We live in extremely polarizing times. Can anyone really dispute that? The two major presidential candidates are calling each other a threat to democracy. Donald Trump says Joe Biden is pulling the ...
Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple Inc., was famous for his “reality distortion field.” Through a combination of charisma, bravado, doggedness and conviction that the impossible was possible, Jobs drove ...
As I’m writing this, Microsoft is reporting a solid quarter with sales (or use) exceeding expectations significantly on four keystone products: Windows 7, Office 10, IE8, and the Xbox. While Steve ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about the broad intersection of data and society. The sheer power of Silicon Valley’s reality distortion field was on full ...
Follow the writers doing good work. Support brands that are carving out unique spaces. Celebrate the poetry when you see it. Colin Nagy is a marketing strategist and writes on customer-centric ...
Apple’s Steve Jobs transformed the consumer electronics industry – repeatedly achieving what had previously been thought impossible. Macintosh engineer Bud Tribble described Jobs’ near-mystical ...
I’m baffled. As an industry observer and analyst who studies this industry and the companies within it, I am baffled by how Wall Street thinks about Apple. I do, however, have a theory. It’s called ...
Join our daily and weekly newsletters for the latest updates and exclusive content on industry-leading AI coverage. Learn More Something struck me after reading “Becoming Steve Jobs.” It wasn’t the ...
I’m thinking about this report today: “Nothing Is Up With Eric Schmidt’s “Revisionist History” of His Relationship With Steve Jobs“, a spirited defense of Schmidt, in which the writer manages to spin ...
Shareholders joyfully vote to dilute their own holdings to the benefit of Musk’s power grab. Shareholders joyfully vote to dilute their own holdings to the benefit of Musk’s power grab. is ...
Source: ChatGPT modified by NostaLab. There’s a new study in Computers in Human Behavior that I found both subtle and stunning. It found that people who used AI to solve LSAT-style problems performed ...