R. L. Dane :debian: :openbsd:🧉 on Nostr: npub153rgq…j0m0m IMHO, the glory days/golden era of Apple was 1984-1989, then ...
npub153rgq8nna0ne3t6r5qqwlyafy82sp820at0lzg5sf2zc7furqy7snj0m0m (npub153r…0m0m)
IMHO, the glory days/golden era of Apple was 1984-1989, then 1998-2011.
The Second Steve Jobs Era was simply amazing.
Tim Cook is way more successful than any other Steve successor, but just a soulless as the rest. He is so *not* inspiring to me, and under his watch, Apple has turned into a decidedly consumer-hostile (in very subtle ways, mind you) contemptible luxury brand.
I'm a little sad I never had a PowerPC. That was a cool architecture, and is still being used.
IMHO, the glory days/golden era of Apple was 1984-1989, then 1998-2011.
The Second Steve Jobs Era was simply amazing.
Tim Cook is way more successful than any other Steve successor, but just a soulless as the rest. He is so *not* inspiring to me, and under his watch, Apple has turned into a decidedly consumer-hostile (in very subtle ways, mind you) contemptible luxury brand.
I'm a little sad I never had a PowerPC. That was a cool architecture, and is still being used.