Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 11th Oct 2012 21:41 UTC
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When it comes to computing, I seem to have some strange attraction to tech visionaries who went bankrupt for non-tech reasons.
Non-tech? The tech which Nokia put out regularly sucked a bit... (even Meego in its shipping N9 form had issues nobody seems to want to remember http://www.mobile-review.com/review/nokia-n9-2-en.shtml ) And the article under discussion basically describes how engineers caused problems, by favouring their pet projects.
Love does cloud judgement, you know...
WRT Amiga - the tech is what killed it. Yes, the 500-generation was impressive, for its time - but the optimised hardware, tightly coupled with software, severely complicated progress (made it slower and more expensive). 1200-gen was, really, not much better - and already lagging behind PCs of the era, rapidly progressing thanks to their more loose architecture and economies of scale.




Member since:
2009-10-26
When it comes to computing, I seem to have some strange attraction to tech visionaries who went bankrupt for non-tech reasons.
I always choose the electronics I love, not just use, and then have it in plural. When I started to deal with computers seriously, it was Amiga several of them throughout years. My first job was to work with several AlphaServers. Then I started using mobile phones, and they were and still are Nokia only. During all that time I specifically picked Hi-FI and A/V almost solely made by Sony. At my current employeer, I deal with the leftovers of the Sun microsystems.
This long article about Maemo describes in details what I felt over and over again. All those companies had unbelievably great engineers and equally great organizational mistakes. I have always bought their products because of technical value and I was always let down by their managerial decisions. It's like some mental disease spread over mankind long and deep enough so neither engineers nor managers can see it and heal it. Or maybe I think like this just because I was born and live in a former communist country and can recognize the pattern? :-)
I just wish this would end. The way I see it, free and open software (and hopefully hardware, too) is the only way out.