What’s the matter with Apple?

Jan 15 2009 Published by Bryan under Uncategorized

I read this today:

What If Steve Jobs Doesn’t Come Back to Work?

But the risk to Apple is far higher if we imagine the grim possibility that Steve Jobs is unable to return to work. I’m not saying that because there is any shortage of good people at Apple. The company’s top management ranks are filled with some very skilled executives, including Tim Cook, the company’s chief operating officer, who will step in for Mr. Jobs while he is on leave.

But the essence of Steve Jobs — the obsessive visionary who involves himself in the smallest details of Apple’s products and advertising — has fostered what is in effect a corporate operating system that will need to be completely upgraded whenever a successor is named.

Steve Jobs deserves a lot of credit for the success of Apple. Before he returned, the company was headed in the wrong direction. But, somewhat ironically, it was headed in the wrong direction because it was doing all the things that conventional business wisdom said it should do – going after market share above all else, sacrificing quality for price, forgoing innovation for mass appeal, even licensing the operating system to other vendors ala Windows. Everyone would have said that Apple was doing the right thing…until 6 months later when they were in the stinker and Steve returned.

Steve has succeeded by doing innovative things well. The iPod almost single-handedly resurrected the company – who would have thought of that? The iPhone could have been a crappy “iPod with a phone” but instead Apple created a whole new platform for mobile applications. The point is that Apple has succeeded when it ignored common sense and when with great design and great ideas.

Steve is not the only guy around with great ideas. Apple has a great team in place to carry the company forward. The success of Apple depends less on Steve Jobs than on Apple’s own faithfulness to its customers, its vision, and its tradition of no-compromise design. It is still the case that only Sony among electronic companies ever gives Apple a run for its money when it comes to designing consumer technology products. Apple will continue to be the leader in computer design so long as Apple refuses to do what popular corporate wisdom says. When Apple sticks to her guns, Apple comes out on top, Jobs or no.

Comments

Doing what I want….

Nov 19 2008 Published by Bryan under Uncategorized

I find it hard to do the things that I want to do. Why is that?

First of all, what do I want to do? I want to read more. I want to write more. Those two seem preeminent. But I also want to spend more time with friends and family. I want to excersize (really). I want to travel. I want to spend time enriching myself and my life.

But there seems so little opportunity for those things. Just finding an hour a day to read is challenging enough. Work gets in the way. Especially when you have as many evening commitments as we pastors tend to have. And other things suck up my time – How many times have I plopped down in front of the television just to space out for a few minutes only to find the energy to turn the television off a few hours later?

The point is that I have the time I need. But I find it hard to use it the way I want.

I read a book called the Now Habit once. It had an intriguing premise. The basic idea was that you should discern what you really want to do, and then schedule the time to do those things on your calendar BEFORE you schedule anything else. In other words, really pirortize what is really important to you. I think that is a great idea! Maybe I’ll spend some time this week doing just that before Advent comes and the year ends without me even realizing it!

Comments

Testing out ScribeFire

Jun 18 2008 Published by Bryan under Uncategorized

Ok….

So, Firefox 3 was finally released recently, and I started messing around with it….and I started testing out the ScribeFire plugin which lets you send a blog post directly from within Firefox. And I thought that would be pretty cool. So I’m testing it out. If it works out pretty well, I might just start ScribeFireing a lot.

Comments