I agree with the last few paras 100%......rf

Dear Steve Jobs - Please build Apple II's
http://hooptyrides.blogspot.com/2005/10/dear-steve-jobs-please-build-apple-i
is.html

It is difficult for me to overstate the importance of the Apple II. I still
remember the smell of unwrapping my Apple II. The disk boot command (PR#6)
is burned into my brain with greater clarity than my social security number.
As if it was in my hands right now, I know the exact weight and shape of a
Hayes Microcoupler. My GBBS bulletin board had all the K-K00l M0dz. And even
though I was only 14, my friends and peers were rocket scientists, lawyers
and college professors.

Before my Apple II, I had a TI 99/4a and then an Atari 400 and although the
specs were impressive, they didn't inspire like the open architecture of the
Apple II. The Atari had sprite graphics and four joystick ports, but BASIC
came on a cartridge. And the TI was a 16-bit machine, but it was screwed
shut and if you wanted an interface bus, you had to buy an external box.
Apple did it all first and Atari still didn't get it. TI was even worse.

Woz got it. Thirty seconds after unwrapping an Apple II, you were opening
the lid and connecting ribbon cables. It was respect. Apple extended
respect. And Apple was respected by my rocket scientist buddies and myself.
Apple extended the respect through meaningful manuals, a documented
architecture and a generally awesome computer. Nothing was hidden. You could
POKE and PEEK your way through the whole machine.

The Apple II became a platform for invention. A modem in every slot to
create the first online chat? Music keyboard controllers years before MIDI?
Digitizing audio through the cassette input jacks? Controlling teletypes
through the joystick ports? Big Traks and Armatrons connected as $30 robots?
The Apple II was the hub of lots of cool homebrew technology. The first time
I heard Van Halen's "Ain't Talkin' About Love" was through a tiny Apple II
speaker. All 15 scratchy seconds of it. Where'd I get it? I downloaded it
from a bulletin board.

It was the mad scientist's computer. And it profoundly changed the way I
viewed the world. A more complex, richer life. And that all-night hacking
lead me to a very successful career. One that would still be paying me
handsomely if I hadn't thrown it in the trash bin. The Apple II was the best
investment that could have made.

Steve Jobs, build open systems. Build new business models. Apple owns the
box, they should call the shots. Don't pander to the media companies. Don't
adopt standards that handcuff us forever. Build for rocket scientists and
teenagers.

When Jobs asked Scully to leave Pepsi and come to Apple, he said, "Do you
want to keep selling sugar water or change the world?"

Now I ask, "Do you want to keep selling DRM'd Desperate Housewives episodes
or change the world?"

Steve Jobs, please build Apple II's.



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