• DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Steve Jobs was the Elon Musk of his time, he just died too soon for everyone to see him for the villain he was.

    • OscarRobin@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Steve Jobs did at least actually do things. Musk just buys things and claims he did them.

      • SternburgExport@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Nah Jobs didn’t do anything himself. From Wozniaks first computer up to the multitouch display for the iPhone, all of these things were just bought/stolen/copied. Jobs just knew how to put these technologies into something that would sell.

            • herrvogel@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              There’s no version of this reality where Jobs isn’t a good businessman. You might not like the company or their products, but they’ve somehow managed to build a huge and successful business selling those overpriced toys to tons of people. They managed to create a cult around expensive consumer electronics. That is a massive success no matter how you slice it. And you can’t deny that Jobs played a big part in that.

              • jj4211@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                The weird thing is that Apple without Jobs was a failure, but also Jobs without Apple was also a failure.

              • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                it was just a gag for comic effect. it wasn’t the breadth and depth of my thoughts and feelings of the digital and manufacturing epochs since the 1980s.

                But also, it was kind of begging the question of “is there such thing as a good business man?”

                There’s good for /their/ business. But is that- in general - good?

                • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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                  1 year ago

                  Does the current head of Larian Studios count as a businessman? If so, that’s one I would consider good for the company ***AND ***the consumers

              • SCB@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Also you can tie it directly to Jobs, because when he was gone for a bit, apple fuckin tanked, and then he came back and they came out with the iPod.

                That’s not an accident.

          • hackitfast@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yeah, Steve Jobs was definitely an asshole, and he didn’t personally design any of his products, but he did know what direction to move things in and what consumers wanted in a phone. He was the first to put a truly usable portable touchscreen computer into our pockets with a phone in it, and every phone nowadays is basically just a reimagined, upgraded version of the first iPhone. The way we communicate is forever changed because of the iPhone.

            But yeah iPhone’s are kind of the pinnacle of “how much can we fuck you over before you notice” now. All because of the little Apple on the back of the phone.

            • general_kitten@sopuli.xyz
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              1 year ago

              There is a story that the concept of touchscreen phones was stolen from a Nokia engineer who tried to get nokia to produce them but the feature was dismissed as a ‘gimmick’.

            • Comment105@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              He didn’t know what customers wanted in a phone.

              He knew what customers would want in a phone when they were taught about its existence.

              The customers had no idea they would want it before he showed it to them.

          • R0cket_M00se@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Jesus I’m no Elon fan but how many companies do you have to take from a couple million to hundreds of billions before you’re good at your job?

            What is it with modern society and the need to reduce everything about a person just because they’re a POS? He might be evil but he’s clearly pretty good at being a businessman or you wouldn’t even know his name.

            • Korne127@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              But… he literally isn’t. Like just look at twitter, he has ruined it from day one with bad decisions day after day whose impacts haven’t shown directly, but now appear more and more with embarrassing effects (The verification badge which is now worthless and has been used to impersonate people and cooperations, the two factor authentification which stopped working, the self-DDOSing, the maximum amounts of tweets one could view per day, the old tweets that got deleted due to a glitch, etc.)
              And in other companies it’s mostly other people managing the stuff and cleaning up the mess he leaves; especially SpaceX is currently just glad that he isn’t too busy with his X playtoy to bother them.
              The only thing you may call him somewhat successful in is making out companies that have a potential so he could get into them early and claim their success.

              • SCB@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Elon is (maybe was) very much good at what he does. Twitter is a bad example because that whole shit show was a dick measuring content from the get-go.

                Fact is, SpaceX wouldn’t be SpaceX and Tesla sure as fuck would not be Tesla without his leadership.

                He’s a piece of shit as a person, and I’d never want to work for him, because his work ethic is unhealthy to say the least (and I personally have a pretty extreme work ethic), but it’s schoolyard nonsense to claim he’s somehow bad at business. Leading a business may be the one thing he is good at. It’s tossing shit just to toss shit.

                You can not like him and acknowledge he is good at things.

                • RegularGoose@sh.itjust.works
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                  1 year ago

                  Tesla sure as fuck would not be Tesla without his leadership.

                  You’re right, it wouldn’t; it would almost certainly be a better company.

                  Musk got Tesla where it is financially entirely through blatant fraud. “Earning” the company’s absurd valuation based almost entirely on dishonest promises of releasing a technology that is entirely unachievable, undesirable, and dangerous is an unsustainable business model, and it’s already showing cracks.

                  The fact that you seem to think that being highly profitable through constant ethical violations in every aspect of the company is to viewed as a succsess is honestly pretty gross.

              • R0cket_M00se@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                It’s a completely different business vertical. Running a government rocketship contract or vehicle manufacturer isnt the same as software development or social media. Plus he’s made so many decisions that are laughably stupid to the layman that it almost seems like he’s tanking it purposefully.

                Businesses aren’t all the same and the same type of person can’t run all of them. It’s like asking your heart doctor to give you a urologists opinion.

                Tesla started with almost nothing, SpaceX was his from the ground up. I’m not certain how much of Paypal was his but something tells me he was in management there too.

                No one’s claiming he developed the Tesla Model 3, or engineered the landing system of the Dragon boosters himself. He has been in charge of the people who have though, and he seems to be doing well enough of a job to keep those companies going.

                So he’s not good at managing a social media platform specifically, if he’s actually trying and this isn’t just a long con to destroy the site for some other end goal.

            • RegularGoose@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              Being a succsessful businessman does not make one a good businessman. Half of the equation is ethics, because it fucking matters.

              A successful businessman with bad ethics and an unsuccsessful one with good ethics are both bad businessmen.

              The only good businessman is one who both succeeds and has good ethics.

            • jj4211@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              While he has had some success, he’s also demonstrably been a glory hog benefiting from crazy good luck.

              He had an Internet company during the first dot com boom. He got a bunch of cash from Compaq for effectively nothing, because businesses had to snap up anything vaguely Internet. Right place at right time, basically won a lottery.

              So then he founded an Internet bank. But want allowed to lead it, no matter, either way it was overshadowed by PayPal, which was a runaway success. Somehow he managed a merger with him being put in charge of the joint company. Then he almost tanked it and was put aside to salvage the company. However, he managed to be popularly thought of as “the PayPal guy”

              He founded SpaceX. Off the top of my head, that one seems fair enough.

              Then you have Tesla, which existed prior to him Knowing about it, yet he still insisted on being called a founder. It’s possible that without him, Tesla wouldn’t have gone far, but either way, he’s been a glory hog about it to the point of again getting himself framed as “the” Tesla guy.

              • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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                1 year ago

                Also in the case of Tesla, it was a company entering a market with virtually zero competition. Compare the available fully electric cars of 2013-4 and take a wild guess as to which consumers were drooling over: the one that looks like an actual car or ones that screams “eco-friendly toy” (Mitsubishi i, Nissan Leaf)?

        • HiddenLayer5@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          Just like how Elon did not design his rockets, SpaceX engineers did, Steve did not design the iPhone, Apple engineers did.

          Also everyone seems to conveniently forget about the factory workers actually building them.

        • jarfil@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Jobs insisted on removing the keypad from a smartphone. He didn’t make the multitouch display, but he did force app developers to take it seriously.

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            1 year ago

            The iPhone didn’t originally have apps other than basic ones that shipped with the phone, like Safari, YouTube, calculator, etc…

            People hacked the first gen to run things like an NES emulator. Apple promptly shut that down and introduced the app store.

          • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            I don’t hate Jobs for that, but I despise almost every other fucking company panicking in order to copy that shit. Blackberry keyboards were great stuff in the early 2010s.

        • Chocrates@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I feel like he had a part in the first apple. Wozniac did the work but Jobs sold it. Selling and marketing are not easy and a different skill set. I’d be curious what Wozniac has to say about it though.

          • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            Not only Jobs managed to sell, he managed to sell way above cost. Apple became synonymous with premium features, even when it was clearly lagging behind the competition in terms of raw power (late 80’s) or offering sub par experiences.

        • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          He was a visionary who was able to see the applicability of new technology, and was able to force his will for better than the standard upon people who would otherwise have thought the improvements impossible. The guy was a fucking jerk, that’s true, but he also completely changed the world with his vision. To say he was nothing more than a Musk, or a thief, is to be disingenuous.

          • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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            1 year ago

            but he also completely changed the world with his vision

            Which is a fucking shame, because his vision sucked for the most part. “Less power to the consumers, let them grovel for our products; You can only use our products the way we demand you to; Fuck repairability, buy new; Fuck keyboards”

        • jarfil@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Jobs insisted on selling a touchscreen-only smartphone. Turns out, he was right on that one.

          • Roboticide@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            But like, he didn’t design or build it himself. His company did.

            So by that logic he’s still the same as Musk, who insisted on a mass-market EV car or reusable rockets.

            • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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              1 year ago

              His company did.

              It wasn’t even his company, they stole the concept from another company. The home button also wasn’t an apple original. The “sum of the parts” was the “original” thing

          • smackjack@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            He was also right about not supporting Flash on the iPhone. People wanted to crucify him for that, but better video and web standards came about because of it, and we’re all better off living in a world without Flash.

      • porkins@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        This sells Musk short. He is making smart entrepreneurial decisions for the most part. I hate the monkey testing controversy though.

      • jarfil@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Didn’t Musk start SpaceX? That’s, at least, one thing. Too bad he can’t stick to it.

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      1 year ago

      Woah; that’s just so wildly inaccurate; I have no idea what to even say.
      Are you really saying Jobs was a transphobic right-wing extremist whose father got super rich and helped him to just buy into uprising companies without really doing anything by himself?

      • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        He did father a child he denied to the day he died, intentionally screwed Woz out of his fair share of the apple fortune, killed himself by treating cancer with quackery. Jobs is probably more self made, but that’s about it.

        • Korne127@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Jobs is probably more self made, but that’s about it.

          I just gave you some pretty major differences. To me, most things that defines Musk as the horrible person he is aren’t true for Jobs. Again: The extremist position, transphobia, the fact that he bought into his companies and didn’t actually invent these things and made these breakthroughs by himself (which is just not true for Jobs, even if you have reasons to not like him), that he just got his money by his father’s mine and hasn’t made such successes by himself, etc. All of that doesn’t apply to Jobs.

          Those things you mention are just… cases of him doing awful stuff; most of them not even related to Musk in any way. But if “he did awful stuff” is enough to set him on the same layer as Musk, then he is also “the same person” as a good share of all people living.

        • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          He did not deny her until the day he died. She even lived with him during highschool, and he named a computer after her, even though he made up a bogus acronym to pretend that wasn’t his motivation.

          Woz was worth $500m at one point and is worth $100m today. It’s not like he was cut out of the game, he just wasn’t interested in money or success the way Jobs was. Without Jobs drive for success, Woz would never have shared his inventions with anyone, it was just a private hobby to him.

          Steve was definitely an asshole, but there are plenty of valid criticisms to levy at him, you don’t need to misrepresent anything.

          • RegularGoose@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            ’s not like he was cut out of the game, he just wasn’t interested in money or success the way Jobs was.

            You really buy that? That’s some bullshit someone says when they got fucked over and know they’ll lose and come out worse if they try to get what’s rightfully theirs.

            • SokathHisEyesOpen@lemmy.ml
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              1 year ago

              Woz himself has said as much. The guy has more money than he’ll ever be able to spend. He’s fine.

              • RegularGoose@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                Woz himself has said as much.

                That’s why I said:

                That’s some bullshit someone says when…

                Don’t get me wrong, I don’t give a shit about the contentedness of any of these treasure hoarding shitdragons, but there never has been and never will be a person who is fine with getting ass fucked out of hundreds of millions of dollars. Even Muskrat is throwing an endless tantrum and fucking up people’s lives over a bad deal, even though he did it to himself on purpose.

                • jarfil@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  there never has been and never will be a person who is fine with getting ass fucked out of hundreds of millions of dollars.

                  Hi, you don’t know me… but for a single hundred million dollars, you can ass fuck me out of as many hundreds more as you want.

                • jj4211@lemmy.world
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                  1 year ago

                  Not to stand up for jobs, but from what I’ve seen of woz, I can totally believe he wouldn’t see more money as worth the bother. From what I’ve seen: If you’re making 36k a year, your are obsessed with opportunities to get more, no matter who you are. Your life is financially difficult and any chance to overcome that is worth it.

                  If you are making 200k a year, you start seeing different sorts of folk.

                  Some will not stop until that number is as big as it can be. Their lives will be consumed by that as a “high score”

                  Some care less about money and more about titles and conspicuous status symbols, like a coveted office.

                  Some are happy to just do their work the way they like without having to worry about the money anymore, or to work on hobbies and afford to walk away from working.

                  I know folks that are 200k as “bird in the hand” money and chasing bigger numbers is worth considering, but they are more concerned about risk to their perceived status or working conditions than pay.

                  Take one of those last sort of folk, get them to tens of millions of wealth and they are likely happy to just stop thinking about the money, even if it means they are sonetimes the chump as a result.

      • DumbAceDragon@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        That’s true, he was not nearly as bad as Musk. I was mainly talking about how he’s a general asshole who steals from others and is revered by techbros. I was maybe being a bit hyperbolic in my comparison.

        • Korne127@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I don’t necessarily agree with that, but I get this point (in contrast to how you phrased it before), so fair I guess.

          But just one thing:

          is revered by techbros I actually don’t know any people who revere Musk. I know this is dependent on the bubble, but at least with Jobs being generally seen pretty favourable and Musk seen extremely unfavourable by most people, I think there’s a big difference.

    • SpaceCadet@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      he just died too soon for everyone to see him for the villain he was

      Oh he died soon enough.

  • umbraroze@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    iOS user: “DUDE have you seen [new iOS feature]? This is the bee’s knees!” [10 minutes of gushing omitted for brevity]
    Android user: “…Yeah, we’ve had that for 15 years.”

      • DrQuint@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I had one called the iPaq.

        Apple has since then made it illegal to trademark products starting with “i”. Irony.

      • tosmo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        To be fair, Apple had a PDA, the Newton, back in 1993… Not that it was the 1st again…

      • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        KkI wouldn’t even say the iphone was more advanced than what came before it haha.

        I still have 2 fully functioning Palm TX devices from 20 or so years ago, they were released mid 2005 while iPhone was June 2007 I think?

        Looking back, I cannot fathom (aside from marketing) how apple beat palm in that market.

        Here are the specs, keep in mind the TX was released several years before the original iPhone Ram: Palm TX: 128 Mb iPhone: 128Mb Screen palm TX: 480×320 iPhone 480×320 Processor TX: 312Mhz iPhone 416 Mhz

        So, for a 3 year or so delay, the original iPhone imo still doesn’t completely dwarf the TX, but I’m also not through as there are plenty of features that the TX had but the iPhone lacked.

        The TX was also touch screen (I find it much more responsive) and was meant for a stylus instead of fingers. To this day, I still love writing and drawing on the TX. Oh, and the stylus fits neatly into the TX on the right side. Also, it has a nice little replaceable flip cover for the screen.

        But that’s not all, it has an SD card slot for expandable storage, something the iPhone omitted.

        It also has wifi 302.11b support and Bluetooth as well, yes, Bluetooth in 2005 and it was very easy to activate and use.

        But no, that’s not all, it also had an IR transmitter/receiver! Something the iPhone helped to kill. Those things were underrated!

        They made the TX the perfect universal remote! I had a program on the TX that listed every T.V/DVD/VCR/Cable etc. Manufacturer you could imagine, you’d just select the manufacturer for the device you wanted to control, aim the TX at it and bam, you had control.

        This helped me a lot as essentially I could control almost any device I could see. Lost remote for the DVD player? TX got you. It wasn’t just for t.v’s and whatnot though, many things run on IR and I miss when smart devices supported it.

        Ah, and I’m still not done, the TX had BUTTONS. Actual factual buttons. Not only was it 100% touch screen, but it had 4 buttons and a directional pad with another button in the middle iirc.

        Those buttons made it great for emulation and I believe I had a snes emulator on it though that may have just been Nes, either way, the buttons were much more fun to play with than touch screen, it made the device actually feel… made for what you were using it to do.

        In fact, everything on the device felt made for what you were doing, and not just an afterthought. It came preloaded with plenty of useful apps. A web browser that was even YouTube capable for one, which in 2006 or so when I got the TX blew my mind, YouTube in my Palm?

        Maybe I went a little overboard in this comment but my point is, damn, some more competition may have been nice.

        Oh, and one last thing, My TX devices still run like the day I got them, hell, the battery life is insane as well. I left one on for at least 2 weeks and it still had power last I checked. How many original iPhones that were opened in 2007 are still running? Heck, even an iPhone 5 from 2012, how many of those are still up and running?

        Yet my 2005 TX runs just the same as it always did. It’s insane to look at a device from 2005 and feel like in 2023 we should be taking notes, but we should.

        Our devices won’t last that long on standby today because they’re filled with bloatware processes that refuse to stop running. The TX powers up instantly after it’s been sitting for days and will be on 99% battery. My modern smart phone will kill its own battery within a day or two, tops, just sitting on my desk without me touching it.

        Palm needs to make a comeback. Devices with SD, IR, buttons, built in stylus etc. Should as well.

        Oh, and the OS was perfect. Calendar, web, paint etc, an Aux jack, these little things were and still are badass. If it wasn’t for the limited capability due to not being able to access the web like before I’d probably still use them daily.

        But I’d never use an original iPhone daily, they just aren’t good for anything that I can’t do with any other device.

        Not that I’m anti IPhone as I realize my comment seems, don’t get me wrong I do prefer androids for my uses but iPhones aren’t too shabby either. Top notch hardware, all of their devices sharing the same hardware also mean their apps tend to be better optimized and more reliable, etc. They’re dependable, reliable devices but… my Palm from 20 years ago can do things no iPhone can, like still run after 2 decades, control IR devices, have an SD card inserted etc.

        The closest thing I’ve had to a TX was an LG Stylo 6, and for it’s day if was a decent device but the screen cracked in my pocket within a year and the battery life had shortened significantly. I was carrying around mophies and chargers like nobody’s business. My TX though? 2 decades without even a scratch that I can see on either of the 2 that I own, and when I’m using it the battery almost seems limitless as I can go for quite some time using it without seeing that 99% battery drop a digit.

        I know we’ve changed battery types a time or two since then but can’t help but wonder how are modern batteries are so unreliable in comparison? Planned obsolescence is a factor, surely because I’m seeing a year or so tops before major performance reduction with these lithium ions of late. Whereas the TX still outlasts them 20 years later,

        Just love my old tech and wish it were updated! I’d love a new palm device built as well as the TX was.

      • ephimetheus@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It wasn’t an entirely new concept but it completely redefined what it could be. Look up what Android looked like until the iPhone was demoed.

          • themz@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            iPhone was announced January 2007 and released in June. The phone you’re linking to was released September 2008.

            What was your point again?

          • Jentu@lemmy.film
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            Doesn’t look like a black rectangular piece of glass to me. I think the point they were making was that there was a design paradigm shift when the iPhone came out.

    • DrQuint@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Floating apps. And split screen. I was playing Pokemon Go with reddit open in the corner in 2017 and it was old then. I dunno when iOS got it, but it’s recentish.

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        1 year ago

        Neither floating apps nor split screen were ever released for iOS. Split screen was added a while ago for iPadOS, but floating apps (Stage Manager) was released just last year.

        • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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          Wait, floating apps as in being able to keep an app in the corner (like YouTube) when I’m using another app primarily right? iOS just got that?

          It’s definitely old for Android as I can remember it being a thing for at least 5 years, and before that it was P-I-P “Picture in Picture” even on old CRT t.v’s with cable boxes lol. My old “Web TV” setup had PIP and was already old when I got it in the early 2000’s

          • SimplePhysics@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            No, that has been a feature for years on iOS and iPadOS. I’m talking about movable apps, like a desktop, a feature many android phones have. Only iPadOS has this feature to date.

            • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Oh okay, I’m late to the party on that and actually had to Google it. I’ve just been using split screen for that purpose haha

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        1 year ago

        Copy muthafuckin paste. That was a laugh, listening to explanations of why you didn’t need it, until they “invented” that too.

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          This is sort of hard to answer because of the number of varieties of Android from different vendors could have things that weren’t in core Android but some user will be like I had a Samsung phone in 2012 that did that or something, so I’ll just base my answers on Android core.

          Notification badges were a big one I wanted on Android that iOS had done since the beginning. You could sorta have them with nova launcher for a while, but it wasn’t as good. Eventually Android came around, I think?

          I think the ability to swipe up and navigate opened apps also existed in iOS long before Android, though I think Samsung may have copied it shortly after, as they do with most solid iOS innovations.

          iOS’s privacy controls have always been better than Android’s, though that’s not super surprising given Google’s market is advertising, Android did eventually try to add granular privacy controls but it feels lacking compared to iOS.

          Also screen recording, is it even in Android yet? It’s been in iOS forever.

          There’s a lot more than that, but reading any Android community and you’d think that the copying only happened one way.

          • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Haha I agree with that actually, I’m an Android fan but don’t see the issue with all the copying. If iPhone users want it and we have it, why can’t they? Also, conversely, if there’s an iOS feature that I don’t yet have so what if I finally get it?

            I can’t too much understand being all too competitive about this. plus, comparing them is apples to oranges. Apple, who I actually used to work for 😂 is one company making one device.

            Android? Anyone can make one, anyone can make apps for them. Of COURSE we’re going to get some features first.

            And yes, you’re also right, depending on the manufacturer some Android devices have had features we’re just now getting today many, many years ago but as we’re not consolidated into one company sometimes they’re forgotten or omitted from later Android barebones cores.

            Screen sharing being one of those things lol. I’ve had it on a few devices throughout the years but probably couldn’t pinpoint the device as I’ve switched between Google, Motorola, LG etc. And also try more 3rd party stuff than most. I believe the first time I saw it native was OS10 or whatever it’s called as that was my last phone, a Motorola Ace something from Verizon.

            Good phone btw! Had some badass features that iOS most likely doesn’t have yet, like can you flick your wrist twice to activate the camera instantly anytime for quick shots? Or can you shake it twice to activate the flashlight?

            However, the fucking cameras on that thing were awful. Advertised as 48Mp but really just a 12, 2 and 16 megapixel camera strapped to the back. Why? Because not Apple. With an iPhone you know that you’re getting something consistent with great hardware. Some of the androids I get may have a feature or two that iOS doesn’t yet have, but I also miss out sometimes and have to pay for that feature in other ways because androids are the wild west of smartphones.

            Love my androids for my personal needs, freedom and the price but can definitely get why iPhones work better for some.

            Also, yes the privacy shit is insane on these devices. I constantly have to fight to keep it from spying and sending reports about my usage to anyone that will listen.

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      1 year ago

      Technically correct, but it was originally aimed at Blackberry. https://www.pcworld.com/article/464050/original_android_prototype_revealed_during_google_oracle_trial.html

      Apple pioneered a moderately useful mobile browser and fully touch screen UI (except for the home button).

      They’ve been copying each other ever since, to the point where I watch the WWDC keynote thinking “they didn’t already have THAT!?” most of the time.

      • ChronosWing@lemmy.zip
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        1 year ago

        More like Apple copies an android feature that is more than a decade old then claims it as some kind of innovation.

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          1 year ago

          slaps a buzzword on it and makes a trillion. Can’t believe some iphone users consider widgets modetn

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            1 year ago

            My old boss would always buy the new IPhone the day it came out and brag about features and a lot of the times I would be scratching my head being like how is that different then what I have on my 4 year old android Galaxy 6??

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          1 year ago

          Now they do, but the iPhone was revolutionary when it was released. Apple literally changed the world with their invention.

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            1 year ago

            A lot of people forget the early days.

            Android had copy/paste first, Apple didn’t for a long time.

            Android had MMS support first, Apple didn’t for a long time.

            Android had multi tasking apps first, apple didn’t for a long time.

            Android allowed app store apps to duplicate inbuilt apps, like web browsers, music players, email clients. Apple banned these for a long time.

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              1 year ago

              I remember having to jailbreak my iPhone 3GS to have swipe down toggles we now know as normal today. It was called SB settings from cydia. I’m pretty sure this was also standard on Android. And file manager.

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              1 year ago

              Android was a poor comparison when iPhone first released. I had one of them. It was neat because it was new, but realistically it was a piece of shit compared to the iPhone. I’m no Apple fan boy, but they genuinely changed the world in many ways

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                1 year ago

                When iPhone first released… it was a piece of shit compared to the HTC Dream with Android. The main improvement Apple did, was removing the keyboard.

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        1 year ago

        To this day whenever I hear people say Apple invented the smart phone I sigh. Maybe that’s technically true or not depending on how you want to count it. But what irks me is how people think it was brilliant. Like bro, I was browsing on the go with my Zune and PSP years before the iPhone came out. The only things we can thank Apple for are the two worst parts of a smart phone. Apps and the phone.

        • Wrench Wizard@lemmy.world
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          Yes, Zune! Had one of those, a Palm TX and a PSP Design wise? Apart from cellular connectivity the Palm TX is pretty similar to an iPhone imo. More of an upgrade really, even though it released several years before the original iPhone.

          Had a built in stylus, 312 mhz processor, touch screen, Bluetooth, Infrared, Wifi, flip cover (which took smartphones a while to adapt to) 128 MB ram just like iPhone, 480×320 screen like iPhone, heck even a Nes emulator. It’s so similar that I really feel like Apple took note, even had its own Palm OS.

          And it releases 2+ years before the iPhone… if only they were hyped more and had access to cell networks.

          When the first iPhone released I paid virtually no attention bc I’d been having devices that did similar and more for a while already

          Heck the TX even had an App where you could select virtually any T.V and use it as a remote via IR, can’t do that shit on an iPhone even today

          Oh, and expandable storage via SD cards. Idk how we downgraded

        • Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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          1 year ago

          But jobs didn’t want apps on the iPhone, it was only planned for the iPad that would only come years later. He kind of got strong armed into putting it on the iPhone as well (and I doubt it would have been as successful as it did if Jobs had had his way)

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        1 year ago

        Android was not aimed at blackberry. It was to be a completely new phone OS from the ground up and add extensive capabilities to the phone world over what the blackberry (the most popular phone at the time) could. Yes the G1 had a similar form factor to the most popular phone at the time and it wasn’t even the only form. The phone in the picture was from prototype stage and never shipped in that form factor. The shipping go had a screen and button under it. The screen slid sideways to reveal a keyboard. The Motorola droid was the most popular android phone when they actually shipped. I had a droid and a coworker had a G1. Development problems and companies scared to gamble on a radical new product delayed Androids launch behind iPhones. Apple did a fantastic job of developing the iPhone in secret, knowing the Android was coming.

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    He died, all right. Never letting go of his bullshit, whether it was alternative medicine or whatever.

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      He’s been raised to divinity almost. Even now, not a month goes by when some major outlet would write a story on what a genius he was, same goes for hackernews.

      Odd that had he lived, you’d be seeing him on Joe Rogan or posting some antivax bs.

  • Flabble@lemmynsfw.com
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    1 year ago

    I miss when Steve Jobs was the most overtly garbage trashman in the tech industry. Well, at least he’s resting peacefully in hell.

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    1 year ago

    Here are the stats nowadays. Just to make Steve Jobs roll in his grave, once again! 😂

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      I think hed be pretty happy with that! That 13% may be less, but its all from 1 manufacturer or brand. They dont need to share a piece of the pie!

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      1 year ago

      Android4Life! But come on, give up that graph that combines mobile + desktop operating systems! They are totally, completely different and should be kept separate. But only based on who buys them, who uses them, who supports them, customer vs corporate customers, etc…

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      1 year ago

      I miss when devices came with infrared transmitters… Also it had a mini sim & built-in Bluetooth/wifi at that time, wow.

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        1 year ago

        Xiaomi phones still come with infrared, mostly used to control TVs, fans, AC units, etc.

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      1 year ago

      iPhone undeniably brought the technology forward by years, even if only in terms of software. I don’t even like iOS, but it seems disingenuous to compare iPhone to those, or the Samsung tablets, or anything that came before it.

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        Here in the UK it took over 3 years, after the initial release of the iPhone, for it to even support MMS messaging. Most people around me had Blackberries until Apple actually gave reason for them to consider switching, which took years. It was largely considered to be like the iPods before it: focused on the fashion/‘cool’ aspect of it.

        I would not say they brought technology forward, and I’d go as far as to say the strive to bring forward functionalities of the iPhones improved after Jobs (I understand this is a hot take and may result in downvotes, just my opinion based on local experience).

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        1 year ago

        While apple did improve the design, they mostly made it “cool”. Before that they were “nerd” phones. The Motorola V3 was a “cooler “phone at the time until the iPhone came out.

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        1 year ago

        I’m with you, but it seems like this post got taken over by passionate haters

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          Lol haters. Can’t really blame ppl for saying fanboy if talk like that.

          You post a hateful quote and ppl nuance it. Doesn’t seem that bad.

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    Why does this asshole live rent free in all your heads? I never hear Apple fanboys bitch about that creep Andy Rubin.

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    At least normal billionaires pretend to be fans of free markets where competition keeps prices in check. Steve Jobs was just honest enough to admit he’s a piece of shit

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    Man all this money in the bank and still ranting like a loser. Mfer his company steals all product ideas from other companies right from VR headsets to features from Android and then he says this. Innovate harder bitch 🤣🤣

  • Stinkywinks@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    He says great artist steal then says he wants to destroy android for stealing? Like he did anything but hype shit up on stage

    • Sundray@lemmy.sdf.org
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      1 year ago

      It’s a good example of how people’s morals vary greatly based on their present situation, rather than being some kind of deeply held, unchanging foundation. What people believe is good and bad is largely a function of where they happen to be at the moment.

  • tallwookie@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    rofl. apple stole their gui from xerox, so I guess he knew how it worked.

    still failed, rather epically

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    1 year ago

    Apple, with the iphone, did pioneering capacitive touch screen and biometric. Android brought smartphone to the mass and trigger the stupid camera war.

    • Norgur@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Apple-Fanboii-Checklist:

      1. Trace everything back to the original iPhone
      2. Be sure to mention Apple’s Marketing buzzwords like “biometry” or “live photo”
      3. Offhandedly treat “Android” as “product for the common masses” with a hint of snobbery
      4. Treat “The Android” as a monolithic entity instead of a licensed OS that has nothing to do with the devices it runs on per se
      5. Call anything that was a marketing focus for Android-Using-Companies but not for Apple for a time some derogatory name because only what Apple did was right
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        1 year ago

        Nice try though, have been an android user all my life and only own one ipad. Typical stupid online generalization.

        • fer0n@lemm.eeOP
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          Too late, you already angered the android extremists. Come at me haters

          • Norgur@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            All hail the little robo dwarf trashcan thing that is supposed to be an Android while looking nothing like a human!

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        1 year ago

        I’ve never seen someone shit and vomit so hard into a 5 point list before. Congrats on that one, go grab some water.

        1. Named the one pioneering thing they actually did
        2. Didn’t use that word but biometrics have nothing implicitly to do with iPhone. Regardless, imagine referring to a named functionality by its own name - so controversial. You’re just trying to take words away from people.
        3. You’re being paranoid, where do you see snobbery in this comment please point it out if you’re willing to defend this point
        4. Again, imagine referring to something as it is socially known. Android, pedantically, is an OS yes but everyone in the fucking world when they hear “android or iPhone” know that means an iPhone or a phone running android. 🙄
        5. What the fuck are you smoking

        Cool username by the way. What’s the origin? Sounds awfully a lot like a specific slur I know of. A trolls MO certainly would line up with whatever your shit post of a comment was.

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              1 year ago

              “riveting conversation” eh?

              Watch the completely uncalled for aggression you spewed towards a silly little post about brand fanboiis. Insults followed by attacks, followed by calling me racist for my nickname. This is pathetic and nothing more. You may believe you dealt some sort of blow to me and “win” or something, yet the only thing you did is flail around like an angry child.

              All this aggression against a post that was meant to tease someone, which you might have noticed had you read my other post 3 answers down.

              Even if there was a conversation to be had about Android vs iOS or the like (there is none, everyone should use their hard earned money to buy whatever is the best products for them and that’s it), even if you made some interesting point somewhere in that ball of hatred you call “conversation”, I’d not engage with that point since the tone you set is not worth my - or everyone else’s - time.

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                Not reading that wall of text, know damn well it equates to I don’t have anything intelligent to contribute to this convo and I am a troll.

                Textbook.

    • jarfil@lemmy.world
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      The “stupid camera war” killed the amount of UFO and ghost sightings, while increasing the sightings of meteors and police brutality, so not all that stupid.

    • DrQuint@lemm.ee
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      capacitative touch screen

      Motorola PDA’s form 1999 already had it. I was playing jawbreaker instead of working back in 2001.

      You’re too young for the stance you want to take. Let the adults talk.

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        Give the credit where its due. Android was designed to be used on a device similar to BlackBerry (Sooner), the success of the first iPhone made them switch to a touch design from the ground up. Your Motorola didn’t start any trend. That’s why I use the word “pioneering”. Use shit just to claim “first” without making any major impact is called “gimmick”, like the 2k screen on my old LG G3 (hate it).

        Empty barrel truly make the most noise.

      • stevedidWHAT@lemmy.world
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        Jsyk I downvoted not because you’re necessarily wrong but because you were a dick when the other dude hadn’t even engaged in anything like that

        Not very cash money of u fren