... we really should have one silicon interface for all of our devices. We should have one set of developer APIs on all of our devices. And all of the apps we bring to end users should be available on all of our devices.
Guess who said this....
... we really should have one silicon interface for all of our devices. We should have one set of developer APIs on all of our devices. And all of the apps we bring to end users should be available on all of our devices.
Guess who said this....
I'm thinking about it
Ken Olsen, CEO of Digital Equipment Corporation in 1978. No wait, he said that people have no need for a personal computer in the home.
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Oooh Shiny: PopularPages
Unumquodque potest reparantur. Patientia sit virtus.
To easy, Terry Myerson, I guess they've been checking out Ubuntu development
I'm thinking it was Khan Noonien Singh.
Or maybe Thomas Edison.
No, wait. Was it Julius Caesar?
I'm thinking Thomas J. Watson (Chairman of the Board of International Business Machines), 1943
No, wait. He's reputed to have said 'I think there is a world market for about five computers'
Nahh! I did !
Back in the golden days when the asylum was a nice place to be !!!!
bhatta
May the Source be with you !
Ash nazg durbatulûk, ash nazg gimbatul, ash nazg thrakatulûk, agh 'Buntu-ishi krimpatul !
Moses at SinaiCon, introducing the first tablet.
It is a lofty goal, but the priority should not be on the goal alone, it should be making the goal while exceeding user expectations about software in the process. Windows 8 is an example of how simply aiming for the goal can bring a lot of negative consequences to a goal that could bring major positives.
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