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Posts Tagged ‘Steve Jobs’


No matter how hard Apple is trying to iron out the wrinkles of its deficient Maps application, the problem doesn’t seem to fade away.  Instead it’s getting bad publicity in other parts of the world.  This time, the faulty software is hitting the headlines in Australia’s newspapers in a bad way.

The people from the “land down under” are fuming about the crippled software after being led to an arid land in the middle of nowhere infested with snakes.

Australian police have warned travelers from using Apple’s flawed iPhone Map software after several motorists became stuck in a snake-infested, desert corner of the country while using their phone for driving directions.

Instead of reaching the tourist town of Mildura, tourists were misled to the arid Murray Sunset National Park, a relatively dry region accessible only by four-wheel-drive vehicles.

Apple’s CEO, Tim Book, apologized to customers last September for problems with the new mobile mapping application and suggested they use a rival product from Google until the bugs had been crushed  The application is built for the iPhone, but works just fine on an iPad too.  Google Maps is free and available even as we speak.  Google Maps is now available for iOS devices.

Apple also fired top executives behind the faulty software, and handed responsibility for software and hardware design to industrial design guru Jonathan Ive to fix the fiasco.

Credit: Apple Inc.

Steve Jobs in his time had to tackle the Antennagate fiasco and had to give away rubber covers for the faulty iPhone antenna; now Tim Cook is having a nightmare with a pesky Mapsgate.  When you’re number one, everyone is looking at you and your performance like a fish in a bowl.  Good Day.

Source:  Australian police warn against using Apple Maps due to stranded motorists – CBS News

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Credit: Apple Inc.

Some people are capable of only looking as far as their tip of their nose; while others are able to envision the vastness of the Universe.  Visionaries such as Isaac Newton, Leonardo da Vinci or Albert Einstein belong to this unique intellectual elite.

When Steve Jobs came up with the iPad tablet, nobody thought it would be an instant hit, not even the consumers themselves felt there was a need for such a gadget.  Steve Jobs created a product out of the blue, that people never thought they needed, less alone cough some money at it.  A new industry was created and instantly everybody followed suit.

I resisted the temptation and looked the other way in an effort to avoid the “herd syndrome”.  I told myself there was no need for an iPad for Yours Truly.  Instead I purchased an Amazon Kindle Fire.  It was a horrible decision.  I was in for a deep disappointment.  The gadget was restricted to a few features such as reading electronic books, browsing the web and viewing and listening to YouTube videos.  The rich content of newspapers, magazines, movies, and TV shows were only possible if you lived inside the United States and owned a U.S. credit card.  (Omar frowns!)

These are the official words from Amazon.com about the Kindle Fire tablet obtained from their official Web site:

“With a U.S. credit card, you will be able to purchase new apps and music for Kindle Fire HD while you are abroad.  To purchase, download, or stream movies and TV shows, you must be physically present in the United States and have a U.S. billing address.”

As Apple bombarded the Internet and other media outlets, I learned more and more about the iPad, and slowly the itch of owning one grew inside my head.  Finally, I succumbed to the song of the mermaid and swiped the card.  I paid a high price for my iPad—almost $550.  That is a lot of money for a retiree in this part of the world, but the mermaids were singing like angels.

For several months, I’ve read the manual and searched under the hood to discover its rich features.  Now I realize it was an excellent deal.  The iPad is a full-fledged computer with a generous amount of apps; in fact, too many for my meager needs.  The more I read, the more I realize what a great piece of equipment this popular juggernaut really is, and how vast was the vision of Steve Jobs.

Below is the Table of Contents of Apple’s iPad PDF Owners Manual for iOS 6 software (third generation) with the much touted Retina Display:

  1. Chapter 1:  iPad at a Glance
  2. Chapter 2:  Getting Started
  3. Chapter 3:  Basics
  4. Chapter 4:  Siri
  5. Chapter 5:  Safari
  6. Chapter 6:  Mail
  7. Chapter 7:  Messages
  8. Chapter 8:  Facetime
  9. Chapter 9:  Camera
  10. Chapter 10:  Photos
  11. Chapter 11:  Photo Booth
  12. Chapter 12:  Videos
  13. Chapter 13:  Calendar
  14. Chapter 14:  Contacts
  15. Chapter 15:  Notes
  16. Chapter 16:  Reminders
  17. Chapter 17:  Clock
  18. Chapter 18:  Maps
  19. Chapter 19:  Music
  20. Chapter 20:  i Tunes Store
  21. Chapter 21:  App Store
  22. Chapter 22:  Newstand
  23. Chapter 23:  iBooks
  24. Chapter 24:  Podcasts
  25. Chapter 25:  Game Center
  26. Chapter 26:  Accessibility
  27. Chapter 27:  Settings
  28. Appendix A:  iPad in Business
  29. Appendix B:  International Keyboard
  30. Appendix C:  Safety, Handling & Support

As you can see, the iPad has an extensive use and certainly worth its salt.  I’m focusing on the use of Siri, the voice activated feature, and photography apps.  The resolution of the Retina Display is as good as Apple says it is, or even better.  I’m still learning the ropes.  As I learn new tricks, I’ll share them with you right here at Lingua Franca.

Maybe you too will soon be listening to the sweet songs of the mermaids.  Good Day.

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Credit: Apple Inc.

On October 23, 2012, Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, made several product announcements such as an upgraded iMac, a new operating system called iOS 6, and the expected Apple iPad mini.  It was a great day for Apple, very similar to the product announcements made by the late Steve Jobs.

A few days later, Apple users were fuming over problems with their Maps application.  It was flawed and full of bugs, nothing like Google Maps.  The zealots were furious and their anger was felt on Tweeter, Facebook and other tech sites on the Internet.  The uproar was so intense that it pressured Tim Cook come out into the open and apologize for the flawed software and promised Apple would take care of the problem.

True to his word, on November 1, 2012, Apple released its first revision of iOS 6, entitled iOS 6.0.1, which as you would expect from such a lowly number, is all about bug fixes and performance updates to iPad, iPhone, and iPod touch users. That’s fine, and will come as good news for those affected by bugs it claims to fix.  Many of the bug fixes are related to the iPhone 5 and iPod touch (5th generation).

The iPhone 5 apparently shipped with a bug that does not allow the device to receive over-the air updates.  For that reason, iPhone 5 users have to also download a patch to download iOS 6.0.1 through the setting app.  Kindly click here to see a gallery of the process to install iOS 6.0.1 on the iPhone 5.

I found out about this latest release in my iPad, because I discovered a small red circle in the middle of the Settings button.  When I pressed the button, I noticed there was a Software Update, from iOS 6.0 to version 6.0.1.  I was previously aware of the 6.0 version, but was reluctant to download it because there were Wi-Fi and Maps apps flaws.  It was cautious to wait and see if Apple would take care of them.  When I found out that the latest version was reliable, I went ahead and unloaded it.  It took about 15 minutes to complete the process.

After iOS 6.0.1 had been downloaded and installed, I noticed that the YouTube app had disappeared.  No problem, I went ahead and bookmarked it through Safari and went back to business as usual.  Other than that, I haven’t noticed anything special, except that the Maps app had been enhanced, but I don’t use this application much,  so it meant  nothing to me.  As far as I’m concerned, most of the improvement were made under the hood, not noticeable to the user.

A good news is that Siri is working in my iPad (third generation).  I’m still learning the ropes; it has a lovely feminine voice and understands my heavy Spanish accent.  To test the software I asked, “Siri, do I need and umbrella today?”, and the gorgeous voice told me “Yes” and provided several weather statistics.

You can set Siri to understand several languages which is very convenient if English is not your native language.  For example Siri has three different versions of Spanish, (e.g., Spanish Mexico, Spanish Spain and Spanish United States).  It also has four versions of English (e.g., English Australia, English Canada, English United Kingdom and English United States).  Interesting!

This is an area which I will concentrate on in the future.  I was aware that Apple had introduced Siri with the late iPhone 4S.  The software had caught on and is very popular among Apple iPhone users in the States.

To talk to Siri, press and hold the Home button and speak.  Siri also helps you get things done just by asking.  You can make a FaceTime call, send a message, dictate a note, or even find a restaurant.  I don’t know if you can do all these things in Panama, but will find out in the upcoming days.

And now you know that Apple had corrected the faulty software and is looking forward for new products and services in the future.  How well Apple will do under the leadership of Tim Cook, remains to be seen.  Its latest maps software was met with widespread frustration and ridicule over glaring mistakes.  Apple stunned investors when it announced the ouster of chief mobile software architect Scott Forstall and retail chief John Browett—the latter after six months on the job.

Some pundits agree that Forstall and Cook disagreed over the need to publicly apologize for its maps service embarrassment.  Cook flexed its muscle and got rid of Forstall and gave Jonathan Ives the new responsibility of overseeing the design of Apple’s software and hardware.  This will also be interesting to watch in Apple’s post Jobs era.

On November 2, 2012 Apple delivered the Apple iPad mini.  Tim Cook reversed Apple’s reluctance to enter the small-tablet market, lagging Amazon and Google, considering Apple was a pioneer in the tablet market in 2010.  Many Apple zealots found many features in the iPad mini to love it, but some features, like the display, left a bit to be desired.  Some Apple users are saying, “I’ll wait for the iPad mini Retina 2 to be released in the future (circa six months from now.” 

Did Cook make a wise decision?  We will see if there are small iPad minis inside the kids’ stockings during the upcoming holidays.  Good Day.

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Almost a year after Steve Jobs’ death, the secret boat he designed was finished by a shipbuilders in Aalsmeer, Holland.  The name of the boat is Venus—after the Roman goddess of love, beauty, sex, fertility, prosperity and victoryand some pundits say that it looks much like an Apple iPhone 4.  According to Dutch website OneMoreThing, the finished ship was launched at shipbuilder Koninklijke De Vries in Aalsmeer, The Netherlands. Jobs’ widow Laurene and three of their children, Reed, Aaron and Eve, were present at the ceremony.

Built entirely out of aluminum, the yacht was designed by Jobs personally along with some help from French designer Phillipe Stack. It’s a big one, too. The ship measures between 70 and 80 meters, but because of the aluminum construction, it’s lighter than your typical yacht, giving it a bit of an edge when it comes to speed.

The front of the ship is equipped with a large sun deck with a jacuzzi built in. Behind that comes an all glass cabin that’s topped with a bridge equipped with seven 27-inch iMacs that handle the ship’s navigation and controls.

Walter Isaacson wrote about this yacht in his biography of Steve Jobs, who had evidently been working on the project alone for six years:

“After our omelets at the café, we went back to his house and he showed me all the models and architectural drawings. As expected, the planned yacht was sleek and minimalist. The teak decks were perfectly flat and unblemished by any accoutrements. As at an Apple store, the cabin windows were large panes, almost floor to ceiling, and the main living area was designed to have walls of glass that were forty feet long and ten feet high. He had gotten the chief engineer of the Apple stores to design a special glass that was able to provide structural support. By then the boat was under construction by the Dutch custom yacht builders Feadship, but Jobs was still fiddling with the design. ‘I know that it’s possible I will die and leave Laurene with a half-built boat,’ he said. ‘But I have to keep going on it. If I don’t, it’s an admission that I’m about to die.’

Sadly, Jobs did die before the yacht was finished, but the shipbuilders finished the visionary’s dream.  The Steve Jobs was aware he might not live to see the boat launched, but continued to tinker with its design. Now, at its christening more than a year after his death, his quotes about the yacht become even more poignant. In the Isaacson book, Jobs said, “I know that it’s possible I will die and leave Laurene with a half-built boat. But I have to keep going on it. If I don’t, it’s an admission that I’m about to die.”

If you are interested in watching a video about the secret project of Steve Jobs, please click here.  Good Day.

Source:  Steve Jobs’s Secret Yacht Looks Like a Giant iPhone—Yahoo! News

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“Here’s to the crazy ones.  The misfits.  The rebels.  The troublemakers.  The round pegs in the square holes.  The ones who see things differently.  They’re not fond of rules.  And they have no respect for the status quo.  You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them.  About the only thing you can’t do is ignore them.  Because they change things.  They push the human race forward.  And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.  Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.”Apple’s Think Different brand image campaign by BTWA\Chiat\Day

Snapshot of a lovely red candle, together with my Kindle Fire, displaying a picture of Steve Jobs from Walter Isaacson’s book, “Steve Jobs.” And of course, the symbolic red apple. Photo by ©Omar Upegui R.

A tribute to a visionary who left us too soon; there was so much more he could have done.  We miss you Steve!  Good Bye!

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Snapshot of my Logitec webcam which I’ve placed on top of my computer screen. I use it, together with Skype, to communicate with friends in the United States. Cameras are often associated with Big Brother. All our movements are observed through public cameras. Photo by ©Omar Upegui R.

Apple’s 1984 commercial is considered by most pundits, one of the most creative commercial ever broadcasted anywhere ever.  It had a price a price tag of $750,000 which was a lot of money in those days and it’s duration was of only one minute.

The story goes that Steve Jobs wanted to launch the Macintosh with an inspiring commercial that was as revolutionary as the computer itself.  He loved the Orwellian tagline when it was presented to him, and he encouraged the Chiat-Day advertising agency to pursue it.  “I want something that will stop people in their tracks”, he said.  “I want a thunderclap.”

Apple booked two expensive slots for sixty and thirty seconds, costing over a million dollars to show it during Super Bowl XVIII on January 22, 1984, which was just two days before the Macintosh launch.  The commercial would air early in the third quarter, at the first commercial break after the second half kick-off.  Only the sixty seconds ad was finally chosen due to internal resistance to the ad from within Apple’s top brass.

Steve Hayden and Brent Thomas put together a storyboard for a 60 second ad that would look like a scene from a science-fiction movie.  It featured a rebellious young woman outrunning the Orwellian thought police and throwing a sledgehammer into a screen showing a mind-controlling speech by Big Brother.

The heroine, with a drawing of a Macintosh emblazoned on her white tank top, was a renegade out to foil the establishment—obviously IBM.  A female discus thrower was chosen to play the heroine.  Just at the moment when Big Brother announces, “We shall prevail,” the heroine’s hammer smashes the screen and it vaporizes in a flash of light and smoke.

At its end, as the drones watched in horror the vaporizing of Big Brother, an announcer calmly intoned, “On January 24th, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh.  And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be like ’1984′.”

The ad was so admired that it was often replayed for free.  It also temporarily boosted the company’s sales, employee’s morale, and stock price.  It was an immediate sensation.  More than 96 million people watched an ad that was unlike anything they’d seen before.

That evening, all three networks and fifty local stations aired news stories about the ad, giving it a viral life unprecedented in the pre-YouTube era.  It would eventually be selected by both TV Guide and Advertising Age as the greatest commercial of all times.

For your ready reference, I’ve selected the “1984″ historic commercial extracted from YouTube for your enjoyment.  This is it.

And now you know the rest of the story.  Good Day.

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Credit: Apple Inc. and Gizmodo

Yesterday afternoon I turned the last digital page of my Kindle Fire’s book dubbed, Steve Jobs written by Walter Isaacson.  It was a long biography approximately 600 pages long.  But each one of those pages was worth reading.  Walter Isaacson has written a riveting story of the roller-coaster life and searingly intense personality of a creative entrepreneur whose passion for perfection and ferocious drive revolutionized six industries:  personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, and digital publishing.

Steve Jobs has been one of my favorite American icons since I started following Apple computers in the early eighties.  Even though I never bought a second Apple computer, I read everything I could lay my paws on about this one-of-a-kind visionary and his roller-coaster life at Apple Computers.  The book was easy to digest, since I was very familiar with the names of the characters mentioned by Isaacson and the evolution of Apple since the late seventies.  Of course I was well aware of the Apple I and II, Macintosh, iMac, iPod, Shuffle, Nano, iTunes, Apple Stores, Apple Apps, Apple Retail Stores, iPhone, and last but certainly not least, the iPad.  However, knowing what was happening inside the well-guarded walls of Apple was indeed an informative experience.

I was deeply touched by the narration of Apple’s marketing campaign identified as Think Different.  It’s an eloquent piece of poetry, vision and determination.  This is what Hollywood actor Richard Dreyfuss said in the TV ad.

“Here’s to the crazy ones.  The misfits.  The rebels.  The troublemakers.  The round pegs in square holes.  The ones who see things differently.  They’re not fond of rules.  As they have no respect for the status quo.  You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them.  About the only thing you can’t do is ignore them.  Because they change things.  They push the human race forward.  And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius.  Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.”—Apple’s Think Different brand image campaign designed by TBWA\Chiat\Day.

From computers to smartphones, Apple products are known for being stylish, powerful and pleasing to use. They are edited products that cut through complexity, by consciously leaving things out — not cramming every feature that came into an engineer’s head, an affliction known as “featuritis” that burdens so many technology products.

Great products, according to Mr. Jobs, are triumphs of “taste.” And taste, he explains, is a byproduct of study, observation and being steeped in the culture of the past and present, of “trying to expose yourself to the best things humans have done and then bring those things into what you are doing.”

His is not a product-design philosophy steered by committee or determined by market research. The Jobs formula, say colleagues, relies heavily on tenacity, patience, belief and instinct. He gets deeply involved in hardware and software design choices, which await his personal nod or veto.

Driven by demons, Jobs could drive those around him to fury and despair.  But his personality and products were interrelated, just as Apple’s hardware and software tended to be, as if part of an integrated system.  His tale is instructive and cautionary, filled with lessons about innovation, character, leadership, and values.

He was passionate about the quality of Apple’s products, and Apple as a lasting company of excellence.  This is what Steve Jobs said drove him to search perfection in everything he did in an area known as the interception of technology and humanities in Apple, NeXT and Pixar:

“What drove me?  I think most creative people want to express appreciation for being able to take advantage of the work that’s been done by others before us.  I didn’t invent the language or mathematics I use.  I make little of my own food, none of my own clothes.  Everything I do depends on other members of our species and the shoulders that we stand on.  And a lot of us want to contribute something back to our species and to add something to the flow.  It’s about trying to express something in the only way that most of us know how—because we can’t write Bob Dylan songs or Tom Stoppard plays.  We try to use the talents we do have to express our deep feelings to show our appreciation of all the contributions that came before us, and to add something to that flow.  That’s what has driven me.”

Steve Jobs, of course, was one member of a large team at Apple, even if he was the ultimate leader. Indeed, he has often described his role as a team leader. In choosing key members of his team, he looks for the multiplier factor of excellence.

Truly outstanding designers, engineers and managers, he says, are not just 10 percent, 20 percent or 30 percent better than merely very good ones, but 10 times better. Their contributions, he adds, are the raw material of “aha” products, which make users rethink their notions of, say, a music player or cellphone.

“Real innovation in technology involves a leap ahead, anticipating needs that no one really knew they had and then delivering capabilities that redefine product categories,” said David B. Yoffie, a professor at the Harvard Business School. “That’s what Steve Jobs has done.”

Mr. Jobs is undeniably a gifted marketer and showman, but he is also a skilled listener to the technology. He calls this “tracking vectors in technology over time,” to judge when an intriguing innovation is ready for the marketplace. Technical progress, affordable pricing and consumer demand all must sell to produce a blockbuster product.

I will certainly read this book again.  It should also be read by college students around the world so they can understand the meaning of innovation, creativity and business administration.  There’s so much to learn from this man from Cupertino.  As the Off switch was activated by the One Above, Steve Jobs ascended to the stars where he will shine forever.  He made his dent in this planet while he was here.  Good bye Steve, you are being missed already.

My next book is Moby Dick; or, the White Whale by Herman Melville.  Good Day.

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Credit: Amazon.com

Since I purchased my Kindle Fire, I had a problem viewing my blog, Lingua Franca.  The text and the images were too small.  I had to use my fingers (pinch gesture) to enlarge the content of the screen so I could read the text and enjoy the pictures.  This was cumbersome and time consuming.  I contacted Amazon’s Customer Online Chat Service and they came up with a complex solution to the problem.  I want to share this useful tip today. Maybe somebody out there is having the same problems and gritting their teeth and pulling their hair in desperation.

This is what the geeks at Amazon told me to do and fix the quirk.

Select the web site you’re having problems with.  Then tap the bottom of the screen to open up a menu with several options.  From left to right, tap the fourth icon which looks like a tiny book.  This will open up several more options.  Tap the tools icon which reads “Settings“, represented by a wrench and a screwdriver.

Next you will find a long list of options.  Scroll down until you find the option, “Desktop or mobile view”.  Tap this option.  A small window will pop up with the following options:

  1. Automatic:  Optimize for each website.
  2. Desktop:  Optimize for desktop view.
  3. Mobile:  Optimize for mobile.

Select the Mobile view.  This option will compress the Web site to the size of your Kindle Fire’s screen, bypassing the need to resize the screen to enlarge the text and pictures.  Then go ahead and refresh your Web site.  You’re done!  Now you’ll able to view your screen exactly the way it was designed to be—dazzling pictures and readable text.  Mission Accomplished!

This is exactly why I wanted.  I wonder why Amazon decided to hide this option deep down in an obscure corner of their software.  They forgot what intuitiveness and simplicity really mean.  Remember:  “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”

Walter Isaacson in his book about Steve Jobs, hits the nail right on the head, regarding the issue of minimalism and simplicity.  This is what he wrote that resonated in my head when I encountered this pesky software inconvenience:

“When our tools don’t work, we tend to blame ourselves, for being too stupid or not reading the manual or having too-fat fingers…When our tools are broken, we feel broken.  And when somebody fixes one, we feel a tiny bit more whole.”

And now you know the rest of the story.  Good Day.

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A mind forever voyaging through strange seas of thought, alone.”-William Wordsworth (1770-1850)

On October 5, 2011, Apple Inc. announced that co-founder Steve Jobs had died.  He was 56 years old.  The news exploded all over the world.  People were in a state of shock.  The man who was able to merge artistry with technology with a touch of gusto was longer amongst us.

Steve Jobs was a patron who could appreciate artistry and knew how it could be interwoven with technology and commerce.  Artistic creativity energized him, especially when it was connected to technology.  Jobs was enamored with beauty and wanted to reflect it in all his products.  His passion for perfection was so obsessive, that he would demand that even the parts inside the products out of the view of the consumer, had to be perfect as well.  Of course his clashes with people around him were classical.  He was abrasive, rude, cold, ironic, arrogant, narcissistic and a whole lot of other negative attributes.  But one thing you can’t deny is that he had a taste for beauty.  He used to say that “Great art stretches the taste, it doesn’t follow tastes.”

Jobs squeezed as much as he could the concepts of the minimalist movement.  Minimalist is one of the most significant movements of the 20th and early 21st century.  It isn’t the flashiest, or the most popular, but it arguably penetrated more fields than almost any other art or design trend.

Everything from user interfaces, to hardware designs, to car, to films and games, to the web and visual designs of today—all those fields and more were influenced by minimalism.  Industrial design should be simple, yet have an expressive spirit.  The Bauhaus movement emphasized rationality and functionality by employing clean lines and forms.  “God is in the Details” or “Less is More” were words often said by Ludwig Mims van der Rohe and Walter Gropius of the Minimalist movement.

Minimalism has been a business strategy for Apple Inc.—and maybe their most successful business strategy of all.  Minimalism built the brand that made their gadgets lust-worth to begin with.

I’m currently reading in my Amazon Kindle Fire, Steve Jobs’s authorized biography written by Walter Isaacson, dubbed Steve Jobs.  Many of the passages of his book are familiar to me, since I have been following Apple since the early eighties, when I acquired my first computer.  It was an Apple II-e.  Since then I have been an ardent follower of Steve Jobs and his roller-coaster ride both inside and out of Apple.

I still have an Apple pin which was given to me by the manager of Xerox Panama, which was the main distributor of Apple products in Panama.  He found out I was a heavy user of the Apple II-e and asked if I could provide seminars to their dealers about Apple’s hardware and software.  I was appalled at the request, and immediately accepted.  They paid me generously.  Apple products sold in Panama were in my hands before they went out to the dealers.  It was a most rewarding experience.

Below is a picture of this Apple pin which is very dear to me.  I later sold my Apple to a friend of mine after it couldn’t handle the workload I had as a Comptroller at Compañía Azucarera La Estrella, S.A. (a large sugar mill in the countryside).  I still have with me a spreadsheet program dubbed Multiplan, which Microsoft elaborated for Apple IIs.  Lotus 1-2-3 and Excel were not even on the drawing board.  During those early days of personal computers, the spreadsheet everybody used was Visicalc, conceived by Dan Bricklin and refined by Bob Frankston.  Visicalc was the first spreadsheet program available for personal computers. It is often considered the application that turned the microcomputer from a hobby for computer enthusiasts into a serious business tool.

Snapshot of an Apple pin which was given to me by the manager of Xerox Panama when I was selected to provide seminars for Apple dealers in Panama. It is a cherished treasure for me. Photo by ©Omar Upegui R.

Apple’s famous colorful logo was designed by Rob Janoff, art director working for Regis McKenna.  Janoff came up with a simple apple shape in two versions, one whole and the other with a bite taken out of it.  The first looked too much like a cherry so Jobs chose the one with a bite.  He also picked a version that was striped in six colors, with psychedelic hues sandwiched between whole-earth green and sky blue, even though that made printing the logo significantly more expensive.

Thank you Mr. Steve Jobs for making a dent in the world and proving to us that “Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication.”  Leonardo da Vinci and you were right.  Both of you belong to the same exceptional breed—Masters of the Universe.

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Jeff Bezos, current CEO of Amazon.com. Credit: Fortune Magazine

After the sudden departure of Steve Jobs from the scene, Apple seems to continue the culture quality promoted by its legendary Guru.  Tim Cook has taken over the reins of the company and is following Steven’s pattern of continuous improvements by the book.  The only problem is that Tim Cook is no Steve Jobs.  Geniuses like Steve Jobs are not up for sale for a dime a dozen.

As you probably know, Steve Jobs was booted out of Apple by John Scully in a bitter managerial quarrel, and was called back to the company after acquiring NeXT in 1996.  The deal brought Jobs back to the company he co-founded, and provided Apple with the NeXTSTEP codebase, from which the Mac OX was developed. Jobs was named Apple advisor in 1996, interim CEO in 1997, and CEO from 2000 until his resignation. He oversaw the development of the iMac, iTunes, iPod, iPhone, and iPad and the company Apple Retail Stores.  He also changed the business model of Apple.  Instead of being a computer company, it was now a global consumer electronics company.  It made Apple spin on the top of a pin and took the whole world by storm.

Will anybody step in and fill the vacuum left by Jobs?  Pundits are wondering and making all kinds of speculations.  The name that keeps coming back and back is Jeff Bezos, the smiling CEO of Amazon.com.  Out of the blue, he consolidated the largest and most productive online retailer the world has ever known.  Any imaginable product you can think of is only a click away at Amazon.com.  Its prices are outstanding and customer service is one of the best in the block.

Amazon became the symbol of book retailing over the Web and a trillion other things as well.  Then Bezos made a brilliant move.  He introduced the Kindle e-book reader and shook the foundations of the publishing industry.  Then he surprised us with the Kindle Fire tablet and once more opened the door to a new niche within the tablet business.  He wasn’t trying to kill the Apple iPad, he was just creating a new subcategory in the tablet business and mainstream America bought the idea.  I understand Amazon.com is selling approximately one million Kindle Fires per week.  Not bad for a book peddler.

Amazon, of course, is much more than a retailer these days. It’s also a web hosting service, with Amazon Web Service powering such giants as Netflix, Reddit, and Foursquare.

Of course, the company has also led the eBook revolution, and with its launch of the popular Kindle Fire, has created a unique and impressive way to get us all to carry around little touch-screen cash registers.

Meanwhile, Amazon Prime is almost certainly the best deal anywhere on the internet, giving customers free 2-day shipping, tons of streaming video, cloud storage, and numerous other perks for only $79/year.  Customers who subscribe to Prime spend more than double what other customers do, and it’s still an amazing deal.

Jeff Bezos is not content with what he has accomplished.  He wants more.  There are rumors out there, that Amazon.com is planning to launch a Kindle smart phone and enter the shark infested waters of the mobile phone arena.  The Web is buzzing about the intentions of Amazon working on a mobile phone which should be released sometime next year.  Now analysis of Amazon’s supply chain in the Far East has revealed that the 7″ tablet may just be the beginning of an assault on the touchscreen entertainment monopoly that Apple has built over the past decade. A smartphone—similar to Apple’s iPhone, but considerably cheaper—could be on sale by late next year.

Citigroup believes that it will cost Amazon between $150 to $170 to build the smartphone, and analysts say that the company could sell the device to carriers at or near cost. This is, in contrast, to other OEMs (original equipment manufacturers), such as HTC, who would price the smartphone at $243, in order to make 30 percent gross margin. Meanwhile, carriers pay $600 and upwards for the iPhone.

It’s already rumored that the handset will feature a dual-core TI OMAP 4 processor, which promises such benefits as high performance and low power consumption, PC-like browsing, and 1,080 pixel HD video capture and playback.

A Kindle smartphone makes sense for Amazon, but it would also be a huge risk.  The tech landscape is as crazy and disruptive as ever.  As we all know, the future is shrouded in uncertainty. But I wouldn’t bet against Jeff Bezos any time soon making a big splash in the cellphone pool.  Good Day.

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