Monthly Archives: October 2010

An anecdotal story, a friend of mine was at meetings at Apple and Microsoft on the same day and this was in the last year, so this was recently. He went into the Apple meeting (he’s a vendor for Apple) and when he went into the meeting at Apple as soon as the designers walked in the room, everyone stopped talking because the designers are the most respected people in the organization. Everyone knows the designers speak for Steve because they have direct reporting to him. It is only at Apple where design reports directly to the CEO.

Later in the day he was at Microsoft. When he went into the Microsoft meeting, everybody was talking and then the meeting starts and no designers ever walk into the room. All the technical people are sitting there trying to add their ideas of what ought to be in the design. That’s a recipe for disaster.

Microsoft hires some of the smartest people in the world. They are known for their incredibly challenging test they put people through to get hired. It’s not an issue of people being smart and talented. It’s that design at Apple is at the highest level of the organization, led by Steve personally. Design at other companies is not there. It is buried down in the bureaucracy somewhere… In bureaucracies many people have the authority to say no, not the authority to say yes. So you end up with products with compromises. This goes back to Steve’s philosophy that the most important decisions are the things you decide NOT to do, not what you decide to do. It’s the minimalist thinking again.

Having been around in the early days, I don’t see any change in Steve’s first principles — except he’s gotten better and better at it.

Former Apple CEO – John Sculley from “John Sculley On Steve Jobs, The Full Interview Transcript”

Twitter-plaining

I’m not sure how everyone uses social media so I’ll speak for myself. I like the fact that I can stay in touch with my friends/family and even people I’ve never met. I enjoy hearing what interests them, understanding their perspective and even to a small degree finding out what irks them. I like the fact that people are willing to take time to share with the world, and me, what’s up.
However…
I have a hard time reading social media updates that primarily focus on the negative. I know I’m saying this at risk of complaining myself, but really for me, it’s just my way of saying, “hey, I like hanging out with you, but i can only take so much negativity.” I recognize that I have the choice to follow or not, but I think I speak for most of your and my friends/followers… They’re following for a reason, but that reason probably is not to listen to me complain.
So there’s a good chance I’ll be making some cuts in the next few weeks. This is probably why.
Thanks for listening to my complaint. ;)
Philippians 4:8