首页
登录
职称英语
Twenty years ago there was panic in Cupertino, Calif. Only a week remained b
Twenty years ago there was panic in Cupertino, Calif. Only a week remained b
游客
2025-04-14
2
管理
问题
Twenty years ago there was panic in Cupertino, Calif. Only a week remained before the team of whiz kids designing Apple’s radical new computer had to turn in the final code. The giant factory was ready. The soon-to-be-famous Super Bowl commercial was ready. But the computer wasn’t.
As recounted by software wizard Andy Hertzfeld on a new cyber-digital history site(folkore.org), the already overworked Mac team trudged back to the cubicles for seven days of debugging hell, fueled by espresso chocolate beans and a dream. And on Jan. 24, 1984, their leader, Apple cofounder Steve Jobs, recited a verse from "The Times They Are A-Changing" then formally unveiled the Macintosh, a boxy little guy with a winning smile icon on it nine-inch monochrome screen. The Mac-oids fully expected to make computer history, and they did. What surprises them now is that their creation is still around two decades later.
Only nine years after the first personal computer(a build-it-yourself box whose only input was a set of switches), Apple’s team had delivered an experience that would persist into the next century. This was the graphical user interface(GUI), a mind-blowing contrast to the pre-1984 standard of glowing green characters and arcane commands. Though Apple didn’t come up with the idea of windows on a screen and a mouse to let people naturally manipulate information, the Macintosh refined and popularized those concepts. Lots of people criticized—and some made fun of—those advances at the time. But even Apple’s rivals became convinced that the GUI was groovy. Now, no matter what computer you use, you’re using, essentially, a Mac.
The original Mac was costly, underpowered and had no cursor keys. Early sales disappointed Apple, and the then CEO John Sculley fired Jobs in 1985. Eventually, Mac became equipped with more memory and storage, and people began to discover the machine’s ability to become a tool for the new pursuit of desktop publishing. The machine began to take off. But the business world never warmed to Macintosh, and by the mid-90’s tech pundits were crafting Apple obituaries. In 1997 prodigal cofounder Jobs returned and restored Apple’s luster with innovations like the eye-popping iMac.
"I think Apple’s now doing the best work it’s ever done," says Jobs. "But all of us on the Mac team consider it the high point of our professional careers. I only wish we knew a fraction of what we know now." Even now for its 25 million users, the Macintosh is a source of passion.(Journalists know that a disparaging word about an iMac or a PowerBook will unleash a hundred flames from rabid Apple-heads.)Steve Jobs thinks he knows why. "In the modern world there aren’t a lot of products where the people who make them love them. How many products are made that way these days?"
If that’s so, then why is the Mac market share, even after Apple’s recent revival, sputtering at a measly 5 percent? Jobs has a theory about that, too. Once a company devises a great product, he says, it has a monopoly in that realm, and concentrates less on innovation that protecting its turf. "The Mac-user interface was a 10-year monopoly," says Jobs. "Who ended up running the company? Sales guys. At the critical juncture in the late ’80s, when they should have gone for market share, they went for profits. They made obscene profits for several years. And their products became mediocre. And then their monopoly ended with Windows 95. They behaved like a monopoly, and it came back to bite them, which always happens."
A wicked smile cracks the bearded, crinkly Steve Jobs’s visage, and for a moment he could be the playful upstart who shocked the world 20 years ago. "Hmm, look who’s running Microsoft now," he says, referring to former Procter & Gamble marketer Steve Ballmer. "A sales guy!" The smile gets broader. "I wonder..." he says. [br] When Steve Jobs thinks "he knows why"(para.5), he implies that______.
选项
A、Apple people have special passion for what they make
B、people do not love the product they make today
C、some products are liked by those who make them
D、Apple people either love iMac or PowerBook
答案
A
解析
本题为推理题。根据第五段可知,乔布斯认为苹果人对自己的工作富有激情,认为这是职业发展的顶峰。当出现诋毁的话语时,就会引发他们的怒火。因为现在社会制造的产品很少有制造它的人喜爱它。由此可以推出,乔布斯说他知道原因,是指苹果人热爱他们制造的产品,对自己的产品和工作富有激情。A选项最符合基于原文的推断。因此,A选项正确。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/4036716.html
相关试题推荐
【T1】Eversinceitscreationover40yearsago,theInternethasremainedap
【T1】Eversinceitscreationover40yearsago,theInternethasremainedap
TwentyyearsagotherewaspanicinCupertino,Calif.Onlyaweekremainedb
TwentyyearsagotherewaspanicinCupertino,Calif.Onlyaweekremainedb
IncomeinequalityintheUnitedStatesremainedrelativelystableforaperio
IncomeinequalityintheUnitedStatesremainedrelativelystableforaperio
IncomeinequalityintheUnitedStatesremainedrelativelystableforaperio
IncomeinequalityintheUnitedStatesremainedrelativelystableforaperio
Thesurveyshowedthat_____numbersof15-year-oldshadalreadysmokedtwentycig
Itwilltakeustwentyminutestogettotherailwaystation,_____trafficdelays
随机试题
WhichofthefollowingwordscanNOTbeusedtocomplete"I’vedonethis_______
Low-carbonFuture:WeCanAffordtoGoGreen[A]Tacklingclima
Thethreemenwereassignedjobsaccordingtotheir______abilities.A、respectful
Ablindbabyisdoublyhandicapped.Notonlyisitunabletosee,butbecaus
“衣必常暖,然后求丽”强调的是()A.审美第一性 B.实用第一性 C.认知第
各种运输方式内外部的各个方面的构成和联系,就是( )。 A.运输系统
共用题干 一般资料:刘某,女性,31岁,大专毕业,无业。案例介绍:刘某从半月前
对各种运输方式营运线路长度、运输工具数量和客货运输量地区分布情况的分析,属于运输
与不公开直接发行股票方式相比,公开间接发行股票方式()。A.发行条件低 B
工程质量检验机构出具的检验报告需经建设单位或工程监理单位确认后,由()归档。A
最新回复
(
0
)