iWorship

Numeri (Numbers) Plate, Laura de Santillana, 1977

Numeri (Numbers) Plate, Laura de Santillana, 1977

In 1954 Alan Turing was poisoned by a half-eaten cyanide-laced apple, found lying by his side. In director Danny Boyle’s bio-pic “Steve Jobs”, Jobs (Michael Fassbender) is interviewed about the coincidence of this event and the design of the Apple logo. We just picked something friendly sounding was his off the cuff answer, but nothing is coincidence in this beautifully scripted story. It is R-rated for the Aaron Sorkin dialog that is in turn ‘crisp, sour, rotten and delicious’. The movie is a creation myth, written by a skeptic. This film is really more theater than cinema and as such is told in three acts. Each act unfolds backstage in real time, in the minutes preceding three famous Jobs product launches: Macintosh (1984), NeXT cube (1988) and iMac (1998).

Jobs: “Musicians play their instruments. I play the orchestra.”

As beautifully written as this movie is, Jobs the man is portrayed as a very ugly person. This is reflected in his treatment of his inner circle, as represented with this cast, at best Jobs deals out condescension and at his worst outright hostility. Among his colleagues, Jobs’ attitude towards Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak (Seth Rogen) is an example of the former, “My furry little friend.” Conversely and especially after his ouster from Apple, Jobs holds nothing but thoughts of cold rage for Apple CEO John Sculley (Jeff Daniels). He enjoys eventually doing to Sculley what was done to him. His special contempt though is reserved for Chrisann Brennan (Katherine Waterson), his estranged girlfriend and mother of his disavowed daughter, Lisa Brennan, who is played by a triumvirate of actresses. We first meet them backstage at the Macintosh opening, where they have come to beg for money. They are on welfare, while Jobs is worth more than 400 million. The character, Joanna Hoffman (Kate Winslet) is the only person that Sorkin allows to effectively speak truth to power, but that is only allowed to further her role as Jobs’ foil.

Wozniak: “It’s not binary. You can be decent and gifted at the same time.”

In full disclosure, I’m a PC and not a Mac, although I do own an iPhone, but even that concession is probably too late to change things. More importantly, I have worked for a long time in a high-tech engineering environment that is analogous to that of Apple’s. I know Steve Jobs or at least his kind. I work with them, for them. They are people who are quite adept at feeding their egos at the expense of others. Late in the film there is a hallway shot. The camera is following Jobs down it, when from the opposite direction comes about the only person of color in the movie. He slides along the wall, past Jobs and utters a greeting, “Hi, Steve.” What caught my attention about this person was not so much his color, which stood out, but that through some trick of cinematography he was out-of-focus, while Jobs was not. Like Steve could not possibly see him.

Envisioneering Technology

On Saturday, I attended an exhibit on Leonardo Da Vinci, entitled “The Da Vinci Machines Exhibition”. It was being held in the expansive lobby of the downtown Bank of America building. I don’t think that this bank lobby is in regular use anymore, because except for the exhibition, the lobby appeared rather empty and vacant. The exhibition comprised mainly wooden models of various Da Vinci inventions. Originally, I thought that it might be free, but I was mistaken. The regular ticket price was $15, but I got the senior price of only $11, being over 55 years old. I think that this is a first for me. I was less than impressed with this exhibit; it seemed to only cheapen Da Vinci’s reputation, instead of enhancing it. The tour didn’t help either, with its emphasis on extending attribution to Da Vinci, for a host of inventions whose veracity seemed somewhat doubtful. At times it seemed that the tour guide was acting like a patent attorney, trying to extend the reach of his client’s 16th century patent filings. I am pretty sure though that Archimedes invented the Archimedes Screw.

The pictures that I had taken at this exhibit were languishing, until yesterday. Yesterday, another great inventor died, Steven Paul Jobs. In the Apple/PC divide, I remain firmly rooted on the PC side, but I do appreciate the other side too. Last year, I purchased my first Apple product, an iPhone. Actually, I bought four iPhones, but that is another story. Shortly after this purchase, I found myself in Silicon Valley. I spoke with a member of a software company, who gleefully announced that they had just sold some voice recognition software to Apple for half a billion dollars. This program was unveiled earlier this this week as part of the iPhone 4S release, as Siri, the new personal digital assistant App. Although originally developed for the iPhone 3GS, the one I own, it will only be released on the iPhone 4S. You have got to recoup that purchase cost.

Like Da Vinci’s renaissance, our more modern computer revolution has brought sweeping changes and many improvements to the human condition. Like Da Vinci, Jobs is a hero of his time. The question still remains though, will gleam and shine of Jobs’ techno-baubles dim over time so that in 500 years they look like only wooden toys. The resale value on old personal electronics is not a good leading economic indicator. Maybe the Mona Lisa, with her enigmatic half smile knows the real answer?