Comments on: Now Apple's credibility really is in the balance
Steve Jobs' early Monday acknowledgment of a mysterious ailment is the first real "communication" about the health of its CEO.
Steve Jobs' early Monday acknowledgment of a mysterious ailment is the first real "communication" about the health of its CEO.
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Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing.
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Apple stock is up - so people seem not to be worried about it.
He is credited ( rightly or wrongly) with single-handedly saving the company from oblivion.
If an individual is accredited with being the only reason a company is afloat, when that individual leaves, the company sinks.
One - Apple will no longer do Macworld (nothing to do with Steve)
Two - Phill will do the last Macworld (something to do with Steve)
No contradiction in my mind.
It's good news that Steve isn't having anything more serious. Honestly though the details of his health problems are really nobodys business.
The public and shareholders only need (and are privledged to) the answer to a single true/false question: Is Steve healthy enough to perform his duties as CEO. Right now the answer is: True. End of story.
The only reason Apple is waffling on what information to hand out is because they are trying to do the right thing by keeping this private and limited to the question I just mentioned. If Steve comes forth to provide more information then that is his prerogative and it has nothing to do with Apple. When he chooses to provide more information that Apple has then the media should just say thanks then ****. Apple must continue to keep everything else in line with general HR guidelines. They are not being dishonest or even less than honest at all.
All the little leaches in the media and blogosphere should give it a rest.
The pull out of MacWorld had nothing to do with Steve, it had to do with the economic situation and is a wise course of action.
As for 'do we have a right' to know any of this? No. None of us have any right to know this information. However, we all have every right to speculate as much as we like. Since Jobs released this note in order to curb speculation it would have been helpful if he released enough information to actually do that. He didn't and that's a mistake.
Next week: Bill Gates: Did Asperger's Syndrome Force his Retirement?
-- Jerry Espenson,
Partner,
Crane, Poole & Schmidt
The details are not important.
I am an MS Fanboy but respect Steve, the Woz, and Bill Gates for what they have done for our current state of computing.*
*This is by no means an exhaustive list as so many more, whose names are obscure to most made major contributions.
Steve's ailment is probably from all that benzene he breathed in that was being emmitted from his his macbook.
Care to turn over you health records so we can all see what obvious disorder you are suffering from?
Yes, and that's exactly what you and millions of other people will do. Because the fact is that people don't think this hurts Apple's credibility. And even if they do, they know it doesn't hurt their ability to build desirable products (none of which I have ever owned).
Steve went above and beyond with his letter, and true to form, CNET used it against him and Apple.
Blech
jb
It casts some serious question into what Apple can do if/when Mr. Jobs retires. Their future is very much dependant upon his continued good health. They will need to demonstrate that they can be independant of Steve for their success and dropping out of MacWorld and having Steve take a few steps back may be their way of starting that process.
- by Norseman January 5, 2009 3:19 PM PST
- Go stand in your corner, Coop. Terrible piece!
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