Podcasts about next computer

  • 29PODCASTS
  • 34EPISODES
  • 40mAVG DURATION
  • ?INFREQUENT EPISODES
  • Oct 27, 2023LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about next computer

Latest podcast episodes about next computer

DoctorApple NEWS
DoctorApple NEWS 215

DoctorApple NEWS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 15:58


27/10/23 - Next Computer, MacOS X Panther, iPod Color, Evento Apple Outubro, macOS Sonoma 14.1, iOS 17.1, iPadOS 17,1, watchOS 10.1, Right to Repair, AppleTV redesign, Dados em vidro, Qualcomm bluetooth e wifi, Padrão USB-c https://www.doctorapple.com.br

TechTimeRadio
174: Activist Hackers Are Racing Into the Israel-Hamas War - for Both Sides. A first-of-its-kind Football Helmet, and a Chatbot Encouraged a Man to Kill the Queen of England. Gwen Way Reviews a New Gadget Lucyd | Air Date: 10/8 - 10/14/23

TechTimeRadio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2023 56:14 Transcription Available


Can you imagine a world where the Israel-Hamas conflict explosively intersects with cyber warfare? Welcome to a scintillating episode of TechTime with Nathan Mumm, where we navigate the complex terrain of geopolitics colliding with technology.  DDoS attacks against Israeli platforms aren't just disrupting communications, they're spreading pro-Palestine messages, blurring the line between activism and cyber warfare. But that's not all. We also tackle the curious case of a chatbot that may have incited a plan to attack the Queen of England!Who said technology couldn't make sports more accessible? Prepare to have your minds blown as we discuss the revolutionary use of specially designed helmets by the Gallaudet University football team to aid deaf and hard-of-hearing players. And speaking of revolution, we take a trip down memory lane to explore the enduring impact of Steve Jobs' absence and subsequent return to Apple. We also raise a toast to Ada Lovelace Day, a celebration of the phenomenal achievements of women in STEM. Finally, let's take a futuristic dive into the world of eyewear with the LUCYD smart eyeglasses. Our expert Gwen Way, will make you rethink everything you know about glasses. On a lighter note, our whiskey connoisseur Mark Gregoire introduces us to the tantalizing world of Wild Turkey Master's Keep Unforgotten, a sublime blend of straight bourbon and rye whiskies. So, buckle up and join us for an hour of exhilarating technology insights, controversies, and innovations.Episode 174: Starts at 1:29This week on TechTime with Nathan Mumm®, Activist Hackers Are Racing Into the Israel-Hamas War—for Both Sides,  Amazon is hosting Prime Day 2.0, "Prime Big Deal Days," but Nathan has found better deals on his Nugget of the Week. Finally, we finish the MGM Resorts sage from their ransomware attack that led to a $100 million loss and data theft, and they cared little about your data as they decided not to pay the ransom. We also look at how Steve Jobs's departure from Apple might be what now makes this company so successful—all this plus so much more.Join us on TechTime Radio with Nathan Mumm, the show that makes you go "Hmmm" Technology news of the week for October 8th - 14th, 2023--- [Now on Today's Show]: Starts at 3:50--- [Top Stories in Technology]: Starts at 6:04Activist Hackers Are Racing Into the Israel-Hamas War—for Both Sides - https://tinyurl.com/4jxcyx7a How a chatbot encouraged a man to kill the Queen - https://tinyurl.com/yc3t56hxA deaf football team will debut a 5G-connected augmented reality helmet to call plays - https://tinyurl.com/ymnypaj4 --- [Pick of the Day - Whiskey Tasting Reveal]: Starts at 26:27Wild Turkey Master's Keep Unforgotten | 105 Proof| $200 MSRP--- Gadgets and Gear with Gwen]: Starts at 29:40Lucyd Eyewear brings ChatGPT to the lens --- [This Week in Technology]: Starts at 39:52October 12, 1988 - Steve Job introduces the NeXT Computer from NeXT Inc. --- [Marc's Whiskey Mumble]: Starts at 43:05Marc Gregoire's review of this week's whiskey--- [Technology Fail of the Week]: Starts at 47:53This week's “Technology Fail” comes to us from MGM Resorts --- [Mike's Mesmerizing Moment brought to us by StoriCoffee®]: Starts at 50:33Question: Is Privacy of Information Something that People Care About Today?   --- [Nathan Nugget]: Starts at 52:10Forget Prime Day II and look for these great deals.  --- [Pick of the Day Whiskey Review]: Starts at 54:30Wild Turkey Master's Keep Unforgotten | 105 Proof| $200 MSRPMike: Thumbs UpNathan: Thumbs Up

Designer Sketches
Paul Rand's Thoughts on Design: What was he thinking? (#3)

Designer Sketches

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2023 63:28


Paul Rand and his work have been much discussed and extolled: Thoughts on Design has been called “a manifesto” and “a bible on modern graphic design.” When Steve Jobs hired him to design the logo for NeXT Computer in 1986, he called him “the greatest living graphic designer.” In a speech honoring Rand (at which he was present), George Lois of Esquire magazine said, “Every art director and graphic designer in the world should kiss his ass.”In the introduction to Thoughts on Design, Paul Rand acknowledges that “many writers and philosophers… have helped to crystalize my thinking.” He calls out John Dewey and Roger Fry in particular. He also refers to some characters from ancient Greece and Rome, including Polykleitos, Vitruvius, and Plato. Who were these Rand influencers? And what insights might they offer today's designer?As I re-read this exposition of Rand's principles, I wasn't finding a lot of relevance to my work today — but then, I'm not an art director or graphic designer — so I decided to go a level deeper, reading source material from Dewey and Fry and revisiting ancient works, to see what I could take away from these influencers. In doing so, I explore questions like: How far back does the idea of “form follows function” go? What do we find so fascinating and instructive about the proportions of the human body? How does Plato's views on the early education of philosophers relate to the role of humor in design?I hope you'll join me on this alternative approach to learning from this towering figure of design history.Outline* The Beautiful and the Useful (1:54)* Fascination with human proportion (18:03)* Confusing things (28:38)* Takeaways* Role of humor (48:37)* Tell the story of your solution (52:17)* Be present at the point of execution (58:36)* Conclusion (61:48)References* Thoughts on Design book (Goodreads)* Paul Rand book by Steven Heller (Goodreads)* Polykleitos (Wikipedia)* Vitruvius (Wikipedia)* Art as Experience by John Dewey (Amazon)* Transformations by Roger Fry (Google Books)* A Theory of User Delight: Why Usability Is the Foundation for Delightful Experiences (Nielsen Norman Group)* How old is the practice of User Experience Design? (HEY World) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit designersketches.substack.com

Video Game Newsroom Time Machine

Super Mario Brothers hits theatres, Blast Processing brings sega to the next level & Id shows off Doom These stories and many more on this episode of the VGNRTM This episode we will look back at the biggest stories in and around the video game industry in May 1993.  As always,  we'll mostly be using magazine cover dates, and those are of course always a bit behind the actual events. Alex Smith of They Create Worlds is our cohost.  Check out his podcast here: https://www.theycreateworlds.com/ and order his book here: https://www.theycreateworlds.com/book Get us on your mobile device: Android:  https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly92aWRlb2dhbWVuZXdzcm9vbXRpbWVtYWNoaW5lLmxpYnN5bi5jb20vcnNz iOS:      https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/video-game-newsroom-time-machine And if you like what we are doing here at the podcast, don't forget to like us on your podcasting app of choice, YouTube, and/or support us on patreon! https://www.patreon.com/VGNRTM Send comments on Mastodon @videogamenewsroomtimemachine@oldbytes.space Or twitter @videogamenewsr2 Or Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vgnrtm Or videogamenewsroomtimemachine@gmail.com Links: 7 Minutes in Heaven: Bubsy in: Claws Encounters of the Furred Kind     Video Version:  https://www.patreon.com/posts/85137884     https://www.mobygames.com/game/7145/bubsy-in-claws-encounters-of-the-furred-kind/ Corrections:     April 1993 Ep - https://www.patreon.com/posts/april-1993-83830415     Ethan's fine site The History of How We Play: https://thehistoryofhowweplay.wordpress.com/     https://www.mobygames.com/game/12795/king-arthurs-world/     https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O_YKqu0uOfs     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NeXT_Computer 1993: Morici to unify Capcom         Play Meter May 1993 pg. 3     Joe Morici - Capcom https://www.patreon.com/posts/37289815 Capcom brings Street Fighter to Genesis     https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AGamePro_US_046.pdf&page=166         https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n9/mode/1up?view=theater     Joe Morici - Capcom  https://www.patreon.com/posts/37289815     https://www.mobygames.com/game/6239/street-fighter-ii-the-world-warrior/     https://www.mobygames.com/game/8053/street-fighter-ii-champion-edition/ Sega explains Blast Processing at CES     https://archive.org/details/video-games-computer-entertainment-may-1993/page/n12/mode/1up Sega to offer games over cable         Play Meter May 1993 pg. 3     Replay May 1993 pg. 33        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellaview Marty announced     https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamingMonthly_201902/Electronic%20Gaming%20Monthly%20Issue%20046%20%28May%201993%29/page/n51/mode/1up     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FM_Towns_Marty     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_(console) Return to Zork to come to 3DO     https://archive.org/details/video-games-computer-entertainment-may-1993/page/n18/mode/1up        https://www.mobygames.com/game/1219/return-to-zork/     https://www.mobygames.com/game/company:2/platform:3do/sort:title/page:1/      Nintendo launches barebones Gameboy     https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n9/mode/1up?view=theater     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_Boy Sonic brings Game Gears to HoJos     https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n13/mode/1up?view=theater     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Game_Gear PDAs take CES by storm     https://worldradiohistory.com/Archive-Poptronics/90s/93/PE-1993-05.pdf  pg. 5     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personal_digital_assistant     https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/PC/GEOS      Doom previewed     https://archive.org/details/PC-Player-German-Magazine-1993-05/page/n5/mode/1up     https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n5/mode/1up?view=theater     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doom_(1993_video_game)     https://www.mobygames.com/game/1068/doom/     https://www.mobygames.com/game/1068/doom/cover/group-72091/cover-194558/ First Pentium systems ship     https://archive.org/details/computerworld2719unse/page/16/mode/1up?view=theater Intel sues AMD     https://archive.org/details/computerworld2718unse/page/6/mode/1up?view=theater Intel sees stock soar     https://archive.org/details/Computer_Gaming_World_Issue_106/page/n9/mode/1up Plug-and-play coming to PC     https://archive.org/details/BYTE-1993-05/page/n35/mode/1up?view=theater Mac compatibles arrive too late     https://archive.org/details/BYTE-1993-05/page/n35/mode/1up?view=theater      Layoffs hit computer game makers     https://archive.org/details/questbusters-v10n05/page/n1/mode/1up     Wild Bill Stealey - Microprose https://www.patreon.com/posts/36710924     Joel Billings - SSI https://www.patreon.com/posts/36827469 Commodore clocks in big in the UK     https://archive.org/details/theone-magazine-56/page/n14/mode/1up?view=theater     https://www.pagetable.com/?p=547 The Future of C64 game software looks bleak     https://commodore.software/downloads?task=download.send&id=14993&catid=721&m=0  pg. 13      Binary Asylum formed     https://archive.org/details/theone-magazine-56/page/n18/mode/1up?view=theater     https://www.mobygames.com/company/5576/binary-asylum/ Cable providers move into information services     https://archive.org/details/computerworld2712unse20/page/n6/mode/1up?view=theater TSN teams up with AT&T     https://archive.org/details/questbusters-v10n05/page/n1/mode/1up     https://www.filfre.net/2018/02/the-sierra-network/ Interplay locks down Star Trek license     https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AGamePro_US_046.pdf&page=166         https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n10/mode/1up?view=theater     https://www.mobygames.com/group/11345/star-trek-licensees/sort:date/ Shaq signs with EA     https://archive.org/details/ElectronicGamesLC2/Electronic%20Games%20LC2%20Issue%208%20%28May%201993%29/page/n9/mode/1up?view=theater     https://www.mobygames.com/game/14585/shaq-fu/ Street Fighter action figures debut     https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AGamePro_US_046.pdf&page=166     https://www.3djoes.com/the-gi-joe-yearbook-a-visual-index-of-carded-figures.html Computerland cuts back     https://archive.org/details/computerworld2719unse/page/6/mode/1up?view=theater      Software industry enlists USTR to fight piracy     https://ustr.gov/about-us         https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:GamePro_US_046.pdf&page=167 UK court expands software copyright protection         https://archive.org/details/BYTE-1993-05/page/n31/mode/1up      Super Mario Brothers hits theaters     https://archive.org/details/video-games-computer-entertainment-may-1993/page/n17/mode/1up        https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0108255/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 Superman is dead     https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AGamePro_US_046.pdf&page=51        https://www.fortressofbaileytude.com/wizard-superman-tribute-edition/ Recommended Links: The History of How We Play: https://thehistoryofhowweplay.wordpress.com/ Gaming Alexandria: https://www.gamingalexandria.com/wp/ They Create Worlds: https://tcwpodcast.podbean.com/ Digital Antiquarian: https://www.filfre.net/ The Arcade Blogger: https://arcadeblogger.com/ Retro Asylum: http://retroasylum.com/category/all-posts/ Retro Game Squad: http://retrogamesquad.libsyn.com/ Playthrough Podcast: https://playthroughpod.com/ Retromags.com: https://www.retromags.com/ Modo Historia: http://guillermocrespi.com/modohistoriapod/ Games That Weren't - https://www.gamesthatwerent.com/ Sound Effects by Ethan Johnson of History of How We Play. Copyright Karl Kuras Find out on the VGNRTM doom nintendo sega mario shaqfu star trek sierra intel amd fm towns marty gameboy street fighter  

DAC-Cast
Episode 8: John Sanguinetti Reaches New Heights & Makes Expensive Mistakes

DAC-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 42:18


Part 3: Dr. John Sanguinetti stops by DAC-Cast to share his story and key moments in his career. Dr. Sanguinetti has been active in computer architecture, performance analysis, design verification, and electronic design automation for many years. After working as a design verification engineer at Ardent Computer and NeXT Computer, he founded Chronologic Simulation in 1991 and was the principal architect of VCS, the Verilog Compiled Simulator. He was a co-founder of C2 Design Automation, now Forte Design Systems, where he served as Chief Technical Officer for 15 years. He is a fellow of the ACM and now serves as Chairman at Adapt-IP. 

Hoy en la Historia de Israel
 Paul Rand, uno de los pioneros del diseño gráfico moderno

Hoy en la Historia de Israel

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2023 1:58


"Todo es diseño, ¡todo!" Con esta frase tan poderosa, Paul Rand capturó la esencia de su filosofía creativa. Nacido como Peretz Rosenbaum en 1914, en Brooklyn, Nueva York, su origen judío influyó profundamente en su enfoque artístico y en su visión del diseño. Paul Rand comprendía que el diseño no se limitaba únicamente a los aspectos visuales, sino que también tenía el poder de transmitir una historia y una identidad cultural. Su herencia judía le brindó una sensibilidad única, permitiéndole fusionar elementos tradicionales con un enfoque moderno y minimalista. A lo largo de su ilustre carrera, Rand dejó una marca indeleble al trabajar con marcas de renombre internacional como la cadena de televisión ABC, IBM y UPS. Su talento excepcional y su visión innovadora le llevaron a colaborar con la empresa NeXT Computer, fundada por el legendario Steve Jobs después de su salida de Apple. Rand diseñó el logotipo de NeXT, combinando simplicidad y sofisticación para representar la visión de la compañía en el campo de la informática. Paul Rand se convirtió en una figura influyente en el mundo del diseño, dejando un legado duradero. Sus contribuciones revolucionarias y su habilidad para fusionar lo tradicional con lo moderno continúan inspirando a diseñadores de todo el mundo.

Ask The Experts
Your Next Computer with Trollbytes

Ask The Experts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 22:35


computers next computer
SaaS Bazen Podcast
166 - Duco Sickinghe (Fortino) over zijn samenwerking met Steve Jobs en advies voor SaaS founders

SaaS Bazen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2023 44:40


Wat leer je van samenwerken met Steve Jobs? Ik vroeg het Duco Sickinghe van Fortino Capital. Hij werkte bij NeXT Computer rechtstreeks samen met Steve en vertelt in deze aflevering van SaaS Bazen welke impact dat gehad heeft op zijn carrière. En, er waren meer vragen te stellen. Want Duco heeft een indrukwekkende loopbaan achter rug en is een drijvende kracht achter het Europese tech ecosysteem. Met Fortino investeert hij in (SaaS) bedrijven en kan daarom veel vertellen over het runnen van een SaaS business. Tune in op het gesprek via je podcast app! Fortino: https://www.fortinocapital.com/ Podcast sponsor Leadinfo: leadinfo.com/saasbazen SaaS Bazen Meetup Wil je meer op de hoogte blijven van ontwikkelingen in de SaaS wereld en zoek je naar een groep trusted advisors? In de SaaS Bazen Meetup krijg je beide: in een tweewekelijkse virtuele Meetup praten Jan Aleman en Johan de Wit je bij over SaaS, krijg je case studies van andere SaaS bedrijven te zien en kun je zelf actief deelnemen aan het gesprek. We behandelen alle thema's die relevant zijn voor jou als SaaS Baas: funding, sales, internationalisatie, het bouwen van een team, marketing, you name it. Je bent van harte welkom om een gratis proefsessie bij te wonen! saasbazen.nl/saas-bazen-meetup/ Volg SaaS Bazen op LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/saasbazen/ Volg SaaS Bazen op Instagram: www.instagram.com/saasbazen/ Word lid van SaaS Bazen! SaaS Bazen is de plaats waar software ondernemers bij elkaar komen, om te bouwen aan een winstgevende SaaS business. Stop met het wiel opnieuw uitvinden en krijg toegang tot de kennis en connecties die je nodig hebt om betere beslissingen te nemen. Je bent in een paar klikken lid en word direct onderdeel van het grootste SaaS ondernemersnetwerk van Nederland. Wat je krijgt: 80+ uur aan interviews met andere SaaS Bazen, 2 groepsmeetings per maand met andere SaaS Bazen en een online omgeving waarin je onbeperkt kunt chatten, vragen kunt stellen en in contact staat met ca. 300 andere SaaS Bazen. Word lid: saasbazen.nl/lidmaatschappen/

Double Tap Canada
Steven's Next Computer & Virtual Assistants

Double Tap Canada

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 53:33


Today on the show, Steven and Shaun discuss some of the big news stories coming out of CSUN's big assistive technology conference taking place in California. There's lots of excitement around the announcement from Orbit Research, who have partnered with AccesMind, to produce a new type of computer for blind people with a QWERTY keyboard and 40-cell Braille display built in. It's called the Optima and is completely configurable before and after purchase. It's likely to be Steven's next computer but will it be his last? Also, there's even more excitement around ChatGPT than usual following Open AI's announcement of the upgrade to version 4, which lets users scan images and get results from them. For example, being able to take a picture of the contents of your fridge and then have Open AI offer you a recipe of what you could make with those contents. The blind community is equally excited as Open AI has partnered with the popular app Be My Eyes to create a new Virtual Assistant in the app, allowing you to check the colour and design of a piece of clothing, up to searching a menu for specific things. And they're not alone. Envision AI is also showing off at CSUN this year their new feature upgrade coming soon that will embed ChaptGPT capabilities into their smart glasses. All this news and more plus your feedback on today's busy show. Email us with your feedback - email feedback@doubletaponair.com or call 1-877-803-4567 and leave us a voicemail. You can also find us across social media @DoubleTapOnair.

DAC-Cast
Episode 5: John Sanguinetti Beats the 600lb Gorillas

DAC-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 29:18


Part 2: Dr. John Sanguinetti stops by DAC-Cast to share his story and key moments in his career. Dr. Sanguinetti has been active in computer architecture, performance analysis, design verification, and electronic design automation for many years. After working as a design verification engineer at Ardent Computer and NeXT Computer, he founded Chronologic Simulation in 1991 and was the principal architect of VCS, the Verilog Compiled Simulator. He was a co-founder of C2 Design Automation, now Forte Design Systems, where he served as Chief Technical Officer for 15 years. He is a fellow of the ACM and now serves as Chairman at Adapt-IP.

DAC-Cast
Episode 4: John Sanguinetti's Light Bulb Moment

DAC-Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2023 37:52


Part 1: Dr. John Sanguinetti stops by DAC-Cast to share his story and key moments in his career. Dr. Sanguinetti has been active in computer architecture, performance analysis, design verification, and electronic design automation for many years. After working as a design verification engineer at Ardent Computer and NeXT Computer, he founded Chronologic Simulation in 1991 and was the principal architect of VCS, the Verilog Compiled Simulator. He was a co-founder of C2 Design Automation, now Forte Design Systems, where he served as Chief Technical Officer for 15 years. He is a fellow of the ACM and now serves as Chairman at Adapt-IP.

Show and Tell
SHOW and TELL 1/25/2023

Show and Tell

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2023 21:36


To show and share a project at 7:30pm Eastern today, view the chat or in discord https://adafru.it/discord and look for the JOIN link to join. For best results, be on a wired network connection and use a headset and microphone. Maker Melissa @00:24 Circut Python installer for https://circuitpython.org/ Scott @02:53 Circuit Python on smartwatch jepler (he/they) @06:10 NeXT Computer adapted for Circuit Python John Park @09:29 NIntendo NES emulator running on Pico w/DVI and Audio out

Userlandia
What's Inside A NeXT Computer Accessory Kit?

Userlandia

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 27:59


Steve Jobs thought he would user in the NeXT generation of computing, but his little black cube of darkness flopped. When you bought a $10,000 computer, what did you get in the box? There's books, disks, tools, and stickers too. Take the NeXTstep with me as I explore a complete package of NeXT accessories included with the first NeXT computers. See the Blog Post for Transcript and Links: https://www.userlandia.com/home/2022/11/next-accessory-kit Published November 23, 2022 Thanks to Steve from Mac84 for providing some extra VCF Midwest Auction footage! https://www.youtube.com/@Mac84 -=- Chapters -=- 00:00:00 - Intro 00:00:24 - Acquiring NeXT Accessories 00:04:43 - NeXT Brochure - Hardware 00:09:14 - NeXT Brochure - Software 00:13:52 - Quick Start Card and Extras 00:15:12 - NeXT Documentation Library 00:21:02 - NeXT Logo Sticker Sheet 00:24:21 - Magneto-Optical Disks 00:24:57 - NeXT Hex Driver 00:26:07 - Conclusion 00:27:05 - Outro & Credits -=- Subscribe -=- Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/userlandia/id1588648631 Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1588648631/userlandia Pocket Casts:   https://pca.st/m4tegn1u Spotify:  https://open.spotify.com/show/79LO3vO9avAt3yCLpNWark Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly91c2VybGFuZGlhLmxpYnN5bi5jb20vcnNz -=- Contact -=- Follow on Mastodon! - https://bitbang.social/@kefkafloyd Follow Userlandia: @userlandiashow - http://twitter.com/userlandiashow Follow Dan: @kefkafloyd -  http://twitter.com/kefkafloyd Visit The Website: https://www.userlandia.com Email us: feedback@userlandia.com Join The Userlandia Discord: https://discord.com/invite/z2jmF93 Theme Song by Space Vixen: https://spacevixen.bandcamp.com Follow them on Twitter @SpaceVixenMusic: https://twitter.com/spacevixenmusic

IoT For All Podcast
What's Driving Change in the IoT Industry? | Bsquare's Ralph C. Derrickson & Matthew Ingulls

IoT For All Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 28:06


Ralph and Matthew begin by introducing themselves and their company before getting into specific use cases and solutions for their work. They then dig deeper into how IoT technology has evolved and the role of security in IoT solutions. At the end of the podcast, Ryan, Ralph, and Matthew talk look at IoT from the adopter side with a discussion on managing expectations and advice for companies starting their IoT journey.Ralph joined Bsquare in March 2019 as president, CEO, and board member. Ralph is a highly accomplished business leader with a wide range of experience using technology to create innovative products, services, and business models. Before joining Bsquare, Ralph was president and CEO of Carena, a pioneer in developing virtual health care delivery until its acquisition by Avizia in 2017. Ralph served as SVP of Corporate Development until Avizia's acquisition by American Well in July 2018. Before Carena, Ralph was managing director of venture investments at Vulcan Capital, where he was actively involved in the investment, growth, and operations of the firm's technology portfolio companies. Ralph has served for 15 years on the board of Perficient (PRFT), an IT services firm with expertise in e-commerce digital transformation. Ralph has senior leadership experience at Metricom, Starwave Corporation (acquired by Walt Disney), and NeXT Computer (acquired by Apple Computer).Matthew oversees engineering at Bsquare. Before joining Bsquare, Matthew was Engineering Manager at MPC Data Inc in Redmond, WA. He worked for many years at MPC Data Limited in the UK, most recently as a Principal Software Engineer. Now based in the UK again, he has extensive experience gained over more than 20 years of building software teams and creating embedded software and cloud systems. Matthew has developed systems across many industries and technologies, including manufacturing and industrial, cutting-edge consumer electronics, and automotive. Matthew has a BSc in Computing and Real-Time Computer Systems from the University of Gloucestershire.

CTO Studio
Emotional Literacy Tools For The CTO, with Patty Leeper facilitating a 7CTOs Forum

CTO Studio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2022 25:21


Patty Leeper, formerly with NeXT Computer and now Executive Coach talks a group of CTOs through recognizing emotions in ourselves and in others. Patty is also a Facilitator at 7CTOs and can be contacted at patty@7ctos.com.Check out https://pattyleeper.comCheck out https://7ctos.com/podcast

DoctorApple NEWS
DoctorApple NEWS 120

DoctorApple NEWS

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2021 14:45


29/10/21 - Next Computer, Dell lidera nas escolas, macos x panther, lançamento ipod, ipod photo, atualização macos 12 monterey, atualização macos big sur 11.6.1, atualização ios 15.1 ipadOS 15.1, glicose no apple watch, resultados fiscais apple, monterey problema com hub, russia alterações app store, facebook papers, UE regulando lojas digitais, https://www.doctorapple.com.br

ue ipados next computer
The History of Computing
Ross Perot For President

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2021 10:56


Ross Perot built two powerhouse companies and changed the way politicians communicate with their constituents. Perot was an Eagle Scout who went on to join the US Naval Academy in 1949, and served in the Navy until the late 1950s. He then joined the IBM sales organization and one year ended up meeting his quota in the second week of the year. He had all kinds of ideas for new things to do and sell, but no one was interested. So he left and formed a new company called Electronic Data Systems, or EDS, in 1962. You see, these IBM mainframes weren't being used for time sharing so most of the time they were just sitting idle. So he could sell the unused time from one company to another. Perot learned from the best. As with IBM he maintained a strict dress code. Suits, no facial hair, and a high and tight crew cut as you'd find him still sporting years after his Navy days. And over time they figured out many of these companies didn't have anyone capable of running these machines in the first place, so they could also step in and become a technology outsourcer, doing maintenance and servicing machines. Not only that, but they were perfectly situated to help process all the data from the new Medicare and Medicaid programs that were just starting up. States had a lot of new paperwork to process and that meant computers. He hired Morton Meyerson out at Bell Helicopter in 1966, who would become the president and effectively created the outsourcing concept in computing. Meyerson would become the president of EDS before leaving to take a series of executive roles at other organizations, including the CTO at General Motors in the 1980s before retiring. EDS went public in 1968. He'd taken $1,000 in seed money from his wife Margot to start the company, and his stake was now worth $350 million, which would rise sharply in the ensuing years as the company grew. By the 1970s they were practically printing cash. They were the biggest insurance data provider and added credit unions then financial markets and were perfectly positioned to help build the data networks that ATMs and point of sale systems would use. By the start of 1980 they were sitting on a quarter billion dollars in revenues and 8,000 employees. They continued to expand into new industries with more transactional needs, adding airlines and travel. He sold in 1984 to General Motors for $2.5 billion and Perot got $700 million personally. Meyerson stayed on to run the company and by 1990 their revenues topped $5 billion and neared 50,000 employees. Perot just couldn't be done in business. He was good at it. So in 1988 he started another firm, Perot Systems. The company grew quickly. Perot knew how to sell, how to build sales teams, and how to listen to customers and build services products they wanted. Perot again looked for an effective leader and tapped Meyerson yet again, who became the CEO of Perot Systems from 1992 to 1998. Perot's son Ross Jr took over the company. In 2008, EDS and their 170,000 employees was sold to Hewlett-Packard for $13.9 billion and in 2009 Perot Systems was sold to Dell for $3.9 billion. Keep in mind that Morton Meyerson was a mentor to Michael Dell. When they were sold, Perot Systems had 23,000 employees and $2.8 billion in revenues. That's roughly a 1.4x multiple of revenues, which isn't as good as the roughly 2x multiple Perot got off EDS - but none too shabby given that by then multiples were down for outsourcers. Based on his work and that of others, they'd built two companies worth nearly $20 billion - before 2010, employing nearly 200,000 people. Along the way, Perot had some interesting impacts other than just building so many jobs for so many humans. He passed on an opportunity to invest in this little company called Microsoft. So when Steve Jobs left Apple and looked for investors he jumped on board, pumping $20 million into NeXT Computer, and getting a nice exit when the company went to Apple for nearly half a billion. Perot was philanthropic. He helped a lot of people coming home from various armed services in his lifetime. He was good to those he loved. He gave $10 million to have his friend Morton Meyerson's name put on the Dallas Symphony Orchestra's Symphony Center. And he was interested in no BS politics. Yet politics had been increasingly polarized since Nixon. So Perot also ran for president of the US in 1992, against George Bush and Bill Clinton. He didn't win but he flooded the airwaves with common sense arguments about government inefficiency and a declining market for doing business. He showed computer graphics with all the charts and graphs you can imagine. And while he didn't get even one vote in the electoral college did manage to get 19 percent of the vote. His message was one of populism. Take the country back, stop deficit spending just like he ran his companies, and that persists with various wings of especially the Republican Party to this day. Especially in Perot's home state of Texas. He didn't win, but he effectively helped define the Contract with America that that Newt Gingrich and the 90s era of oversized suit jacket Republicans used to as a strategy. He argued for things to help the common people - not politicians. Ironically, those that took much of his content actually did just the opposite, slowed down the political machine by polarizing the public. And allowed deficit spending to increase on their watch. He ran again in 1996 but this time got far less votes and didn't end up running for office again. He had a similar impact on IBM. Around 30 years after leaving the company, his success in services was one of the many inspirations for IBM pivoting into services as well. By then the services industry was big enough for plenty of companies to thrive and while sales could be competitive they all did well as personal computing put devices on desks across the world and those devices needed support. Perot died in 2019, one of the couple hundred richest people in the US. Navy Lieutenant. Founder. Philanthropist. Texan. Father. Husband. His impact on the technology industry was primarily around seeing waste. Wasted computing time. Wasted staffing where more efficient outsourcing paradigms were possible. He inspired massive shifts in the industry that persist to this day.

RNZ: Saturday Morning
Prof David Hutchinson: NZ leading next computer revolution

RNZ: Saturday Morning

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2021 36:28


Dunedin-based quantum physicist Professor David Hutchinson believes New Zealand can lead the world in what is considered to be the next computer revolution, photonics.

Keen On Democracy
Amit Katwala on the Next Computer Revolution

Keen On Democracy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2021 33:31


In this episode of "Keen On", Andrew is joined by Amit Katwala, the author of "Quantum Computing: How it Works and Why it Could Change the World", to discuss how close we are to seeing quantum computers become a widespread reality. Amit Katwala is an award-winning sports journalist, and Senior Writer at Sport magazine. He has written in-depth interview pieces with some of the biggest names in sport, including David Beckham, Lewis Hamilton, Ronnie O'Sullivan, Stuart Broad and Jessica Ennis-Hill. Amit's first book, The Athletic Brain – how neuroscience is revolutionising sport weaves together cutting-edge science and interviews with elite athletes to show how understanding the brain could unlock new levels of sporting performance. It will be published in August 2016 by Simon & Schuster. In 2012, Amit was nominated for Young Sportswriter of the Year by the Sports Journalists' Association and won Young Journalist of the Year at the GG2 Leadership Awards. Amit grew up in Bournemouth and studied Experimental Psychology at St Hugh's College, Oxford University. He supports AFC Bournemouth and Manchester United. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Le digital pour tous #BonjourPPC
Et si Steve Jobs avait créé The Facebook en 2004 ?

Le digital pour tous #BonjourPPC

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2021 9:41


Bienvenue dans cette uchronie, un récit d'évènements fictifs à partir d'un point de départ historique. Lorsqu’il a été limogé de chez Apple en 1985, Steve Jobs a d’abord monté Next Computer. Mais ce que personne ne pressentait à l’époque c’est que ce génie du marketing avait un projet secret en tête. Monter un logiciel complètement révolutionnaire qui allait permettre aux personnes du monde entier de se connecter entre eux. De passage à Harvard en juin 2005, il ne s’en cache plus. Son projet est prêt et c’est à Harvard qu’il a monté son projet avec des étudiants. Son objectif ? Faire le lien et c’est d’ailleurs la première histoire qu’il raconte en juin 2005. Faire le lien. C’est aussi l’objectif de son projet. Un projet grandiose, mondial, époustouflant. Un projet que Steve Jobs appelle The Facebook ! D’où lui est venu l’idée ? Quelles ambitions y a-t-il derrière sa démarche ? PS : Et si tu veux écouter l’intégralité du live sur YouTube, le lien magique est ici https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdRaOOoB5k0 Lien vers le groupe Discord si ça te dit de nous rejoindre et de pratiquer le cozy web https://discord.gg/nGsejwX Lien pour t’abonner à la newsletter https://bonjourppc.substack.com Lien pour t’abonner à notre chaîne YouTube https://www.youtube.com/BonjourPPC

Basuke's Tech Talk
NeXTの話 with @nagasawa144

Basuke's Tech Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 82:45


今回はアップルを離れたSteve Jobsが次に作ったコンピュータ、NeXTの話です。実際にNeXT ComputerでJobsと一緒に仕事をしていたモダシンさんに、NeXTSTEPというOSとハードウェアについて伺っていきます。その後のmacOSやiOSなどに引き継がれたテクノロジーはどのように生まれたのか、Jobsが作ろうとしたコンピュータを解き明かしていきます。 ※4/4 Clubhouseにてトークしたものを、各自ローカルで録音して編集したものです。 0:00:00 オープニング 0:01:30 バスケとNeXTの出会い 0:06:57 Display PostScript がもたらした真のWYSIWYG 0:08:39 モダシンさんとNeXT 0:19:16 NeXT Computerの始まりと高等教育機関向け 0:23:42 NeXTが採用したUNIXと環境 0:27:02 Interface Builder 0:31:51 開発者のプロダクティビティに注目したJobs 0:33:27 NeXTで実装されたWorld Wide Web 0:40:56 画期的なスプレッドシートだったLotus Improv 0:44:07 魅惑的な筐体だったNeXT Cube 0:46:03 他のプラットフォームに移植されていたNeXTSTEP 0:52:36 ハードウェアからの撤退とNeXT Software 0:55:03 OPENSTEP for Windowsの発表 1:07:30 MVCとWebがナチュラルに統合したWebObjects 1:13:54 Appleへの買収裏話 1:18:00 エンディング --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/basuke-suzuki/support

The History of Computing
Apple and NeXT Computer

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 14:12


Steve Jobs had an infamous split with the board of directors of Apple and left the company shortly after the release of the original Mac. He was an innovator who at 21 years old had started Apple in the garage with Steve Wozniak and at 30 years old while already plenty wealthy felt he still had more to give and do. We can say a lot of things about him but he was arguably one of the best product managers ever.  He told Apple he'd be taking some “low-level staffers” and ended up taking Rich Page, Bud Tribble, Dan'l Lewin, George Crow, and Susan Barnes to be the CFO. They also took Susan Kare and Joanna Hoffman. had their eyes on a computer that was specifically targeting higher education. They wanted to build computers for researchers and universities.  Companies like CDC and Data General had done well in Universities. The team knew there was a niche that could be carved out there. There were some gaps with the Mac that made it a hard sell in research environments. Computer scientists needed object-oriented programming and protected memory. Having seen the work at PARC on object-oriented languages, Jobs knew the power and future-proof approach.  Unix System V had branched a number of times and it was a bit more of a red ocean than I think they realized. But Jobs put up $7 million of his own money to found NeXT Computer. He'd add another $5 million and Ross Perot would add another $20 million. The pay bands were one of the most straight-forward of any startup ever founded. The senior staff made $75,000 and everyone else got $50,000. Simple.  Ironically, so soon after the 1984 Super Bowl ad where Jobs based IBM, they hired the man who designed the IBM logo, Paul Rand, to design a logo for NeXT. They paid him $100,000 flat. Imagine the phone call when Jobs called IBM to get them to release Rand from a conflict of interest in working with them.  They released the first computer in 1988. The NeXT Computer, as it was called, was expensive for the day, coming in at $6,500. It sported a Motorola 68030 CPU and clocked in at a whopping 25 MHz. And it came with a special operating system called NeXTSTEP. NeXTSTEP was based on the Mach kernel with some of the source code coming from BSD. If we go back a little, Unix was started at Bell Labs in 1969 and by the late 70s had been forked from Unix System V to BSD, Unix version 7, and PWB - with each of those resulting in other forks that would eventually become OpenBSD, SunOS, NetBSD, Solaris, HP-UX, Linux, AIX, and countless others.  Mach was developed at Carnegie Mellon University and is one of the earliest microkernels. For Mach, Richard Rashid (who would later found Microsoft Research) and Avie Tevanian, were looking specifically to distributed computing. And the Mach project was kicked off in 1985, the same year Jobs left Apple.  Mach was backwards-compatible to BSD 4.2 and so could run a pretty wide variety of software. It allowed for threads, or units of execution and tasks or objects that enabled threads. It provided support for messages, which for object oriented languages are typed data objects that fall outside the scope of tasks and threads and then a protected message queue, to manage the messages between tasks and rights of access. They stood it up on a DEC VAX and released it publicly in 1987. Here's the thing, Unix licensing from Bell Labs was causing problems. So it was important to everyone that the license be open. And this would be important to NeXT as well. NeXT needed a next-generation operating system and so Avi Tevanian was recruited to join NeXT as the Vice President of Software Engineering. There, he designed NeXTSTEP with a handful of engineers. The computers had custom boards and were fast. And they were a sleek black like nothing I'd seen before. But Bill Gates was not impressed claiming that “If you want black, I'll get you a can of paint.” But some people loved the machines and especially some of the tools NeXT developed for programmers. They got a factory to produce the machines and it only needed to crank out 100 a month as opposed to the thousands it was built to produce. In other words, the price tag was keeping universities from buying the machines. So they pivoted a little. They went up-market with the NeXTcube in 1990, which ran NeXTSTEP, OPENSTEP, or NetBSD and came with the Motorola 68040 CPU. This came machine in at $8,000 to almost $16,000. It came with a hard drive. For the lower end of the market they also released the NeXTstation in 1990, which shipped for just shy of $5,000. The new models helped but by 1991 they had to lay off 5 percent of the company and another 280 by 1993. That's when the hardware side got sold to Canon so NeXT could focus exclusively on NeXTSTEP.  That is, until they got acquired by Apple in 1997. By the end, they'd sold around 50,000 computers. Apple bought NeXT for $429 million and 1.5 million shares of Apple stock, trading at 22 cents at the time, which was trading at $17 a share so worth another $25 and a half million dollars. That makes the deal worth $454 million or $9,080 per machine NeXT had ever built. But it wasn't about the computer business, which had already been spun down. It was about Jobs and getting a multi-tasking, object-oriented, powerhouse of an operating system, the grandparent of OS X - and the derivative macOS, iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, and tvOS forks. The work done at NeXT has had a long-term impact on the computer industry as a whole. For one, the spinning pinwheel on a Mac. And the Dock. And the App Store. And Objective-C. But also Interface Builder as an IDE was revolutionary. Today we use Xcode. But many of the components go back all the way. And so much more.  After the acquisition, NeXT became Mac OS X Server in 1999 and by 2001 was Mac OS X. The rest there is history. But the legacy of the platform is considerable. Just on NeXTSTEP we had a few pretty massive successes. Tim Berners-Lee developed the first web browser WorldWideWeb on NeXTSTEP for a NeXT . Other browsers for other platforms would come but his work became the web as we know it today. The machine he developed the web on is now on display at the National Museum of Science and Media in the UK. We also got games like Quake, Heretic, Stife, and Doom from Interface Builder. And webobjects. And the people.  Tevanian came with NeXT to Apple as the Senior Vice President of Software Engineering. Jobs became an advisor, then CEO. Craig Federighi came with the acquisition as well - now Apple's VP of software engineering. And I know dozens of others who came in from NeXT and helped reshape the culture at Apple. Next.com still redirects to Apple.com. It took three years to ship that first computer at NeXT. It took 2 1/2 years to develop the iPhone. The Apple II, iPod, iPad, and first iMac were much less. Nearly 5 years for the original Mac. Some things take a little more time to flush out than others. Some need the price of components or new components to show up before you know it can be insanely great. Some need false starts like the Steve Jobs Steve Jobs famously said Apple wanted to create a computer in a book in 1983. That finally came out with the release of the iPad in 2010, 27 years later.  And so the final component of the Apple acquisition of NeXT to mention is Steve Jobs himself. He didn't initially come in. He'd just become a billionaire off Pixar and was doing pretty darn well. His arrival back at Apple signified the end of a long draught for the company and all those products we mentioned and the iTunes music store and the App Store (both initially built on WebObjects) would change the way we consume content forever. His impact was substantial. For one, after factoring stock splits, the company might still be trading at .22 cents a share, which is what it would be today with all that. Instead they're the most highly valued company in the world. But that pales in comparison to the way he and his teams and that relentless eye to product and design has actually changed the world. And the way his perspectives on privacy help protect us today, long after he passed.  The heroes journey (as described is a storytelling template that follows a hero from disgrace, to learn the mistakes of their past and reinvent themselves amidst a crisis throughout a grand adventure, and return home transformed. NeXT and Pixar represent part of that journey here. Which makes me wonder: what is my own Monomyth? Where will I return to? What is or was my abyss? These can be large or small. And while very few people in the world will have one like Steve Jobs did, we should all reflect on ours and learn from them. And yes that was plural because life is not so simple that there is one. The past, and our understanding of it, predicts the future. Good luck on your journey. 

Viewpoints
Becoming Steve Jobs

Viewpoints

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2020 11:19


Apple co-founder, Steve Jobs, was hailed as a genius and master innovator during his lifetime, but his career wasn’t always a smooth, upward trajectory. He failed many times and was eventually sidelined at Apple. We speak with one of his biographers about how Jobs changed his ways during this turbulent time, and how his experiences working with NeXt Computer and Pixar helped develop him into a savvier, more understanding leader.

On the Way to New Work - Der Podcast über neue Arbeit
#218 mit Wilfried Beeck, CEO und Founder ePages

On the Way to New Work - Der Podcast über neue Arbeit

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2020 78:09


In der aktuellen Folge haben wir uns für die persönliche Geschichte unseres Gastes besonders viel Zeit genommen. Nicht ohne Grund, denn Wilfried Beeck´s Geschichte ist eine unglaublich spannende. “Wenn ich anfange, wie es 1980 war, dann ist es so, als wenn Opa vom Krieg erzählt.” so sagt er es am Anfang. Wir sehen das anders und verfolgen seinen Weg vom Mathematik und Informatik Studenten zum Unternehmer. Es sind zwei Sätze, die seinen Weg gut beschreiben. Der erste lautet: “Mit Glück musst Du rechnen.” und im zweiten Satz ergänzt er: “Wenn die Leute Dich fragen: Wer will es machen? ... dann mußt Du die Hand heben.” Mit seinem Professor entwickelt er in den 80er Jahren mathematische Anwendungen für den Mac. Schon auf seiner ersten Reise in Silicon Valley lernt er Steve Jobs kennen, der ihn zu einem NEXT Entwicklercamp einlädt. Zufällig wird er dann zum ersten NEXT Importeur und erlebt seine erste Krise, als NEXT die Produktion einstellt und Steve Jobs, das Betriebssystem von NEXT mit zu seiner zweiten Zeit bei Apple nimmt. Aber weder die 300 teuren nahezu unverkäuflichen NEXT Computer noch die Achterbahnfahrt, die er mit seiner nächsten Firma “Intershop” erlebt, bringen Wilfried aus der Ruhe. In der Spitze hat die Firma eine Bewertung von 14 Mrd Euro. Als die Blase platzt verlieren Wilfried uns seine beiden Partner jeden Tag mehrere hundert Millionen Euro. Von Steve Jobs hat Wilfried eine Menge gelernt. In seiner neuesten Produktgeneration bei ePages macht er es wie Steve Jobs bei der Einführung des Mac: “Wir bauen das für den Rest der Welt.” Die ganze Folge 218 mit Wilfried gibt es, wie immer, auf allen gängigen Podcast Plattformen, wie Spotify oder Apple Podcasts (oder direkt auf otwtnw.de). Einfach nach ‘On the Way to New Work' suchen und abonnieren, um keine Folge zu verpassen. Wir veröffentlichen immer montags pünktlich um 6:00 Uhr. #Podstars #OMR #XING #ApplePodcasts #Spotify #OnTheWayToNewWork #ChristophMagnussen #MichaelTrautmann #epages #wilfriedbeeck #next #apple #stevejobs #intershop SPOTIFY spotify.onthewaytonewwork.com Apple Podcasts apple.onthewaytonewwork.com

Day in Tech History Podcast - Apple History
October 12, 1988: Steve Jobs Introduces NeXT Computer

Day in Tech History Podcast - Apple History

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2019 6:43


1988– Davies Symphony Hall in San Francisco, California. Steve Jobs shows off the NeXT Computer featuring the Motorola 68030 microprocessor at 25 MHz. The computer introduces several new features including optical storage disk, voice recognition, and object-oriented languages. The system came with the NeXT STep operating system and cost $6,500. NeXT computer sold around 50,000 […]

The Daily Stoic
The Best Technology Ever Invented

The Daily Stoic

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2019 4:13


There have been all sorts of wonderful technological innovations since Marcus Aurelius’s time, particularly in the domain of writing. We got the printing press. We got typewriters. We got ballpoint pens and erasers and whiteout. We got computers and smartphones. We have emails and tweets and audio memos. Journaling for Marcus wouldn’t have been easy. He needed ink and some sort of pen-like implement, and he had to write on fragile parchment. The supplies weren’t cheap. He needed to do everything by hand. We might think we are superior for all our fancy tools and real-time digital backups and copy and paste. But are we? In a recent interview, Walter Isaacson pointed out just how well paper has held up over the centuries: “Paper’s not a bad technology. It is really a good technology for the storage and retrieval of information. After 500 years, we still can turn the pages of Leonardo’s notebooks. From the 1990s, Steve Jobs had some memos on a NeXT Computer in his house. Even with his tech [abilities], we couldn’t retrieve that, because the NeXT operating system no longer can retrieve the documents that well. So every now and then, one of the lessons I learned is take notes on paper in a notebook. They’ll be around 50 years for ...your grandchildren or great-grandchildren. They’ll be around maybe 500 years.”It is remarkable that the simple letters that Seneca penned by hand to a friend survive to us today and remain best read in print. It’s incredible to think that Marcus Aurelius’s journals, which also endure, were themselves influenced by the notes one of his teachers took while sitting and listening to the lectures of Epictetus. There are fragments in his journal and in the journals and commonplace books of writers that preserve lines from Epictetus that would have otherwise vanished to history. The power of putting things down on paper should not be underestimated, particularly today. Sure, it can be a pain to carry books around with you. Every once in a while a pen breaks in your pocket or your bag and makes a mess. Yes, handwritten words are harder to search. They take up more space in your house than they would in the cloud. But there is something special and timeless and perennial about the art of writing by hand. It’s a more involved process—and that’s the point. It’s good that it takes more time and energy, because you’ll remember it more. It’s good that it’s physical and takes up space—this way you’ll pass it in the hallway when you walk by. It’s good that it’s harder to search...who knows what you’ll find when you flip through the pages, one by one. So what if it’s more delicate? Maybe you’ll treat it with the respect it deserves this way. Take Isaacson’s advice. Get a notebook. Start writing!PS: Check out The Daily Stoic Journal. It’s an easy place to start and is built around the Stoic journaling methods of Marcus Aurelius and Seneca.

Slow Money Podcast
Interview with John Corey | Start with what you’re good at

Slow Money Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2018 35:23


Welcome to the Slow Money Podcast. Where we give you realistic ways of attaining financial freedom. In each episode, we share Get Rich Slow strategies to help you go from employee to entrepreneur and turn your dreams into income streams. In this episode we have a chat with John Corey, founder of property Fortress. John is a steadfast figure on the London property scene with a diverse background. Before launching his property education company, Property Fortress, he worked alongside the likes of Steve Jobs in Silicon Valley. He now focusses on helping property investors find the tools and services to be successful. John has been investing in property for over 30 years. After his successful career in technology, he reinvented himself as a multinational landlord with a property portfolio spanning 11 time zones from Bradford to Hawaii. I asked John about his time reporting directly to the legendary Steve Jobs, and his interactions co-workers who became the founders of LinkedIn and Pixar. We also cover his own transition from employee to entrepreneur and he shares some tips for property investing based on his journey from employee to entrepreneur. Key discussion points include: On reporting directly to Steve Jobs at NeXT Inc – “One of the things I did learn was that presentation matters. How to tell his story, how to envision the future and then communicate it effectively in words.” On things not turning out how you planned – “A lot of things you do it for one reason, and that turns out to be something else.” That something else can end up being the World Wide Web, as is the case with Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who “created Web as a project simply to justify buying the NeXT Computer. The pattern is that you incrementally solve problems” On courses telling you to quit your job to become a full time property developer – “I think it’s rather lame. Lenders, particularly after the credit crunch, lenders don’t want to lend to the people who don’t have any income because tax don’t want to build the banks.” On getting started in property – “Start with what you’re good at. If you’re a numbers person or you love customer service types, there that shouldn’t heavily influence the strategies that you choose to invest in property. And don’t get emotionally attached.” Mentions Links Property Fortress – Property education company founded by John Corey NeXT Computer – Steve Jobs founded NeXT, Inc. which unveiled its first product, the NeXT Computer, in 1988. LinkedIn – History and story Edutopia – Randy Nelson on Learning and Working in the Collaborative Age The Flying Karamazov Brothers – The troupe originally consisted of two members; “Ivan” (Howard Jay Patterson) and “Dmitri” (Paul David Magid).[2] “Alyosha” (Randy Nelson) joined some time after 1975.   Resources Mindset Online Website – Learn Why brains and talent don’t bring success, how they can stand in the way of it and why praising brains and talent doesn’t foster self-esteem and accomplishment, but jeopardizes them. Along with how teaching a simple idea about the brain raises grades and productivity. Plus what all great CEOs, parents, teachers, athletes know   Books Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman on Amazon Mindset –  by Carol Dweck on Amazon   People John Corey LinkedIn Eric Ly LinkedIn Randy Nelson LinkedIn Tim Berners-Lee   Connect with us : email Facebook|Instagram|Twitter Download Now Download Now

Fork Bomb - Technology and Other Nerdy Retro Stuff
Episode 5 - Learning about NeXT and NeXTSTEP

Fork Bomb - Technology and Other Nerdy Retro Stuff

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017 41:38


In this episode, Euro and Chris take a dive into the history of NeXT Computer and the NeXTSTEP operating system. Email: forkbombpodcast@gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/forkbombpodcast/ Twitter: @forkbombpodcast https://twitter.com/forkbombpodcast Or leave us a message in the comments section below!

Internet Advisor – PodcastDetroit.com
Podcast 1620 Chosing Your Next Computer

Internet Advisor – PodcastDetroit.com

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2016 77:39


Podcast 1620 Chosing Your Next Computer

chosing next computer
The Small Business Radio Show
#376 Hire the Right People, Overcome Setbacks, and Best Cities for WOSB

The Small Business Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2016 53:52


Segment 1: Susan Drumm is a leadership coach and advisor for C-level executives and their teams, as well as growth stage entrepreneurs. Susan has spent over two decades teaching high profile organizations and companies like Viacom, Cisco, L'Oreal and KPMG how to harness the power of leadership to launch their teams towards multi-million dollar growth. Segment 2: Dr. Willie Jolley is the author of several international best-selling books including It Only Takes A Minute To Change Your Life, A Setback Is A Setup For A Comeback, Turn Setbacks Into Greenbacks. He has gone on to be named "One of the 5 Outstanding Speakers in the World" by the 175,000 members of Toastmasters International. He has also been inducted into the prestigious Speaker Hall of Fame as well as achieving the distinction of Certified Speaker Professional by the National Speakers Association.Segment 3: Jill Gonzalez is consumer finance expert and spokesperson for WalletHub. Her appearances include NBC Nightly News, Fox Business Network, Wall Street Journal Live and ABC News New York.Segment 4: Nichole Rairigh is the Founder and CEO for The Apparel Agency, a product development and production management firm in Chicago, providing pre-production services to apparel brands worldwide.Segment 5: Siamak Farah is an industry expert and visionary whose technology company focuses on small business computing in the cloud. He is the founder and CEO of InfoStreet, a leading provider of Cloud-based solutions and services for the small business. Prior to founding InfoStreet in 1994, Siamak worked at NeXT Computer, side-by-side with industry visionaries including Steve Jobs. 

The History of Personal Computing
eBay Episode 10 – NeXT Computer

The History of Personal Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2016 65:23


On today's show, we're continuing and finalizing our coverage of the 32-bit GUI computers. On our last show, we covered the somewhat boring, beige Compaq Deskpro 386, other 386 based computers, and touched on the Windows/386 operating system. Today, we're talking about the NeXT computer! Links mention in this episode: Slow down your Apple IIc […]

computers windows ebay replicas pdp apple iic next computer
Infinitum
Samo tetki lek da odnesemo

Infinitum

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2016 123:30


Follow-up U epizodi 24 spomenusmo čoveka iz Googlea koji testira USB-C - našao je ubicu računara Nije sve tako crno, sine Marco Rešenje za naše media/backup probleme Zanimljivosti Steve Jobs predstavlja NeXT Computer, 1998-e Vesti Google ugasio Picasa servis iOS/tvOS 9.3 razvoj se nastavlja punom parom, izašle beta3 i beta4. http://9to5mac.com/2016/02/08/tvos-9-2-beta-3/ http://www.macrumors.com/2016/02/22/apple-seeds-tvos-9-2-beta-4/ http://www.macrumors.com/2016/02/22/apple-seeds-ios-9-3-beta-4/ Takođe i odgovarajući updatei za watchOS i Mac OS X. Glavna zanimljivost vezana za novitete se desila u podcastu The Talk Show ep 146, gde su gostovali Eddy Cue i Craig Federighi. Svašta zanimljivo su rekli, između ostalog da se radi na redizajnu iTunesa(!) Computer pioneer Ken Olsen dies - The Boston Globe Low power mode, perfect for vacations Tim Cook napravio mutnjikavu sliku na SuperBowlu, pa je kasnije obrisao. /Lame, trebalo je da ostavi/ Tema - sigurnost i privatnost Blockbuster tema poslednjih desetak dana: Apple vs FBI FBI objavio šta se traži od Applea Tim Cook/Apple odgovaraju javnim pismom svojim korisnicima Analiza problema na blogu TrailOfBits Facebook i Twitter nedvosmisleno staju uz Apple. Google relativno mlako podržava Apple. Ostatak tech firmi uglavnom ćuti. Panzarino on fire: http://techcrunch.com/2016/02/18/no-apple-has-not-unlocked-70-iphones-for-law-enforcement/ https://twitter.com/thegrugq/status/700555611415556096 Komedija nesposobnosti ili nameštanje igre: http://www.buzzfeed.com/johnpaczkowski/apple-terrorists-appleid-passcode-changed-in-government-cust http://techcrunch.com/2016/02/19/apple-executives-say-new-iphones-also-vulnerable-to-back-door-requested-by-fbi/ https://twitter.com/CountyWire/status/700887823482630144 FBI kaže da Apple koristi situaciju za marketing(?!) Direktor FBI-a kaže da je ovo one-off situacija i nećemo nikad više, vidi ruke Manhattan D.A. izgleda nije dobio taj MEMO: In an interview with Charlie Rose, the Manhattan district attorney, Cyrus R. Vance Jr., was asked, “If there is access to this phone, you want access to all those phones that you think are crucial in a criminal proceeding?” Mr. Vance responded: “Absolutely right.” Apple odgovora na sve to Bill Gates prvo kao stao na stranu FBI-ja a onda rekao da su ga pogrešno preneli. Vredi imati na umu: https://twitter.com/Snowden/status/702158047599325184 Komentari Why apple is fighting not to unlock… The US has gone F&*%ing Mad APPLE, THE FBI and Security iOS 8/9 security Appleov iOS Security White Paper http://tidbits.com/article/14557 https://nabla-c0d3.github.io/blog/2015/06/16/ios9-security-privacy/ Kako radi Secure Enclave: https://mikeash.com/pyblog/friday-qa-2016-02-19-what-is-the-secure-enclave.html (Ne)Sigurnost iCloud backupa A quick list of iOS Restrictions 1Password for Families Apps security ATS (Advanced Transport Security) OAuth2 Man in the middle attack http://blog.lumberlabs.com/2012/04/why-app-developers-should-care-about.html https://possiblemobile.com/2013/03/ssl-pinning-for-increased-app-security/ http://timekl.com/blog/2015/08/21/shipping-an-app-with-app-transport-security/ Korisni source code linkovi https://www.nccgroup.trust/us/about-us/newsroom-and-events/blog/2013/february/ssl-pinning-on-ios/ https://github.com/datatheorem/TrustKit Hacking apps https://realm.io/news/conrad-kramer-reverse-engineering-ios-apps-lyft/ http://www.zdziarski.com/blog/?p=4002 http://www.lyonanderson.org/blog/2014/02/06/ios-power-diagnostics/ Mac http://training.apple.com/pdf/osx_wp_security_108.pdf http://training.apple.com/pdf/WP_FileVault2.pdf Zahvalnice Snimljeno 24.02.2016. Uvodna muzika by Vladimir Tošić. Logotip by Aleksandra Ilić. Artwork epizode Seizing the Sun (2015) by Saša Montiljo

Viewpoints
Becoming Steve Jobs

Viewpoints

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2015 12:04


We talk to one of Steve Jobs's biographers about how he changed his ways after he left Apple, and how his experiences with NeXt Computer, Pixar, and becoming a husband and father helped him develop into a more understanding innovator and leader.

apple pixar steve jobs becoming steve jobs next computer
Yak About Today
Doug Menuez -The Great American Photographer Joins David Yakir on this edition of “Yak About Tech”

Yak About Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2015 45:38


On today's broadcast of “Yak About Tech”; Doug Menuez. From photographing Presidents to the historical capture of the technology greats, Doug is one of America's great photographers. From 1986 to 1988, Doug Menuez documented Steve Jobs' new company NeXT Inc. and its development and launch of the computer NeXT Computer for Life magazine.At Apple Computer, Doug Menuez documented various projects, including the Apple Newton from its early stages in 1992 to its launch in 1993. In 1992, Menuez published, with Markos Kounalakis, the book, Defying Gravity: The Making of Newton.   Between 1988 and 1995, Menuez documented the corporate life and the early development of PDF, and the development of Adobe Photoshop at Adobe Systems San Jose, California. The 250,000 photographs Menuez shot, documenting SiliconYak On!