B
Biannoshufu
Just. Damn.
You know, I really think that the majority if these people are trolling. They just want to stir up shit by saying asshole stuff because they like to stir shit, and thats the only reason. Web anonymity, etc. That isn't discounting the "fanboy" groups who perch on both sides of issues/companies/etc and just want to attack anything that isn't their "thing", but I just don't think the majority care that much, I think they just want to be assholes because they can.It is interesting to see the haters out there on the web.
Right?Sidenote: The thread prefix title for this one is fantastic.
Oh god. Two cults collide. (I call WBC a cult cause to me they are one) Rabid fanboi vs WBC round 1.I want to envision hordes and hordes of Apple-fanbois and grrls dressed in jeans and black turtlenecks making that cult's picketing damn near impossible.
Well, whether people don't want to admit it or not, Steve Jobs guided a company to create really innovative products in the last couple of years. They are sold in the millions and become a common household item. Sure there are haters, but millions upon millions of iPhones, iPods, iShuffles, and iPads sold around the world is insane. Yes there are alternative, but a lot of people have been touched by Steve Jobs' innovation one form or another.Seconded, Ame.
It seems that the news of his passing are taken pretty hard. One of my friends with whom I talk and game almost daily was too saddened by the news to talk today...
Totally awesome.Right?
Top right.What I don't understand is how people who did not know him at all are that much affected by it.
I think it has to do how that person effect them. Some people have their heros, idol, or whatever you may call it, guiding their personal lives. Some people are devastated by fictional character dying.See, I can understand being sad about someone's passing, or making it you more contemplative of your own mortality, but this man was a) just a man, and b) had somewhat of a celebrity status, and if you adhere to that philosophy c) a bit of a dick. What I don't understand is how people who did not know him at all are that much affected by it.
Generally, when North Ranger talks of "friends with whom I game," I think he usually means P&P. But maybe not here, who knows. And I could kinda see it being the case that if somebody's a little bummed out they might not feel like LARPing it up at the D&D session.On top of my head, I've had two of my 'heroes' die during my lifetime. I was still able to play a video game after the news.
Yea. I am just saying that not everyone is strong. Humans are emotional lots. Sometimes logic doesn't dictate their actions. If that was the case, we won't have many stupid asses around the worldOn top of my head, I've had two of my 'heroes' die during my lifetime. I was still able to play a video game after the news. And I can certainly be devastated over a fictional character dying (overemotional + hormones = cry at least once a day, even if it's about cooked food that came out kinda off) but that doesn't stop me from continuing to live my life.
Being guided by someone else is not living. In fact, to aptly RE-quote Steve Jobs here:
Not if you like memebase, they've been doing that since yesterday.Is it too soon for a "dey took er jobs!" joke?
Steve Jobs Succumbs to Alternative Medicine
from Skepticblog by Brian Dunning
100+ people liked this
I’m sad that today I’m adding a slide to one of my live presentations, adding Steve Jobs to the list of famous people who died treating terminal diseases with woo rather than with medicine.
Seven or eight years ago, the news broke that Steve Jobs had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, but considering it a private matter, he delayed in informing Apple’s board, and Apple’s board delayed in informing the shareholders. So what. The only delay that really mattered was that Steve, it turned out, had been treating his pancreatic cancer with a special diet and other alternative therapies, prescribed by his naturopath.
Most pancreatic cancers are aggressive and always terminal, but Steve was lucky (if you can call it that) and had a rare form called an islet cell neuroendocrine tumor, which is actually quite treatable with excellent survival rates — if caught soon enough. The median survival is about a decade, but it depends on how soon it’s removed surgically. Steve caught his very early, and should have expected to survive much longer than a decade. Unfortunately Steve relied on a naturopathic diet instead of early surgery. There is no evidence that diet has any effect on islet cell carcinoma. As he dieted for nine months, the tumor progressed, and took him from the high end to the low end of the survival rate.
Eventually it became clear to all involved that his alternative therapy wasn’t working, and from then on, by all accounts, Steve aggressively threw money at the best that medical science could offer. But it was too late. He had a Whipple procedure. He had a liver transplant. And then he died, all too young.
My whole family loves Apple devices. Steve made our lives better, and I think I can say that pragmatically and without any Apple heroin in my veins. Note only that, he created my profession.
His lifelong friend Bill Gates tweeted:
For those of us lucky enough to get to work with Steve, it’s been an insanely great honor. I will miss Steve immensely. b-gat.es/qHXDsU
I saw another tweet today from @DamonLindelof that I thought was beautifully worded:
Steve Jobs. On behalf of every dreamer sitting in his or her garage who is crazy enough to try to change the world, you will be missed.
We can’t say for sure that Steve would still be alive and making lives better were it not for the alternative therapy, but the statistics suggest it very strongly. If you insist on unproven therapies, fine; but also try the proven ones. Nobody likes to either write or read a post such as this one.
If Steve Jobs is your hero/idol, you need to reevaluate your life.I think it has to do how that person effect them. Some people have their heros, idol, or whatever you may call it, guiding their personal lives. Some people are devastated by fictional character dying.
He is not my hero/idol I am not the one breaking down here.If Steve Jobs is your hero/idol, you need to reevaluate your life.
I agree. From an IT perspective, I like it when things work. I do love my iPhone and my iPad cause it is easier to use (and lighter) I DO have a nice laptop (work provided) and a PC for my gaming needs. I was raised by PC with little mac influence, but I am not brand advocate.Someone doesn't have to be a hero to impress you with what they did with their lives enough to think the world is a little worse without them. Jobs may have been had some issues in "real life", but his vision was in recognizing what it was out of the crop of tech products that needed to be developed and pushed. He also gave us products that weren't crap. That's the part mac-haters never seem to understand. You may outspec my macbook pro, but it's built like a tank and looks good, and it just works. Same with the OS. I have converted so many mac haters at talks because I plug a projector in, and lo and behold, it projects. That's less impressive lately, but it worked in 2002, too. That actually is the heart of his effect on the world. Even though you may not like Apple products (and you could say they're not the best for whatever reason), I'll bet the brand you use was heavily influenced. Even if apple didn't invent the mouse or the windowed UI, it made them popular. Apple didn't invent the MP3 player, but it made it a phenomenon. Apple didn't invent the smartphone, but it made them sell because Jobs insisted on the real life fit. Not because people fawn over Jobs or Apple. I fawn over my Apple because it's good, not the other way around, and I detest being accused of the opposite.
I'm actually more of a primitivist, and feel the world could do without massive consumer crap.Someone doesn't have to be a hero to impress you with what they did with their lives enough to think the world is a little worse without them. Jobs may have been had some issues in "real life", but his vision was in recognizing what it was out of the crop of tech products that needed to be developed and pushed. He also gave us products that weren't crap. That's the part mac-haters never seem to understand. You may outspec my macbook pro, but it's built like a tank and looks good, and it just works. Same with the OS. I have converted so many mac haters at talks because I plug a projector in, and lo and behold, it projects. That's less impressive lately, but it worked in 2002, too. That actually is the heart of his effect on the world. Even though you may not like Apple products (and you could say they're not the best for whatever reason), I'll bet the brand you use was heavily influenced. Even if apple didn't invent the mouse or the windowed UI, it made them popular. Apple didn't invent the MP3 player, but it made it a phenomenon. Apple didn't invent the smartphone, but it made them sell because Jobs insisted on the real life fit. Not because people fawn over Jobs or Apple. I fawn over my Apple because it's good, not the other way around, and I detest being accused of the opposite.