Posts Tagged ‘steve jobs’

Change the World (NOW!) or Go Home

Jun 2009

10

Over the past few weeks, I’ve done a lot of thinking about how 1) we impact the world, and 2) what we’re doing (collectively and individually) to increase that impact.

 

I’ve come to the conclusion that as individuals, we each need to:

 

1) change the world, and
2) do it now

 

A few weeks back, I came across a great piece of art done about 2 years ago by Hugh McLeod (illustrator of Seth Godin’s The Dip):

 

microsoftbizcard219border Change the World (NOW!) or Go Home

 

Change the world, or go home. These are empowering (and scary) words that can apply to every individual in today’s society as well as every company or corporation. If you’re not doing something that truly impacts the world (even if that means YOUR world, or your tribe, or your community), then go home.

I also recently watched an old commencement address at Stanford by Steve Jobs, which is incidentally one of my favorite speeches of all time. The most influential quote for me was this:

 

“Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose… Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life”

 

We are running out of time. The internet (and the world) is changing before our eyes at an astonishing rate. The things that we can create (and get away with) today may not be available for us to do tomorrow. Since the internet is so young, it is also very naive. Twitter, for instance, is a great marketing and networking platform, but for how long? Soon it will be drowned out by the noise of millions of many that may not understand the system or appreciate its mechanisms. Maybe it will be changed for the better, maybe for the worse, but only time will tell.

 

My point here is this: If we have the knowledge and ability to change the world based on today’s systems and mechanisms, what are we waiting for? The easy and safe choice of taking the path of least resistance (whether that’s staying at your current job, going to law school, or just sitting “waiting to make your move”) may be the very thing you regret 10 years from now. If you’re taking the path of least resistance that will get you to where you want to be in 10 years, what happens when the world changes in 4 and your years of experience are no longer relevant (think about the journalists and FM DJ’s who are being replaced by news feeds and iPods)? Those things that you think are permanent and long-lasting are really only temporary.* Especially in today’s era.
*As they say in Avenue Q: “except for death and paying taxes, everything in life is only for now.”

 

Stop putting off your plans until tomorrow. Because if there really is no tomorrow, think of all the time you have wasted. Change the world. And do it now.

 

Technology Portability vs. Performance

May 2009

01

Smallest PC in the worldI’m still not sold on iPhones and Eee PCs. That sounds like a bizarre thing to say, considering the early financial and social success of the two products, so let me clarify. I’d love an Eee PC, and I use a smartphone every day. What I’m skeptical about is the belief that the future will rely on portability and ease over performance.

 

Since at least the early 1900’s, audio production has focused on producing the high fidelity sound quality faithful to artists’ original performances. Improved technology brought us from AM radio to FM, from phonographs to records and through to compact discs. The introduction of online downloadable music and the iPod is one of the few changes in technology that actually decreased sound quality in favor of portability, but is taking a very similar path to the tape cassette.* Over the past few years, torrent sites have encoded music files at 256 kb/s or higher, and even Apple instituted iTunes Plus on all new songs, increasing sound quality.
*The cassette tape also reduced quality from the 8-track tape, but later increased its quality dramatically to make it nearly, if not as good.

 

Cloud computing, mobile technologies and netbooks have been not only popular, but heavily hyped over the past few years. They face a similar quandary, though: does the internet’s increase in portability and usability outweigh its decrease in performance when compared to an operating system? I’m not sure it does at this point. At All Things Digital in 2007, Steve Jobs and Bill Gates were asked about cloud computing and future technology, but both pointed out that netbook and internet (cloud) capabilities are still nowhere near the operating system in terms of performance. Steve Jobs gave a concrete example:

 

“When we were doing the iPhone, we thought: wouldn’t it be great to have maps on the iPhone? So we called up Google… We ended [creating] a client app [that]… when we showed it to [Google], they’re just blown away by how good it is, and you can’t do that stuff in a browser. People are figuring out how to do more in a browser… but it’s happening fairly slowly, and there’s still a lot that you can do with a rich client environment. At the same time, the hardware is progressing to which you can run a rich client on [lower cost or lower power] devices. The marriage of great client apps with great cloud services… can be more powerful than just having a browser on the client.”

 

And Bill Gates noted that:

 

“The 5 inch screen does not compete with the 20 inch screen, [which] does not compete with the big living room screen… [It is important that] locally you have the responsiveness of immediate interaction without the latency or bandwidth limitations that you get if you try to do it [online].”

 

Granted, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs have their own biases, but it doesn’t mean they’re wrong. Will netbooks and smartphones eventually reach the point that their hardware is powerful enough to do what a personal computer does today? Absolutely. However, I don’t think that a smartphone will ever replace a personal computer and I believe it will still take years for netbooks to truly replace the functionality and performance of a full computing system. Take Google Docs, for example. The things that can be done with Google Spreadsheets are much more limited than what can be done with Microsoft Excel.* The differences in form factors and screen sizes only exacerbate the issue, too. I can’t even imagine trying to operate a spreadsheet on a touch screen iPhone.
*I’m a power user of Excel and have dabbled with Google Spreadsheets, and I don’t believe that the functionality is even close to there yet.

 

So every time I see a new Eee PC, or the next smartphone that will change my world, I can’t stop but think that we’re still not there yet. Touch screens (even with virtual keyboards) just don’t offer the computing or performance capabilities that I need every day, and there is absolutely zero chance that I would ever do 100% of my work from a mobile phone. Netbooks have the most attractive form factor, but most times I still prefer a larger monitor* to the ones featured on netbooks. Unfortunately at this point, my only option is to carry an iPhone-type device (smartphone + music player), netbook (small form factor PC for word processing, simple web browsing), desktop/laptop computer (heavier computing technology & gaming). As I said, I’m not sold. Yet.
*Or two monitors when I’m crunching numbers in Excel.

 

Passionate People Can Do Anything

Apr 2009

27

Apathy Motivational Poster

Passionate people are willing to work 80 hour weeks for low pay and go the extra mile to make sure a project succeeds. Passionate people pay less heed to risks and believe more that anything is possible.* Take a look at the incredible grassroots marketing campaign done by the Obama team last November. If they asked a team full of realists to work 100-hour weeks on little pay to try to get an African-American president elected, Barack Obama would have had no chance. Instead, they took young, passionate people and told them that anything was possible if they worked hard enough and fought for every last vote.

 

Apathetic people will do whatever they can to tell you that something isn’t possible. Simple tasks turn into drawn-out ordeals, and it can be a nightmare to get anything done. I bet there have been a couple of projects that you’ve worked on in the past that you did for the wrong reasons*, and entered without passion. Lack of passion will hurt your productivity and apathy is the easiest way to kill a project in the water. Everyone must find ways to be passionate about your work in order to generate the greatest benefit out of their own skill set.
*see: Money, Fame.

 

I am eternally grateful that I have the opportunity to not only work in an industry that I am extremely passionate about, but that the current side projects I’m working on are of my own creation. It puts a jump in my step every day on my way to work, and makes me excited to take on new projects. Additionally, I am excited every day I get to work on winAround and try to come up with new ideas to improve a gamer’s experience. I’ve spent many late nights up talking with winAround’s CTO, Mike Murray, about how we can create the perfect experience for our users. There have been projects that I’ve quit because I wasn’t passionate about them. Figure out what you truly love, drop all the other stuff and do it.

 

Steve Jobs once said:

“When I was 17, I read a quote that went something like: “If you live each day as if it was your last, someday you’ll most certainly be right.” It made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, I have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: “If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?” And whenever the answer has been “No” for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something.”

 

Treat every day like it’s your last, and love what you do, because passionate people can do anything.