Apple Culture and Jobs

Braulio 2022-10-03 02:27:39

This is a very logical and neutral documentary. By reviewing the details of Jobs’ highlights at Apple and old colleagues, we can get a glimpse of how Apple has become Apple today: Apple’s attitude towards the media and suppliers; Apple’s handling of employees switching jobs to competing companies; Apple Wolf culture. It turns out that everything was fixed in the Steve Jobs era, and it can even be traced back to the birth of the first generation of Mac, when crazy workstyle has become common practice. After so many years, people who constantly adjusted themselves to adapt to Jobs' style remained, and more people became the past in the history of Apple's development.

As a great man who changed the times, Jobs's attitude towards his ex-girlfriends and daughters can be regarded as a model of a scumbag. Of course, it seems that this is a common problem for all geniuses, including Musk, the popular fried chicken in Silicon Valley. He was a saint to the world, but he was an a**hole to the family.

View more about Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine reviews

Extended Reading

Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine quotes

  • Himself - Narrator: In the end I was left with the same question with which I began this journey: Why did so many strangers weep for Steve Jobs? It is just simple to say it was because he gave us products we love, without asking why we love them the way we do. It is too simple even to conclude that we love them because they connect us to a wider world and the people in our lives that are far away. Because these machines isolate us too. Perhaps the contradictory nature of our experience with these gadgets, narrates the contradictions of Jobs himself: He was an artist who sought perfection, but could never found peace. He had the focus of a monk, but none of the empathy. He offered us freedom, but only within his closed garden to which he held the key.