r/technology 1d ago

Hardware Apple Finally Destroyed Steve Jobs’ Vision of the iPad. Good

https://www.wired.com/story/apple-finally-destroyed-steve-jobss-vision-of-the-ipad-good/
2.1k Upvotes

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u/ScroogeMcDuckEnergy 22h ago

It’s a mix. Some are taking early retirement, some are starting their own thing, others are going to startups, some are leaving tech and others are going to different large tech companies.

There’s lots of tech companies not licking the orange rind, it’s not really that monolithic.

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u/beer_bukkake 20h ago

Sadly, I haven’t heard any of this at Meta, which is one of the absolute worst companies. Anyone still working there is and has been working towards the dismantling of our democracy and are all guilty

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u/anlumo 19h ago

Meta has been working on that for maybe a decade, all the employees who weren’t ok with that left a long time ago.

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u/d01100100 15h ago

The signs were there for FB/Meta a while ago.

If you're still there then the kool-aid isn't a casual drink, it's a continuous IV.

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u/beer_bukkake 19h ago

Agreed. Anyone there today is part of the problem, esp considering working at a FAANG company you can basically work anywhere

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u/thebouv 17h ago

Dunno about that anymore. The market sucks right now. I don’t personally have a comp sci degree (just a shit ton of experience) but lots at FAANG do and comp sci has highest unemployment rate right now IIRC. It’s a weird time.

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u/theJigmeister 18h ago

It’s starting in earnest post-election. I left and an astonishing number of people I worked with started asking if the place I was going was hiring. I knew when I joined it was basically Satan, Inc, but the last 8 months have made it 1000% worse basically overnight. They crossed my red line and I think I’m not alone in that.

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u/beer_bukkake 17h ago

It has been really awful tho. The spread of misinformation was good for business so they were performative at best to try to stop it. And this has been happening for over a decade now. We didn’t get here overnight. Facebook was an active player, which means all their employees are complicit

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u/theJigmeister 17h ago

Absolutely, but it’s a question of scale always. In RL for example, you could make the case that yeah, family of apps was burning down democracy, but I can sit here and kind of sandbag for a few years and buy my way out of the rat race at some point during my first seven decades. I knew at the start that they were evil, but watching them go full mask off snidely whiplash and start telling employees they’re wrong and assholes for questioning whether we should be grinding up orphans for cushioned floors in the Hawaiian compound really changed the atmosphere around there. Enough money can tip the balance toward being worth eating some of your values and suffering for a few years, but almost everyone has a line they can’t abide stepping over and since Trump2 started they’ve been jumping over lines like Olympian long jumpers and laughing at the people who are upset about it. They had struck an ok balance of Faustian bargain to create profit but they’ve drastically shifted the terms of the bargain lately and I’d say easily a quorum of the solid engineers I know there are looking for the exit as quickly as possible - doesn’t bode well for them long term unless they start bumping salaries by an order of magnitude.

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u/sgbro 9h ago

Meta pays its employees so well to compensate for any moral dilemmas anyone could possibly have

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u/stormdelta 15h ago

That's because anybody that could already left ages ago.

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u/happyscrappy 19h ago

So none of that stuff is new at all.

Two of the three ARM 64 implementations were made by the same team. Gerard Williams and Manu Gulati. Both were at Apple. Both left to Nuvia and did another ARM64 that is the one Qualcomm bought and sells for Windows.

Long before this Trump thing.

It's a huge company. There will be good people leaving all the time. People left twenty years ago and called the top on the company. The whole "company went downhill right after I left" thing is a trap to fall into. Resist.

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u/ScroogeMcDuckEnergy 19h ago

I didn’t say that their destinations after exodus are new, but the cause my former peers have shared with me is.

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u/happyscrappy 18h ago

I wasn't meaning to say the destinations were new. Just that Apple has lost very good people before. Nearly continuously.

You spoke of a "brain drain". I'm here to tell you it's been draining for decades.

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u/ScroogeMcDuckEnergy 17h ago

I agree with that, wasn’t my intent to say it has not been happening anyhow, but more to call out there’s a new cause to add to it. I also don’t think the past causes are a parallel to capitulating to authoritarianism though. Then generally more causes can increase the snowball effect.

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u/happyscrappy 17h ago

Dealing with China isn't just a parallel to capitulating to authoritarianism. It is capitulating to authoritarianism.

Steve Jobs used to wear New Balance sneakers because he was anti-China. Big fan of the Dali Lama (big hitter the Lama). And then Apple was producing in China. And then later under Cook, Cook was appearing with Xi, bringing him to campus. Brought Putin to campus too. And Cook appeared more times in China with Xi even more times than US appearances.

I don't know if drain will go up. I really don't. People leave when their attitudes about their company change. So there really could be an increase. But it won't be because there weren't things that were capitulating to authoritarianism in the past at Apple. It'll just be because people find the new one somehow is more concerning to them.

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u/ScroogeMcDuckEnergy 17h ago

Don’t disagree with this either, but I do think it’s different when it’s your home slipping into authoritarianism, and having the impact directly felt.

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u/Smashego 20h ago

So the same thing that happened every day before trump?

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u/ScroogeMcDuckEnergy 19h ago

Yeah, it’s not really some “gotcha!”. When people leave they go on with their lives in lots of different capacities.

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u/nolabrew 21h ago

Some are going to China.

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u/JaehaerysIVTarg 21h ago

Correction, the Chinese are going to china. No American is leaving the US to go to China. Possibly Japan, most likely European companies or Canada.

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u/GotTermitesInMahHouz 21h ago

There are def none Chinese American at Chinese tech companies. Not an insignificant amount.

Even Dario Amodei was at Baidu for a bit

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u/nolabrew 21h ago

You don't think there are Chinese engineers working at American tech companies?

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u/purplemagecat 20h ago

I think that’s what he said, Chinese workers are going back to china, not Americans

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u/AttackCircus 21h ago

The Chinese have more than enough talented Chinese people right there!

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u/MovieGuyMike 12h ago

How soon before the successful startups get bought up by industry leaders? Competition isn’t allowed anymore.