Cult of Mac: 'Just one more thing' videos…
To set the stage for Steve Jobs' June 9 keynote, Leigh McMullen of Wired.com's Cult of Mac has done a brave and lovely thing: he's created a multimedia time line of nearly every keynote since Jobs' return to Apple (AAPL) in 1997.
Lovely because McMullen's tiptoe through time is so nicely laid out, generously annotated with historical video clips of Steve Jobs — growing steadily more wizened — as introduces everything from the 1998 iMac to the 2008 MacBook Air.
Brave because no good deed goes unpunished. Predictably, McMullen's labor of love has drawn nitpickers like, well, fleas.
"This is completely wrong," wrote JakePT on Saturday morning at 3:37 a.m. "The last 5 were not ‘One More Thing’s, neither were some of them the anchor of the keynote as you say in your excuse. The Mac Pro was NOT the anchor of the Keynote, Leopard was. The Air wasn’t really even the anchor of the keynote… You’re also missing the iFund from March which was a ‘One More Thing’…
Get the idea?
You can check out the time line yourself — and watch the videos — at Cult of Mac here. I've pasted a sample below the fold: Steve Jobs, clean-shaven and looking 20 years younger, as he unveiled the original OS X on Jan 5, 2000.
An open letter to Philip Elmer DeWitt:
Dear Philip,
I have on occasion purchased Fortune Magazine, it is a magazine about investing and making money, correct? Normally I would expect articles that analyze the company, its products, its bottom line. I have read some of your articles and just finished Mac: "just one more thing". To be honest, I don't think this article reflects anything about the business of apple. As an investor in Apple, I do appreciate knowing about the company through websites such as macrumors or appleinsider. However, you just published an article that consists of work by McMullen from wired.com that is interesting. Then you go on to mention how a person trashes it in a comment to the very same story and include his "blogger name", which gives no clue as to who he is. These two items are basically the whole article. In addition you show a shot of Jobs looking "20 years" younger in 2000,. which was 8 years ago. Are you commenting on the toll that cancer takes on a person's apparent age? What's the point (of the article)? Get the idea?
Sincerely,
Phillip
ps please reply as I am curious to know the answers
ex ped: Answered privately.






I think instead of 'no good dead goes unpunished' should be 'no good deed goes unpunished'
ex ped: Ouch. Fixed. Thanks.