Mike Kerner wrote:
> Here's all I can say about Apple in the last few years.  Tim Cook is
> no Steve Jobs.

Agreed, but at the risk of veering off into cheeseland here I'll say that's not entirely a bad thing.

Steve was a gifted product designer, and indeed his loss is a loss for not just Apple but all of us. They'll continue to make good products, but we haven't seen anything like the excitement he was able to generate, and I'm not sure we ever will. He was one of a kind.

But on balance, Cook seems a more cool-headed leader, less prone to the sort of anger fits that gave us his Adobe revenge with the iOS SDK v4 Section 3.3.1 debacle, and others. I can't imagine Cook would lie to his oldest friend to trick him out of money he had earned. And if Cook had produced a child, I imagine he'd pay child support without a court order.

And apparently, they even disagreed over whether mounting years of expensive lawsuits was a smart thing to do:
<http://www.phonearena.com/news/Tim-Cook-said-No-to-suing-Samsung--but-Steve-Jobs-said-Yes_id39639>

After Steve passed Cook negotiated a truce with Samsung.

I don't think Jobs was a bad person, or even a bad leader. Obviously he did a lot of good for Apple's growth. But we was definitely volatile, and like many, complicated.

Personally, I feel I can rely on Cook more, that his stewardship may be less interesting, but more predictable, in ways that benefit business planning with such a partner.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Systems
 Software Design and Development for the Desktop, Mobile, and the Web
 ____________________________________________________________________
 [email protected]                http://www.FourthWorld.com

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