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Offline TonyAndHollywood

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #15 on: 06 October 2011, 04:08:54 PM »
responsnya terhadap masalah :
Lam e-mailed Jobs about three weeks before the Apple creator's death apologizing and saying he should have even considered quitting shortly afterwards. While no direct response came, a very close contact of Jobs' had said that the CEO considered it "all water under the bridge." The message and news provided a sense of peace.

http://www.electronista.com/articles/11/10/06/former.gizmodo.writer.praises.jobs.grace/

Former Gizmodo writer praises Jobs grace



Former Gizmodo editor and now Wirecutter founder Brian Lam revealed Wednesday evening that the late Steve Jobs had been kind even at the height of the incident surrounding the escaped iPhone 4 prototype. Recalling the conversation after the initial story, he noted that Steve just said he "really want[ed] my phone back" and emphasized that he wasn't mad at the news outlet. While he clearly got upset after the site refused to give the iPhone back without a formal letter, Jobs delicately ended a following call, telling Lam "you're just doing your job."

Jobs' constant desire to succeed and produce the best product possible even saw him ask for feedback from Lam on the look of the iPhone 4 prototype. "What do you think of it?" the CEO asked.

 Lam himself expressed some regret that may have reached Jobs before his death. While he had no regrets about posting the initial leak, he wished sometime afterwards that his outlet had returned the iPhone prototype without questions.

 "I probably would have given the phone back without asking for the letter," Lam explained. "And I would have done the story about the engineer who lost it with more compassion and without naming him. Steve said we'd had our fun and we had the first story but we were being greedy. And he was right. We were. It was sore winning. And we were also being short sighted. And, sometimes, I wish we never found that phone at all."

 Lam e-mailed Jobs about three weeks before the Apple creator's death apologizing and saying he should have even considered quitting shortly afterwards. While no direct response came, a very close contact of Jobs' had said that the CEO considered it "all water under the bridge." The message and news provided a sense of peace.

Thanks Bro Radi Muliawan,
Saya semakin kagum sama Almarhum Steve Jobs.......
 _/\_
« Last Edit: 06 October 2011, 04:13:56 PM by TonyAndHollywood »

Offline El Sol

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #16 on: 06 October 2011, 04:57:08 PM »
dia Buddhist...:)

Offline johan3000

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Lisa, anak Steve Jobs yg pertama
« Reply #17 on: 06 October 2011, 11:56:13 PM »


Lisa Brennan-Jobs

From Wikipedia(View original Wikipedia Article) Last modified on 6 October 2011, at 03:12
Lisa Brennan-Jobs

Lisa Brennan-Jobs in Montenegro
Born   May 17, 1978 (age 33)
Occupation   Writer
Nationality   American
Citizenship   American
Education   Harvard University
Relative(s)   Steve Jobs (father)
Chris-Ann Brennan (mother)
Laurene Powell Jobs (stepmother)
lisabrennanjobs.net
Lisa Nicole Brennan-Jobs (born May 17, 1978) is an American journalist and magazine writer, and is the daughter of the late Steve Jobs (former Chairman and co-founder of Apple Inc.) and Chris-Ann Brennan.[1][2]
Early life

Lisa Brennan-Jobs grew up with her mother, Chris-Ann Brennan, in California. When she was born, Jobs refused to acknowledge paternity, so that she was raised on welfare for the first two years of her life.[1]
She was born just as Apple Computer began to experience significant growth. The Apple Lisa computer, invented the year she was born, was allegedly named after her, though, officially, Apple stated that the name was an acronym for Local Integrated Software Architecture.
Education and career

Brennan-Jobs graduated from Harvard University in 2000[1] and then moved to Europe.
She is a writer and her essays are available at lisabrennanjobs.net. She has been published in The Southwest Review, The Massachusetts Review, Harvard Crimson,[3] The Harvard Advocate, Spiked, Vogue and O, The Oprah Magazine.
Nagasena : salah satu dari delapan penyebab matangnya kebijaksanaan dgn seringnya bertanya

Offline johan3000

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Wozniak Tearfully Remembers His Friend Steve
« Reply #18 on: 07 October 2011, 01:07:41 PM »
Nagasena : salah satu dari delapan penyebab matangnya kebijaksanaan dgn seringnya bertanya

Offline Predator

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #19 on: 07 October 2011, 04:54:25 PM »


di tinggal hopeng, temen jackass sekaligus temen petualang ide-ide dunia IT :)
susah dan senang, sakit dan sehat selalu silih berganti

Offline Predator

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #20 on: 07 October 2011, 10:42:27 PM »
dia Buddhist...:)

selain Steve Jobs ada juga yg pengalamannya mirip, yaitu Peter Norton (Norton Untility)..
sama-sama mengenali buddhism dan menggunduli kepalanya

==================
http://www.nndb.com/people/704/000030614/

MS-DOS utilities programmer famous for Norton Utilities, sold his business to Symantec, a company which produces few original products of its own but thrives instead on acquisitions. Popularized the "Norton pose", a smug, arms-cross, "I Have What You Need" look. Of course, this was after his "I Am a Buddhist Monk" period where he shaved his head around 1971. Now a major collector of contemporary art. Estimated net worth as of 1998, $300-400 million.

==================

kesimpulannya : walau kita sama-sama mengenal buddhism dan nantinya sama-sama digunduli, hasilnya tetap sulit menjadi seperti mereka :D
susah dan senang, sakit dan sehat selalu silih berganti

Offline johan3000

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #21 on: 10 October 2011, 04:32:43 PM »

oh ternyata di kayangan juga pakai iPad,... jadi steve dpt keistimewaan ?
Nagasena : salah satu dari delapan penyebab matangnya kebijaksanaan dgn seringnya bertanya

Offline Mokau Kaucu

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #22 on: 11 October 2011, 12:45:01 AM »

oh ternyata di kayangan juga pakai iPad,... jadi steve dpt keistimewaan ?

P***us mencoba access ke forum Dhammacitta, tapi ngga bisa, maknya dia panggil Steve Job menghadap.
 :)) :)) :))
~Life is suffering, why should we make it more?~

Offline williamhalim

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #23 on: 11 October 2011, 03:12:47 PM »
selain diatas, ini nambah sumber info satu lagi..
semoga lebih termotivasi dalam praktik....

Walaupun seseorang dapat menaklukkan beribu-ribu musuh dalam beribu kali pertempuran, namun sesungguhnya penakluk terbesar adalah orang yang dapat menaklukkan dirinya sendiri (Dhammapada 103)

Offline Anestan

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #24 on: 02 December 2011, 09:10:42 PM »
Steve Jobs: Thoughts on Life



This short clip of Steve Jobs sharing his thoughts on life is well worth watching. Taken from a 1995 interview when Jobs was still working at NeXT, he reflects on some important lessons and simple facts about life and the world around us. Here’s a great inspirational quote:

Quote
“Everything around you that you call life, was made up by people who were no smarter than you”

It’s just under 2 minutes long, don’t miss it.

Offline johan3000

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #25 on: 05 December 2011, 07:07:17 PM »
katanya steve jobs memang lihai...

dia mengerjakan proyek (coding) dgn Atari pada malam harinya....

nah tao nya Steve Wozniac yg sebenarnya menyelesaikan coding tsb...
dgn menerima bayaran $350 dari SJ,

nah SJ menerima bayaran dari Atari $5,000.-

Nagasena : salah satu dari delapan penyebab matangnya kebijaksanaan dgn seringnya bertanya

Offline bluppy

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #26 on: 05 December 2011, 07:53:16 PM »
sebagai penyeimbang saja


What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve Jobs

In the days after Steve Jobs' death, friends and colleagues have, in customary fashion, been sharing their fondest memories of the Apple co-founder. He's been hailed as "a genius" and "the greatest CEO of his generation" by pundits and tech journalists. But a great man's reputation can withstand a full accounting. And, truth be told, Jobs could be terrible to people, and his impact on the world was not uniformly positive.

We mentioned much of the good Jobs did during his career earlier. His accomplishments were far-reaching and impossible to easily summarize. But here's one way of looking at the scope of his achievement: It's the dream of any entrepreneur to effect change in one industry. Jobs transformed half a dozen of them forever, from personal computers to phones to animation to music to publishing to video games. He was a polymath, a skilled motivator, a decisive judge, a farsighted tastemaker, an excellent showman, and a gifted strategist.

One thing he wasn't, though, was perfect. Indeed there were things Jobs did while at Apple that were deeply disturbing. Rude, dismissive, hostile, spiteful: Apple employees—the ones not bound by confidentiality agreements—have had a different story to tell over the years about Jobs and the bullying, manipulation and fear that followed him around Apple. Jobs contributed to global problems, too. Apple's success has been built literally on the backs of Chinese workers, many of them children and all of them enduring long shifts and the specter of brutal penalties for mistakes. And, for all his talk of enabling individual expression, Jobs imposed paranoid rules that centralized control of who could say what on his devices and in his company.

It's particularly important to take stock of Jobs' flaws right now. His successor, Tim Cook, has the opportunity to set a new course for the company, and to establish his own style of leadership. And, thanks to Apple's success, students of Jobs' approach to leadership have never been so numerous in Silicon Valley. He was worshipped and emulated plenty when he was alive; in death, Jobs will be even more of an icon.

After celebrating Jobs' achievements, we should talk freely about the dark side of Jobs and the company he co-founded. Here, then, is a catalog of lowlights:
Censorship and Authoritarianism

What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve JobsThe internet allowed people around the world to express themselves more freely and more easily. With the App Store, Apple reversed that progress. The iPhone and iPad constitute the most popular platform for handheld computerizing in America, key venues for media and software. But to put anything on the devices, you need Apple's permission. And the company wields its power aggressively.

In the name of protecting children from the evils of erotica — "freedom from porn" — and adults from one another, Jobs has banned from being installed on his devices gay art, gay travel guides, political cartoons, sexy pictures, Congressional candidate pamphlets, political caricature, Vogue fashion spreads, systems invented by the opposition, and other things considered morally suspect.

Apple's devices have connected us to a world of information. But they don't permit a full expression of ideas. Indeed, the people Apple supposedly serves — "the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers" — have been particularly put out by Jobs' lockdown. That America's most admired company has followed such an un-American path, and imposed centralized restrictions typical of the companies it once mocked, is deeply disturbing.

But then Jobs never seemed comfortable with the idea of fully empowered workers or a truly free press. Inside Apple, there is a culture of fear and control around communication; Apple's "Worldwide Loyalty Team" specializes in hunting down leakers, confiscating mobile phones and searching computers.

Apple applies coercive tactics to the press, as well. Its first response to stories it doesn't like is typically manipulation and badgering, for example, threatening to withhold access to events and executives. Next, it might leak a contradictory story.

What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve JobsBut Apple doesn't stop there. It has a fearsome legal team that is not above annihilating smaller prey. In 2005, for example, the company sued 19-year-old blogger Nick Ciarelli for correctly reporting, prior to launch, the existence of the Mac Mini. The company did not back down until Ciarelli agreed to close his blog ThinkSecret forever. Last year, after our sister blog Gizmodo ran a video of a prototype iPhone 4, Apple complained to law enforcement, who promptly raided an editor's home.

And just last month, in the creepiest example of Apple's fascist tendencies, two of Apple's private security agents searched the home of a San Francisco man and threatened him and his family with immigration trouble as part of an scramble for a missing iPhone prototype. The man said the security agents were accompanied by plainclothes police and did not identify themselves as private citizens, lending the impression they were law enforcement officers.
Sweatshops, Child Labor and Human Rights

Apple's factories in China have regularly employed young teenagers and people below the legal work age of 16, made people work grueling hours, and have tried to cover all this up. That's according to Apple's own 2010 report about its factories in China. In 2011, Apple reported that its child labor problem had worsened.

In 2010, the Daily Mail managed to get a reporter inside a facility in China that manufactures products for Apple and the paper shared a bit about what life is like:

    With the complex at peak production, operating 24 hours a day, seven days a week to meet the global demand for Apple phones and computers, a typical day begins with the Chinese national anthem being played over loudspeakers, with the words: 'Arise, arise, arise, millions of hearts with one mind.'

    As part of this Orwellian control, the public address system constantly relays propaganda, such as how many products have been made; how a new basketball court has been built for the workers; and why workers should 'value efficiency every minute, every second'.

    With other company slogans painted on workshop walls - including exhortations to 'achieve goals unless the sun no longer rises' and to 'gather all of the elite and Foxconn will get stronger and stronger' - the employees work up to 15-hour shifts.

    Down narrow, prison-like corridors, they sleep in cramped rooms in triple-decked bunk beds to save space, with simple bamboo mats for mattresses.

    Despite summer temperatures hitting 35 degrees, with 90 per cent humidity, there is no air-conditioning. Workers say some dormitories house more than 40 people and are infested with ants and cockroaches, with the noise and stench making it difficult to sleep.

A company can be judged by how it treats its lowliest workers. It sets an example for the rest of the company or in Apple's case, the world.

What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve Jobs
In Person and At Home

Before he was deposed from Apple the first time around, Jobs already had a reputation internally for acting like a tyrant. Jobs regularly belittled people, swore at them, and pressured them until they reached their breaking point. In the pursuit of greatness he cast aside politeness and empathy. His verbal abuse never stopped. Just last month Fortune reported about a half-hour "public humiliation" Jobs doled out to one Apple team:

    "Can anyone tell me what MobileMe is supposed to do?" Having received a satisfactory answer, he continued, "So why the f**k doesn't it do that?"

    "You've tarnished Apple's reputation," he told them. "You should hate each other for having let each other down."

Jobs ended by replacing the head of the group, on the spot.

In his book about Jobs' time at NeXT and return to Apple, The Second Coming of Steve Jobs, Alan Deutschman described Jobs' rough treatment of underlings:

    He would praise and inspire them, often in very creative ways, but he would also resort to intimidating, goading, berating, belittling, and even humiliating them... When he was Bad Steve, he didn't seem to care about the severe damage he caused to egos or emotions... suddenly and unexpectedly, he would look at something they were working on say that it "sucked," it was "shit."

Jobs had his share of personal shortcomings, too. He has no public record of giving to charity over the years, despite the fact he became wealthy after Apple's 1980 IPO and had accumulated an estimated $7 billion net worth by the time of his death. After closing Apple's philanthropic programs on his return to Apple in 1997, he never reinstated them, despite the company's gusher of profits.

It's possible Jobs has given to charity anonymously, or that he will posthumously, but he has hardly embraced or encouraged philanthropy in the manner of, say, Bill Gates, who pledged $60 billion to charity and who joined with Warren Buffet to push fellow billionaires to give even more.

What Everyone Is Too Polite to Say About Steve Jobs"He clearly didn't have the time," is what the director of Jobs' short-lived charitable foundation told the New York Times. That sounds about right. Jobs did not lead a balanced life. He was professionally relentless. He worked long hours, and remained CEO of Apple through his illness until six weeks before he died. The result was amazing products the world appreciates. But that doesn't mean Jobs' workaholic regimen is one to emulate.

There was a time when Jobs actively fought the idea of becoming a family man. He had his daughter Lisa out of wedlock at age 23 and, according to Fortune, spent two years denying paternity, even declaring in court papers "that he couldn't be Lisa's father because he was 'sterile and infertile, and as a result thereof, did not have the physical capacity to procreate a child.'" Jobs eventually acknowledged paternity, met and married his wife, now widow, Laurene Powell, and had three more children. Lisa went to Harvard and is now a writer.

Steve Jobs created many beautiful objects. He made digital devices more elegant and easier to use. He made a lot of money for Apple Inc. after people wrote it off for dead. He will undoubtedly serve as a role model for generations of entrepreneurs and business leaders. Whether that's a good thing or a bad thing depends on how honestly his life is appraised.
dari http://gawker.com/5847344

ok, he's buddhis, so what?
no body is perfect
« Last Edit: 05 December 2011, 07:55:24 PM by bluppy »

Offline will_i_am

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #27 on: 05 December 2011, 08:38:44 PM »
ternyata ketauan belangnya...
saya kira selama ini orangnya baik...
hiduplah hanya pada hari ini, jangan mengkhawatirkan masa depan ataupun terpuruk dalam masa lalu.
berbahagialah akan apa yang anda miliki, jangan mengejar keinginan akan memiliki
_/\_

Offline bluppy

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #28 on: 05 December 2011, 08:41:28 PM »
well, steve jobs ada kebaikan dan keburukannya sendiri
sama seperti manusia lainnya...
nothing unusual about that

jadi bagus juga kan bisa liat berita dari sisi lain
mainstream media seringkali hanya memperlihatkan satu sisi saja



Offline will_i_am

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Re: Steve Jobs
« Reply #29 on: 05 December 2011, 08:46:09 PM »
tapi kalau dibaca dari artikel di atas, sepertinya steve lebih terkesan ke arah "buruk" daripada baik...
yang bisa dibanggakan dari dirinya hanya semangat kerjanya yang tinggi, dan ketegasannya...
hiduplah hanya pada hari ini, jangan mengkhawatirkan masa depan ataupun terpuruk dalam masa lalu.
berbahagialah akan apa yang anda miliki, jangan mengejar keinginan akan memiliki
_/\_

 

anything