Masa first encountered Steve Jobs in the mid-1980s at the annual Comdex trade fair in Las Vegas. Sometime in the summer of 1998, they had their first serious conversation under a cherry tree at the Woodside, California, home of Larry Ellison, boss of the Oracle software group and a fellow Japanophile.
Steve Jobs knew that constant busyness is the enemy of great ideas. Put his insight to use with the two-hour rule.
Today marks 18 years since Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled the original iPhone and Apple TV at Macworld Expo 2007. Standing on stage, Jobs
But even back in 2007, Nokia saw that the exclusive US iPhone distribution relationship Apple reached with Cingular (later acquired by AT&T) was both a strength and a weakness. To compete, the industry was famously forced to rally round Google’s Android, an operating system Steve Jobs once vowed to destroy .
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has taken a fresh jab at Apple, criticising the tech giant for relying too heavily on the iPhones long-standing success. During a podcast with YouTuber Joe Rogan, Zuckerberg mocked Apple for what he described as a lack of innovation in recent years.
It seems to be a week for interesting peeks at Apple history, a new piece telling the story of Softbank founder Masayoshi Son making a $17B gamble on the basis of a gentleman’s agreement with Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs introduced the iPhone, and now they’re just sitting on it 20 years later,' Mark Zuckerberg said, claiming that Apple has been "milking" the iPhone’s success by making incremental improvements rather than introducing transformative technologies.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs, dressed in his uniform of black turtleneck T-shirt and jeans, unveiled the ‘revolutionary’ iPhone — a touchscreen mobile phone. Since then, the phone has earned cult status around the world,
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg criticised Apple for its lack of innovation and restrictive policies in an interview on the “Joe Rogan Experience” podcast.
In Joe Rogan's podcast, Mark Zuckerberg made several interesting statements, among other things, paying great attention to Apple.
To navigate that paradigm, Ranganath came up with what he calls the “Four Cs of memorable messaging,” which uses concepts from memory science to craft lessons that stick with students.