Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 29th Aug 2008 20:59 UTC
Apple Quite often, Steve Jobs is given all the credit for the original Macintosh - but in reality, it wasn't Steve Jobs who made the largest contribution to the project; in fact, he didn't even come up with the idea. Jef Raskin envisioned an easy-to-use computer with a graphical user interface, and somewhere in 1979 he got the green light to start the Macintosh project, and together with Bill Atkinson he put together a team to develop the hard and software. It wasn't until much later that the project caught Steve Jobs' eye, who realised the Macintosh project had more potential than his own brainchild, the Lisa. One of the people on the Macintosh team was Andy Hertzfeld, and O'Reilly News interviewed him a few days ago.
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A Steve Job
by TheBadger on Fri 29th Aug 2008 21:36 UTC
TheBadger
Member since:
2005-11-14

Ah yes, the Macintosh project where Steve Jobs threw out the work done by Jef Raskin (only now showing up in the mainstream in that new Mozilla Ubiquity plug-in) and sharked off Xerox PARC instead.