Jobs vs. Schmidt = product vs. service

Gizmodo is running a very speculative – and yes, there are speculations, – post about a meeting between Steve Jobs and Eric Schmidt.  It took place in a public place, and someone noticed it and made a couple of pictures and now everyone and their brother is running around trying to figure out what these two were talking about.  Things went as far as even consulting a body language expert.

Firstly, my reaction to this is: “C’mon!  Leave them alone already!“.  Who cares?  But it seems too many people do.  So there kicks in my second reaction – since we don’t really know what it was all about, let’s speculate and blow this out of all proportions.  After looking at the pictures, reading through the comments, and through the body language expert’s analysis, here is my view of what is captured on those pictures.

This is, quite obviously, a historical moment, where two schools of thought are standing against each other.  Steve Jobs represents the old school which stands for closed things and for products, as in things that you can touch, feel, and break.  Eric Schmidt represents the new school of thought, which is characterised by openness and the idea of a service.  Two great men with two great companies behind them meet at the neutral point.  And while Eric seems to be more uncomfortable, as body language expert suggests, the important bit here is that they are at the same table on the same terms.  The clash of the titans, so to speak.  The outcome is obvious for some of us though.  Go, Eric, go!

P.S.: Before you start throwing lava balls at me, I do mean this as a joke, and yes, I am drunk.  It’s Friday night after all.

P.P.S.: There is some truth to every joke.

Xbox and women

As per this Slashot story:

A new site allows lonely Xbox 360 gamers to pay a prescribed fee for a few minutes of game time with one of the ‘PlayDates’, a girl who is paid to play video games. Gamers can choose to have a ‘flirty’ or ‘dirty’ experience with one of the PlayDates. Is this what we meant when we said we wanted ‘adult gaming’?

Now that gives a totally new perspective for interpreting this image:

For those of you who haven’t noticed, the kid is in fact holding an Xbox controller in his hands.

Politically repressed 6 year olds

Via Slahdot I ended up reading New York Times interview with Sergey Brin.  Quote:

Mr. Brin lived in the Soviet Union until he was nearly 6 years old, and he said the experience of living under a totalitarian system that censored political speech influenced his thinking — and Google’s policy. “It has definitely shaped my views, and some of my company’s views,” he said.

I’m sure they meant it different or something got lost in translation (I am not a native English speaker after all), but I don’t see how being under 6 years of age, Sergey could have been influenced by the totalitarian system.  The only totalitarian system which kids of that age know about is the system of parental / guardian control.

User interface changes

Here is a bit of a conversation we had today in the office:

– I hate it!

– What?

– They changed the context menu slightly in Windows 7, re-arranged a few items.

– You mean you end up clicking on a wrong menu item all the time?

– Yes.

– Like what?  “Print this page and shut down the computer”?

– Yeah, very close.

– Imagine if there really would be such a choice.  Instead of, say, “Cancel” button.

– Someone should write a virus for this.  It will be the most annoying virus ever.