Thursday Jan.22
- "Greed was good" (Triumph of the Nerds, Part
I).What a sinister view, assigning an attribute normally associated with
bad to good. Allow me to revise, "Success was good."
- There was speculation in class on the real intent of
Steve Jobs admitting "It wasn't for the money". Regardless,
money should always be a perk of starting a company, not the chief
endeavor. However, it has stricken the strongest of individuals to its
enticing influence.
- The ideal of programming for fun has never fit in
the specification of "excitement" for me. Still it started with
these hobbyist who enjoyed tinkering with software in order to build a
computer and its accompanying apps. Surely anyone can appreciate their
contribution.
Tuesday Jan.27
- Gates was viewed as a cult leader (Triumph of the
Nerds, Part II). A larger than life individual which is a caution
indicated in the "Seven signs of ethical Collapse". Still, Gates
has no control over how people view him and I'm sure he probably welcomed
the admiration on his behalf.
- Apples attack on IBM in their famous 1984 commercial is
the start of their further aggression seen elsewhere, such as the
"I'm a mac, I'm a PC" commercials. They are relentless in
their pursuit to discredit competitors much in the way a politician would
towards an opponent candidate.
- Just to point out, I found the videos title to be a bit
of jab at those presented in the film. Nerds is a term given by someone
who lacks the self-esteem and self-respect to advance their own state of
being.
Thursday Jan.29
- Job's caustic remarks about Microsoft
stealing their ideals was hypocritical of Apple stealing the GUI from
Xerox. He further buries himself by stating that he was "shameless
about stealing great ideas". If it wasn't for the borrowing or stealing
that major tech companies such as Apple or Microsoft had deviously done
then who knows if we would have the the sophisticated technology
the world knows and loves today.
- The stubbornness of Jobs
to pay no attention to the initial failure of the apple II was a bit
startling. I find no admiration in this. One must take notice and prepare
in accordance to meet the needs of the situation. Ego can be a destructive
tool that inflicts everyone.
- "Being right vs.
success"(Triumph of the
Nerds, Part III)
implies taking one or the other. I don't really see why both can't be used
to compliment each other. Unless the quote follows along the line that
doing the wrong thing is the way to be successful. In which case it is
never right to do the wrong thing.
Tuesday Feb.3
- the film Revolution OS, loss much of it's credibility
when it villainized Bill Gates. Gates is a respected forefather to
much of the technology we have today and it was apparent the film held a
bit of bias against Microsoft and others that did not support
free-software.
- I stand considerable in the direction of having
proprietary software. Although it is quite helpful to have free software
available, it is even more so advantageous to use it as a means to make
money. As such companies can expand, provide jobs, and grow the
economy.
- After reviewing The Free Software
Definition, the question I find myself asking is "what
if"? Would the world be that much further ahead if software was
free?
- From the film, I felt the attempt of the social
movement of free software was admirable, but also laughable. Namely
because their means of income was from support through the use of Linux.
There has to be a more profitable way to benefit everyone. However, I do
not have the solution.
Thursday Feb.5
- I do find the lengthy Free Software license to be
a clever way to thwart someone from stealing and patenting software
written by others. It is helpful that a community of programmers are readily
available to assist and even write most of the code that one might need
for software.
- The philosophical standing of Open Source seems like a
more practical approach to the war on proprietary software. It contributes
in part to the Free Software movement while at the same time holding a
portion of the software as proprietary. Is this a plausible solution to
Tuesdays response? Regardless, it meets the needs of both sides so it
arguable a step in the right direction.
- The on going war between the various companies has come
down to a very important element, the software and apps on their machines.
Today the world is flooded by such applications, such as finding a
calculator app that does just about every mathematical operation possible
in order to be superior to other similar apps.
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