By Glenn Chapman | AFP News



Where do Apple and Steve Jobs
Ad Age columnist Simon Dumenco pays attention to this stuff for a living, so I'm sure he knows more about the subject than I do. But I think Dumenco misses the mark when he contends in this column that Steve Jobs was wrong when he claimed three years ago that "people don't read anymore."
Dumenco's evidence is that the iPad has turned out to be most useful as e-reader, even though, he says, "Apple has conspicuously downplayed its role as a text consumption device."
That may be true. But the problem is that Dumenco assumes that Jobs meant what he said... and often he doesn't.
Jobs is famous for trashing technology that Apple doesn't yet offer, in large measure an attempt to keep consumers away from the companies Apple plans to be competing against. When he said people don't read anymore, he was simply trying to squash interest in Amazon's new Kindle. What Jobs was really saying was, "Why buy a Kindle when what you really want is the tablet we're working on at Apple. So just wait a bit, would you?"
Jobs  has done the same thing plenty of times before. He once said people  weren't interested in watching video on small screens — and then Apple  released the iPod video. He claimed people don't want Flash-based music  players — and then Apple introduced the iPod shuffle. And on and on.
I think Jobs knew all along that the iPad would be used as an e-reader (although I'm not sure I buy Dumenco's claim that web browsing, even on a "Flash-hobbled" device, consistutes "reading"), but he also knew that its capability as such would not be what would separate it from the competition. Apple emphasizes all the other things the iPad can do because few if any other devices can do that stuff. The iPad's e-reader features, on the other hand, are nothing unique.

Apple Co-Founder and CEO Steve Jobs appeared at the Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on June 6, 2011
Jobs gave the keynote speech and unveiled iCloud



Apple's legendary co-founder and top ideas man Steve Jobs resigned as chief  executive Wednesday, the company said, in a long expected move after he began a  dramatic fight with cancer.
In a written statement, Apple, the world's second biggest company by market  capitalization, announced that chief operating officer Tim Cook would take over  as CEO but that Jobs would stay on as chairman of the board.
"Steve's extraordinary vision and leadership saved Apple and guided it to its  position as the world's most innovative and valuable technology company," board  member Art Levinson said in a statement.
No reason was given for Job's resignation, but his health problems, including  a lengthy medical leave for a liver transplant in 2009 and his increasingly  gaunt appearances at public events, fueled speculation he would have to give up  the everyday running of the company he co-founded in 1976.
Cook ran Apple when Jobs went on medical leave and has essentially been  running day-to-day operations since early this year with the company racking up  record revenue and profit.
Jobs is seen as the heart and soul of Apple, with analysts and investors  repeatedly expressing concern over how the Cupertino, California-based company  would handle his departure.
"The board has complete confidence that Tim is the right person to be our  next CEO," Levinson said.
"Tim's 13 years of service to Apple have been marked by outstanding  performance, and he has demonstrated remarkable talent and sound judgment in  everything he does," Levinson continued.
Jobs submitted his resignation on Wednesday and urged the board to implement  its succession plan and name Cook as his replacement, according to Apple.
Cook was previously responsible for Apple's worldwide sales and operations,  including management of the supply chain, sales activities, and service and  support in all markets and countries.
Jobs is a living legend in Silicon Valley. He is the beloved visionary behind  the Macintosh computer, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad.
Born on February 24, 1955 in San Francisco to a single mother and adopted by  a couple in nearby Mountain View at barely a week old, he grew up among the  orchards that would one day become the technology hub known as Silicon  Valley.
Jobs was 21 and Steve Wozniak 26 when they founded Apple Computer in the  garage of Jobs's family home in 1976.
While Microsoft licensed its software to computer makers that cranked out  machines priced for the masses, Apple kept its technology private and catered to  people willing to pay for superior performance and design.
Under Jobs, the company introduced its first Apple computers and then the  Macintosh, which became wildly popular in the 1980s.
Apple's innovations include the "computer mouse" to make it easy for users to  activate programs or open files.
Jobs was elevated to idol status by ranks of Macintosh computer devotees,  many of whom saw themselves as a sort of rebel alliance opposing the powerful  empire Microsoft built with its ubiquitous Windows operating systems.
Jobs left Apple in 1985 after an internal power struggle and started NeXT  Computer company specializing in sophisticated workstations for businesses.
He co-founded Academy-Award-winning Pixar in 1986 from a former Lucasfilm  computer graphics unit that he reportedly bought from movie industry titan  George Lucas for $10 million.
Apple's luster faded after Jobs left the company, but they reconciled in 1996  with Apple buying NeXT for 429 million dollars and Jobs ascending once again to  the Apple throne.
Since then, Apple has gone from strength to strength as Jobs revamped the  Macintosh line, revolutionizing modern culture with the introductions of the  iPod, iPhone, iPad, and iTunes online shop for digital content.

Where do Apple and Steve Jobs
Ad Age columnist Simon Dumenco pays attention to this stuff for a living, so I'm sure he knows more about the subject than I do. But I think Dumenco misses the mark when he contends in this column that Steve Jobs was wrong when he claimed three years ago that "people don't read anymore."
Dumenco's evidence is that the iPad has turned out to be most useful as e-reader, even though, he says, "Apple has conspicuously downplayed its role as a text consumption device."
That may be true. But the problem is that Dumenco assumes that Jobs meant what he said... and often he doesn't.
Jobs is famous for trashing technology that Apple doesn't yet offer, in large measure an attempt to keep consumers away from the companies Apple plans to be competing against. When he said people don't read anymore, he was simply trying to squash interest in Amazon's new Kindle. What Jobs was really saying was, "Why buy a Kindle when what you really want is the tablet we're working on at Apple. So just wait a bit, would you?"

I think Jobs knew all along that the iPad would be used as an e-reader (although I'm not sure I buy Dumenco's claim that web browsing, even on a "Flash-hobbled" device, consistutes "reading"), but he also knew that its capability as such would not be what would separate it from the competition. Apple emphasizes all the other things the iPad can do because few if any other devices can do that stuff. The iPad's e-reader features, on the other hand, are nothing unique.

Apple Co-Founder and CEO Steve Jobs in the early years

Jobs gave the keynote speech and unveiled iCloud

Apple Inc. Co-Founder and CEO Steve Jobs
Apple announced on Monday, January 17, 2011 that Steve Jobs was taking a medical leave of absence
Apple announced on Tuesday, January 18, 2011 legendary financial results for Q4 2010