
Look, I get it. It's a great story, maybe the greatest in the history of American business. From
Day One, Apple did things the right way: clean, elegant, beautiful. But they were brought to their knees by Microsoft's colossal mediocrity. Their visionary founder was forced out. They teetered on the brink. And then--
bam! They were saved (ironically, by Microsoft.) They regained their footing. And then they built one of the most remarkable corporate empires that has ever been constructed. And they did it by doing things their way. Clean. Elegant. Beautiful. Insanely great. So I can see why people who were Apple users during the dark days have a messianic zeal. Their ultimate triumph, after such long suffering at the brutal hands of inferiors, must seem to them more than remarkable. It must seem
righteous. Add that to one of the weirdest and most unexpected things about the twenty-first century--the extent to which so many people defensively identify with the operating system on their phone--and Apple must seem like a living testament to the ultimate victory of truth, justice, and the American way. But there's nothing even remotely admirable about their latest coup.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/IEu9x1uhYik/
Tech Crunch Personal Finance News & Advice Guide To Financial Fitness Money Game
No comments:
Post a Comment