It's
all true, almost. Bloomberg ran an obituary Wednesday for the man who
made the computer as easy to use as the telephone, remade animated
films, hooked the world on digital music and turned the phone into a
truly smart, pocketable computer. There's just one tiny detail
Bloomberg's write-up got wrong: Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs lives.
Bloomberg quickly retracted the story, though crocodiles are probably
gnawing away on the editors who let that pre-packaged obit slip through.
Apple (nasdaq: AAPL - news - people ) has been dogged by rumors of
Jobs' ill health since his appearance at an Apple developer's conference
in June. (The Apple co-founder had surgery for pancreatic cancer in
2004.) The best sign: Jobs ambushed New York Times columnist Joe Nocera
with a call that began with an expletive-ridden rant before browbeating
Nocera--whom he called a "slime bucket," according to Nocera's
column--into an off-the-record conversation on the matter.
But while the rascally Jobs lives, another man is dead: Dave Freeman,
47, author of "100 Things to Do Before You Die." Freeman died this week
after hitting his head at his Venice, Calif., home. Reportedly, he'd
only gotten to half the destinations he'd urged readers to visit before
his own untimely demise. In that spirit, here are a few of the gadgets
we'd like to see Jobs, 53, create before he goes.
1. A Tablet Computer
Apple has hinted that the iPod Touch won't be the only device that will
get a version of the iPhone's touch-sensitive interface. One product
long speculated about: a thin, lightweight Web tablet with a touch
interface, perfect for browsing the Internet or viewing an episode of
Torchwood from Apple's iTunes store.
2. A Television
While Forrester Research (nasdaq: FORR - news - people ) trashed the
idea in a report published earlier this year, others, including Apple
co-founder Steve Wozniak, have suggested Apple will design its own
television. The effort could revive the fortunes of Apple TV, a set-top
box that transfers content from Apple's iTunes digital media store onto
television screens.
3. A Remote Control
For a control freak like Jobs, a remote control might just be impossible
to resist. Or so speculate the prognosticators at Forrester Research.
Apple is already part-way there. An application created by Apple for the
iPhone and iPod Touch already allows users to take control of the media
on their computer or their Apple TV using the slim devices. A
touch-sensitive remote control would be another step toward placing
Apple at the center of the digital living room.
4. A Digital Book
Amazon's Kindle is nice. The slim, white device allows Amazon customers
to buy and read books for the online retailer at the touch of a button.
And while the device isn't the next iPod, it's revived a category of
gizmos many had left for dead. But something's missing--and it's not
just Apple's unerring design sense. What e-readers lack is a crafty
business model, such as Jobs has constructed for putting content on
Apple's iPod digital media players.
5. The Personal Computer--Again
Jobs didn't invent the graphical user interface, or the mouse. But he
was the first to put them on a machine with the power--and the
simplicity--to appeal to a mass audience. Twenty-four years after the
introduction of the Macintosh, however, most of us still type when we
want to communicate with our computers. Jobs' experiments with touch
interfaces and fascination with ever larger, thinner displays hint that
he may have some thoughts on how to take the way we interact with
personal computers in a new direction.
Of course, the best gadgets Jobs will make will be the things no
one--except Jobs--imagines. The upside: Jobs will get to know how Huck
Finn felt when he and Tom Sawyer got to listen in all the nice things
everyone said about him at his funeral service. Just don't let it go to
your head, Steve. You've got work to do.
Five Things Steve Jobs Must Do Before He Dies
Written By Admin on Jumat, 18 Januari 2013 | 05.28
Label:
News,
Technology

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