa asks,

“Talking with your friend, Dad?”
Steve looks up at his daughter.
“Yeah, honey... my friend”. 

The following week, Facebook Mark arrives at Steve’s home to talk about social media. However, Mark realizes Steve may have had an ulterior motive when the surprise guest is Bill. Steve points out that both Bill and Mark are Harvard dropouts. “Although, Bill spent most of the time there playing poker with his buddies Allen and Ballmer. Do all you Harvard losers like poker too? How ‘bout a few rounds of Texas Hold’em?”

Bill produces a No.92 Club Special deck of cards. The red and white deck was a gift from The Dunes in Vegas before it was demolished and replaced with The Bellagio in the 1990s. He shuffles the cards as easily and naturally as a Zen monk breathes.

Mark plays with a youngster’s aggression and arrogance. There is much good-natured humour about the age of his hosts. Bill and Steve are a handful of months apart.
Over-playing your hand is one lesson that an avid poker player like Bill could teach Mark. It is the biggest mistake that most new players make. Bill explains:

“Playing a hand of this nature is like dancing in a mine field. It’s strong in a snapshot moment but not tough enough to cop the pressure from multiple drawing hands. This is why most experts tell you to fold a hand like six-seven pre-flop. When you do improve, it complicates things.  It could cost you so many more bets that it’s not worth speculating from the beginning.”

Mark’s glazed look causes a grin to play at the corner of Steve’s mouth. Bill was having fun confounding the lad.

“The cornerstone of poker is caution. There are lots of gamblers out there who love poker but hate the math. They will chase with eight-nine when the board comes A-6-7 and they won't let go. Like a pit-bull that’s got something by the jugular. They are holding out for that miracle five card so they can make so much cash this one time that it makes up for all the times they were chasing their tail. When you are in front, your mission is to take money from them, but not at the expense of your entire night.”

Bill looks over at Steve and winks conspiratorially. He takes a sip of water to hide a playful grin.
“When you are in front with one or two cards to come you gotta feel the texture of the board. Is it favourable? Is there a drawing-hand out there that was helped by the last card? What could your opponent have been plotting in order to hang on in the face of your pressure? If that third suited card drops you need to know for damn sure that your hand is still the best. If you have overplayed your hand from the get-go it will be too late,” said the world’s richest man.

Mark nods like a kid who is too afraid to tell coach that he doesn’t understand the play.

Steve adds helpfully, “You
spend so much time thinking of the ways you can win that you forget all the ways you can lose. My friend here, Bill… he always won – poker, business, whatever.”

“Sure, sure”, Marks keeps nodding because he doesn’t know what else to do. Steve almost feels sorry for him.

“Are you getting it? Are you getting it, Mark? You can screw people for only so long before it catches up to you and bites you in the ass. Only took eighteen months for the entire industry to switch from cheering you, to hating you”. He looks at Steve startled like he was just caught halfway through a lie.
Now he gets it.


[1] Gawker.com (2010, March 31) A Treasure Trove of Steve Jobs Stories [blog]. Nerdspotting.  Retrieved from: http://gawker.com/5506526/a-treasure-trove-of-steve-jobs-stories
 
[2] Stone, B. (2010, April 27) Google’s Andy Rubin On Everything Android. From Bits [blog]. New York Times. Retrieved from http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/27/googles-andy-rubin-on-everything-android/

[3] Brian, M. (2011, September 15 ) Stevie Wonder sings Steve Jobs’ praises for iOS accessibility. Retrieved from: http://thenextweb.com/apple/2011/09/15/stevie-wonder-sings-steve-jobs-praises-for-ios-accessibility/

Steve Jobs Versus Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook founder, Mark Zuckerberg has no social skills, but he created the world's most popular social network. He was born the same year that Steve hurled his Macintosh against his Big Brother, IBM. Twenty-six years later, Mark’s empty eyes stare at us from cover of Time Magazine with the headline, “Person of The Year”. The public voted for Mac-toting troublemaker, Julian Assange to receive the award. In fact, he received twenty times more votes than Mark. However, the news icon decided Mark was a safer option to connect with the Time brand name. The nut-shelled reason that Mark is on the December cover is that he has connected one-twelfth of the world’s population. Time explains itself:
Facebook makes cyberspace more like the real world: dull but civilized. The masked-ball period of the Internet is ending. Where people led double lives, real and virtual, now they lead single ones again. The fact that people yearned not to be liberated from their daily lives but to be more deeply embedded in them is an extraordinary insight, as basic and era-defining in its way as Jobs' realization that people prefer a graphical desktop to a command line or pretty computers to boring beige ones.[1]

Steve blew his chance of winning this accolade in 1982. Does Steve really need the award anyway? Consider some of its previous recipients: Stalin (twice), Mao, Nixon, and George W Bush.

Hollywood has made a scathing and critically acclaimed film about Mark called The Social Network. Like Pirates of Silicon Valley, it details the mercenary tactics behind building a digital empire. The film was released on the heels of a hot trend of people leaving Facebook. Information Week[2] reported that Peter Rojas, founder of Gizmodo and Engadget, and Google guru, Matt Cutts have turned off their Facebook pages in protest against the enfant terrible who built it. Mark is making influential enemies, but his worst enemy is himself. He Shanghaied ConnectU and then joked about it, “They made a mistake ha, ha. They asked me to make it for them. So I’m like delaying it so it won’t be ready until after the Facebook thing comes out”. He hacked Harvard reporters’ accounts to stop an investigation about him.[3] He stole the check-in feature from Foursquare. He stole public facing profiles from Twitter. Then he changed his customers’ privacy settings three times.


Mark’s office is a twenty-minute drive from Steve’s. The Apple CEO was generous enough to be the first to sponsor Mark through his Apple Students Group.[4] Steve also featured Facebook pages in his iPad commercials. In June 2010, the un-grateful start-up up-start scrawled on his Facebook page, “This week I got an iPhone. This weekend I got four chargers so I can keep it charged everywhere I go and a land line so I can actually make calls." Later, he replaced the iPhone with an Android.[5]


In September, Forbes Magazine announced that Mark is richer than Steve.[6] Regardless of Mark's rank in a rich man's magazine, Steve reigns supreme as the entrepreneur teenagers most admire. This is Mark’s most important demographic, and his greatest loss if he wants their support. The 2010 Junior Achievement Teens and Entrepreneurship survey placed Steve as number one favorite. Mark was down the list at number six, behind Oprah. A look at the questions reveals why this Steve was numero uno. Thirty-one percent admired entrepreneurs who “make a difference in people’s lives”. Wealth and fame earned only ten percent of their vote. Twenty-four percent said, “Controlling your destiny” was the key motivation to become an entrepreneur like Steve.[7]


Just like Steve, Mark travelled from place to place in India on a “vision quest” for a month of “pleasure and contemplation”. Though for Steve, he found less pleasure and more disappointment than contemplation.  Both men returned to the States only to sleep on the floor and foster formidable enemies. Mark kicked out his co-founder, Eduardo Saverin, whereas Steve’s co-founder left the company on his own ticket. Unfortunately, Mark doesn’t have the protection of Steve’s charismatic personality. He’s a PR train wreck.

Following in Steve’s footsteps, Mark tried to diffuse the harsh light shed upon him by the bio-pic by appearing on Saturday Night Live with the actor who portrayed/betrayed him. Unfortunately, Mark lacked Steve’s control over the event. The largely improvised sketch merely cemented the film’s portrayl.
The Social Network’s composer, rebel-without-a-pause Trent Reznor, won the Oscar and the Golden Globe for the score. The digital virtuoso had this to say about Mark,
When I see the media heralding Zuckerburg, putting him up on a pedestal of genius and mentioned in the same breath as Steve Jobs, I highly disagree with that. He was in the right place, at the right time, with a functional tool.[8]
The one thing Mark has over Steve is a knack for social networking. Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn et cetera all know how to play nicely with one another. Old man Steve just doesn’t get it. Social networking involves alien concepts that Steve can’t quite grasp: community, altruism, gift economy, the non-rival good. He tried to create a social network called Ping for his iTune people to connect with each other. The oracle of social media, Mashable.com, says the clunky Ping “lives in a ghetto of its own. It doesn’t interact with other social networks at all, and that breaks one of the cardinal rules of social media if you ask us.”[9] It seems the open social concept grates on Steve’s closed up sociopathic sensibility. Steve tried to connect Ping with Facebook, but Mark pulled that plug soon after Steve announced Ping.[10] How embarrassing.
Steve invited Mark over for dinner in early October, 2010.[11] Perhaps there’s something these two can learn from one another. Whatever conversation transpired, they must have agreed to disagree on agreeable terms. When Mark heard that Steve was taking a medical leave in January, 2010, he posted on his Facebook with his iPhone, “Steve, you've done so much good for the world already. I hope you get better soon.” (150 people ‘liked” this). Nevertheless, Facebook maintains its distance from the lone wolf Ping.
At the Silicon Valley dinner with MacHead Obama, Mark sat on the President’s right hand side whilst Steve sat on his left. Steve was the only man not in a shirt and tie. Guess what he wore?

[1] Grossman, L. (2010, December 15) Person of The year: Mark Zuckerberg. Time Magazine.

[2] Diana, A. (2010, May 11) Facebook Deactivations Gaining Attention. Information Week.

[3] Carlson, C. (2010, March 5) At Last – The Full Story Of How Facebook was Founded. Business Insider. Retrieved from http://www.businessinsider.com/how-Facebook-was-founded-2010-3#we-can-talk-about-that-after-i-get-all-the-basic-functionality-up-tomorrow-night-1

[4] Frommer, D. (2010, September) Apple And Facebook Talked For More Than A Year -- Then Apple Launched Ping Without Facebook's Help. Business Insider. Retrieved from: http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-facebook-ping-2010-9#comment-4c992c097f8b9acb60a80700

[5] Matyszczyk, C. (2010, June 14) Facebook's Zuckerberg disses iPhone, removes post. cnet.com. Retrieved from http://news.cnet.com/8301-17852_3-20007712-71.html

[6] Bertoni, S. (2010, September 22) Facebook’s Zuckerberg Now Richer Than Apple’s Steve Jobs [blog]. Money Talks. From Forbes.com. Retrieved from: http://blogs.forbes.com/stevenbertoni/2010/09/22/facebooks-zuckerberg-now-richer-than-apples-steve-jobs/

[7] Junior Achievement (2010) Latest Teen Idol: Steve Jobs. Retrieved from: http://www.ja.org/files/surveys/2010-Teens&EntrepreneurshipPart2.pdf

[8] Adams, S. (2010, October 11) Interview: Trent Reznor discusses The Social Network soundtrack. Drowned In Sound. Retrieved from: http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4141283-interview--trent-reznor-discusses-the-social-network-soundtrack

[9] Axon, S. (2010, October 16) Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg Talked Ping Over Dinner. Mashable.com. Retrieved from: http://mashable.com/2010/10/16/steve-jobs-mark-zuckerberg/

[10] Swisher, K. (2010, September 2) Steve Jobs on Why Facebook Is Not Part of Apple’s New Ping Music Social Network: “Onerous Terms” [blog]. BoomTown. From AllThingsD. Retrieved from: http://kara.allthingsd.com/20100902/steve-jobs-on-why-Facebook-is-not-part-of-apples-new-ping-music-social-network-onerous-terms/

[11] Guynn, J. (2010, October 15) Apple's Steve Jobs pings Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg for dinner. Los Angeles Times.