indefensible: john gruber

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david foster wallace is of course the singular writer of choice for guys like this who are looking for empirical proof that someone is the best artist

lag∞n, Monday, 6 April 2015 14:59 (nine years ago) link

being a yankees fan not from new york is too perfect too

lag∞n, Monday, 6 April 2015 15:00 (nine years ago) link

i like DFW

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 6 April 2015 15:26 (nine years ago) link

sure so do i

lag∞n, Monday, 6 April 2015 15:27 (nine years ago) link

none of these things are necessarily bad, but if you are the guy who speaks only of liking these things you are bad

mh, Monday, 6 April 2015 16:08 (nine years ago) link

otm

brunch technician (silby), Monday, 6 April 2015 17:21 (nine years ago) link

since he's a Yankees fan from Philly probably means he's a DH apologist

brunch technician (silby), Monday, 6 April 2015 17:21 (nine years ago) link

http://daringfireball.net/linked/2015/04/06/the-obama-doctrine

this is such a baffling paraphrase of the quoted passage

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Tuesday, 7 April 2015 00:12 (nine years ago) link

Don't forget James Bond and the Dallas Cowboys

sofatruck, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 00:58 (nine years ago) link

I read the new SJ bio. I think Gruber has a higher opinion of it than I do.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:39 (nine years ago) link

I thought it was better than the Isaacson one

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:47 (nine years ago) link

I’m not sure I agree. If someone were to ask me which one to read, I’d recommend Steve Jobs. Becoming Steve Jobs had weird pacing problems, I think. The coverage of his early years didn’t seem nearly comprehensive enough. A lot of input from Avie and Jon later on in the book, but very little from Cue. Nothing from Schiller? Some from Cook, but perhaps not enough. The Iger stuff was good. Some repetition, perhaps a lot, from stuff I’d read before. Gruber said there’d be “sensational” stuff in the book, didn’t he? Besides the Tim Cook liver incident, there wasn’t anything that fit that description. We’re never going to get a perfect SJ book. Then again the market for the type of book I’d want would be very small. (Think: multi-volume shit.)

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:55 (nine years ago) link

Unfortunately, I don’t think my destiny in life is to be SJ’s Robert Caro.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:55 (nine years ago) link

But someone better do more interviewing of the principals before they all die off and get some more books out there.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:56 (nine years ago) link

Where’s Phil Schiller’s take? Someone find Scott Forstall! Tell me more about what happened inside the company from, like, mid-1997 to mid-1998.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:56 (nine years ago) link

Gruber would think a description of what Jobs' farts smelled like was "sensational"

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:56 (nine years ago) link

Exactly what did Jobs do, step by step, in excruciating detail, to save the company during those months. Give me a book just about that, with interview with everybody in it!

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:57 (nine years ago) link

A whole volume on the development of the iPhone!

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:57 (nine years ago) link

I think those wouldn't really be biographies, more oral histories of the workplace.

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:58 (nine years ago) link

Btw: https://instagram.com/p/084wz7hHQ5/

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 03:58 (nine years ago) link

imo the ex-Apple person who had the most ongoing social power was prob Katie Cotton

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:01 (nine years ago) link

http://daringfireball.net/linked/2015/04/06/the-obama-doctrine

this is such a baffling paraphrase of the quoted passage

― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, April 6, 2015 8:12 PM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

lol design solutionism

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:03 (nine years ago) link

about half of Apple's success has been delivering good products, the other half has been strictly controlling the narrative and perception of those products

they really use the stick/carrot approach with journalists, and I think Gruber probably has some pretty sharp night vision, if you catch my meaning

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:04 (nine years ago) link

Gruber as part of the Apple-media syndicate that delivers people who "care about design," but really only maybe know web design and like to talk about Important Men

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:06 (nine years ago) link

Apple doesn’t approach PR the same way now as it did before. I think Cook addressed this specifically . . . in Lashinsky’s Fortune cover story maybe?

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:08 (nine years ago) link

tbf if u want to credit gruber with anything he understood the concept of user experience design before it became common place, in other words he took the right lesson from apple, or at least one of the lessons he took was right

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:09 (nine years ago) link

Yes, that’s definitely not the only lesson though.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:10 (nine years ago) link

and i do think apples success is largely based on making products that just work, the marketing is nice and all but, i mean this is not jewelry (<<<), also the supply chain aspect is huge but that never wouldve been possible if the design didnt appeal to enough ppl to reach those economies of scale

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:12 (nine years ago) link

There are other factors too, like picking the right products at the right time and not being afraid of cannibalization, blah blah blah.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:16 (nine years ago) link

When I was in college, they were the iPod and Mac company!

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:17 (nine years ago) link

The Mac isn’t the biggest business on the planet. The iPod disappeared as a direct result of the success of the phone, but it’s possible that in an alternate reality someone else got to the phone and Apple didn’t or Apple did but never got traction or scenario C, D, E, or F.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:18 (nine years ago) link

ppl thought canceling the mini for the nano was crazy at the time!

brunch technician (silby), Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:19 (nine years ago) link

There’s also the way Jobs thought about hiring people. That was important.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:20 (nine years ago) link

There are other factors too, like picking the right products at the right time and not being afraid of cannibalization, blah blah blah.

― markers, Tuesday, April 7, 2015 12:16 AM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

those both fall under the rubric of ux design imho at least philosophically if not as far as typically prescribed

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:20 (nine years ago) link

yah maybe now, their late 90s comeback through the iPhone was basically releasing mostly-baked ideas and hoping people would get into them because they looked cool and had an ethos

OS X performed like crap for the first few years, but you could spend your time waiting by cleaning lint out of your iPod's moving scroll wheel

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:20 (nine years ago) link

The fact that Jobs (eventually) listened to people who disagreed with him was crucial! No iPod on Windows!

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:21 (nine years ago) link

steve jobs was the best "product guy" ever is all you need to know

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:21 (nine years ago) link

also remember when iPods didn't have sudden motion sensors and the hard drives would fail because the read head would smack the platters

Click of death!

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:21 (nine years ago) link

steve jobs was the best "product guy" ever is all you need to know

― lag∞n, Monday, April 6, 2015 9:21 PM (10 seconds ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

my experience with "product guys" at 4m4z0n was that none of them seemed to have any insight into what anyone might possibly want

brunch technician (silby), Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:23 (nine years ago) link

it's probably hard to be a "product guy"

brunch technician (silby), Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:23 (nine years ago) link

You key word there is the 440 thing.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:23 (nine years ago) link

They don’t know how to make consumer electronics a lot of people want beyond that one thing for reading books that most people don’t care about.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:24 (nine years ago) link

amazon's firetv is currently about twice as useful as appletv, mostly due to apple not developing it much at all

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:25 (nine years ago) link

Ah forgot about that. Some people seem to like it, sure! I don’t care about the Apple TV though. Or the entire category, basically.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:25 (nine years ago) link

you are apple

mh, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:26 (nine years ago) link

I was only around/working on website stuff, lots of people clearly want to buy things, trying to figure out dumb ways to make them want more things was really a pointless exercise

brunch technician (silby), Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:26 (nine years ago) link

xpost Apple and I will diverge later this year probably, because it looks like they might start caring, and I don’t see how I will. The Watch is more interesting to me; I will be saving up for one of those, not so much with the TV.

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:27 (nine years ago) link

amazon is a great product company! it just has a very low end shitty throw shit at the wall and see what (empirically) sticks approach, which is in its own way more fascinating and emblematic of our consumerist times than apple even imho

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:28 (nine years ago) link

What products, lag00n?

markers, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:29 (nine years ago) link

the watch is an epic fail imho but we will see

lag∞n, Tuesday, 7 April 2015 04:29 (nine years ago) link


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