Infinite Loop: How the World's Most Insanely Great Computer Company Went InsaneCurrency/Doubleday, 1999 - 597 sidor The inside story of how one of America's most beloved companies--Apple Computer--took off like a high-tech rocket--only to come crashing to Earth twenty years later. No company in modern times has been as successful at capturing the public's imagination as Apple Computer. From its humble beginnings in a suburban garage, Apple sparked the personal computer revolution, and its products and founders--Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak--quickly became part of the American myth. But something happened to Apple as it stumbled toward a premature middle age. For ten years, it lived off its past glory and its extraordinary products. Then, almost overnight, it collapsed in a two-year free fall. How did Apple lose its way? Why did the world still care so deeply about a company that had lost its leadership position? Michael S. Malone, from the unique vantage point of having grown up with the company's founders, and having covered Apple and Silicon Valley for years, sets out to tell the gripping behind-the-scenes story--a story that is even zanier than the business world thought. In essence, Malone claims, with only a couple of incredible inventions (the Apple II and Macintosh), and backed by an arrogance matched only by its corporate ineptitude, Apple managed to create a multibillion-dollar house of cards. And, like a faulty program repeating itself in an infinite loop, Apple could never learn from its mistakes. The miracle was not that Apple went into free fall, but that it held up for so long. Within the pages of Infinite Loop, we discover a bruising portrait of the megalomaniacal Steve Jobs and an incompetent John Sculley, as well as the kind of political backstabbings, stupidmistakes, and overweening egos more typical of a soap opera than a corporate history. Infinite Loop is almost as wild and unpredictable, as exhilarating and gut-wrenching, as the story of Apple itself. |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-3 av 81
Sida 53
... meeting , held on March 5 , 1975 , drew thirty - two people from all over the Bay Area . All of them jammed into Gordon French's garage . The high point of that first meeting was a demonstration of a brand- new Altair that Berkeley's ...
... meeting , held on March 5 , 1975 , drew thirty - two people from all over the Bay Area . All of them jammed into Gordon French's garage . The high point of that first meeting was a demonstration of a brand- new Altair that Berkeley's ...
Sida 221
... meeting with IBM . For the rest of his life ( he would die in 1994 in a drunken fall in a saloon ) , Kildall would protest that he was flying to a business appointment and that Gates had not fully explained the importance of the meeting ...
... meeting with IBM . For the rest of his life ( he would die in 1994 in a drunken fall in a saloon ) , Kildall would protest that he was flying to a business appointment and that Gates had not fully explained the importance of the meeting ...
Sida 485
... meeting , look thoughtful , answer their complaints sincerely and not say anything that might scare off Sun and queer the deal . Just run the gauntlet and keep telling yourself that all will be forgiven and forgotten in a few days when ...
... meeting , look thoughtful , answer their complaints sincerely and not say anything that might scare off Sun and queer the deal . Just run the gauntlet and keep telling yourself that all will be forgiven and forgotten in a few days when ...
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Infinite Loop: How the World's Most Insanely Great Computer Company Went Insane Michael Shawn Malone Ingen förhandsgranskning - 1999 |
Vanliga ord och fraser
already announced Apple Computer Apple employees Apple II Apple's asked Atari began biggest Bill Gates building called chip clone company's computer industry corporate create Cupertino customers disk drive dream early electronics engineering everything executive fact finally Gassée Gil Amelio going Graziano hardware Homebrew Intel John Sculley knew later layoffs Lisa look machine Macintosh market share Markkula Meanwhile meeting microprocessor Microsoft Mike Markkula Mike Scott million minicomputer months never once operating system Pepsi percent personal computer played PowerBook problem puter Raskin Regis McKenna Sculley's seemed sell Semiconductor Silicon Valley Spindler start-up Stephen Wozniak Steve Jobs Steve Jobs's story strategy success talk tech thing told took turned wanted weeks Woz's Yocam young