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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
The results do not match your projections.
Your first link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MaJeW4XB... makes a mockery of your argument.
Your second link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qzbNTRxV... was obviously a preschool project.
Want to try again to explain how we got to where we are?
So did I...Bill Gates.
"And why on earth would someone from the Gulch ask if she "donated" her discoveries to mankind? She has no requirement to donate anything to anyone unless she wants to."
Maybe because you said this: "...she cares nothing for fame or money,"
As of now, nobody knows who you are even talking about...but we all know what Bill Gates has done, and returned to the people.
This all began with the dissing of Bill Gates.
Your mysterious Mother Theresa of blood testing may be all that you hope, but you haven't explained why Bill Gates is a demon.
Maybe because he isn't any such thing. And thousands (maybe millions) of people are thanking him for his value.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6MaJeW4XB...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3qzbNTRxV...
"The day of combination is here to stay. Individualism has gone, never to return."
— John D. Rockefeller, age 41, in 1880
Edison's tactics included the frequent killing of "stray" dogs via electrocution, the killing of Topsy the elephant at Coney Island (which was filmed), and even the first electrical execution of a criminal (William Kemmler) using the newly invented electric chair. Edison used these events (all of which he helped mastermind) to create anti-AC propaganda, telling the press that only DC electricity was safe for public use.
After losing bids for contracts to Telsa and Westinghouse, Edison printed numerous pamphlets which he sent to journalists and lighting utilities companies that were considering purchasing equipment from Tesla, claiming that Tesla's inventions violated his patents, and Edison threatened that as soon as the patent infringement cases had settled, any company that had purchased Tesla's equipment would find themselves without a supplier.
If you want more detail about the feud between Tesla and Edison, as well as an intricate look at the immoral tactics used by Edison, there's an excellent book about Tesla's life that I highly recommend:
"Tesla: The Wizard of Electricity," by David J. Kent
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/tesla-da...
There's also a fascinating documentary by the Discovery Channel titled "The Unknown Genius of Nikola Tesla," which you can watch here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dpn33EunG...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundling_o...
The tie-in of OS to hardware has been around since the 1950s in large part due to computer languages not being in existence that could generically target various hardware platforms at high speed and the OS therefore being written in low-level, non-portable languages. The situation began improving in the 1970s, before the PC architecture as we know it existed. In the 1980s, it was absolutely possible to install something like Unix on hardware using the Intel 80x86 architecture, and Motorola 68000 architecture. In the face of this reality, Microsoft went an unethical direction, IMO.
I wonder if this is the case with OSs. Computers are appliances that can do many things. Embedded computers, say those that control the fuel/air mixture in an engine, are more reliable but only do one thing. Personal computers were a disruptive innovation, making computing accessible to a market for whom it was previously too complicated. The way to do that is with an OS tightly partnered with the uP vender (the Wintel alliance) and applications that are made by the same vender as the OS. This seems like the OS vender using its position anti-competitively to control the application market, but maybe it worked out that way b/c personal computers were a disruptive innovation (brought a technology to a new market) and benefited from more integration / less modularization.
As you can tell I'm fuzzy on these concepts. I'm a tech expert trying to learn the business side. My main point is I'm not sure that Micro$oft's and Apple's success is owed as heavily to anti-competitive practices as it seems.
Did she start in a smaller basement than Gates?
Is she not living 'large', regardless how she views profits?
Has she donated her discoveries to mankind?
Telsa was amazing in a different way. He made circuits that I do not understand how to analyze, so I cannot explain why they work. My colleague built a Tesla coil and show it to me. I don't think he understood it in terms of formal circuit analysis. I get the idea it was more of an art for him.
These are some amazing engineers who made the modern world possible. Whom did Edison use force on besides the elephant he electrocuted?
The men that made this the greatest nation in recorded history can be counted on one hand. You mentioned two of them....
Get you hands on the DVD 'The Men Who Built America' by Patrick Reams, and learn how capitalism unfettered can change the world...just as it built this nation.
And that Bill Gates could be as close as it gets?
Gates has made many middle class folks millionaires, including one of his early secretaries. Not to mention that he gives virtual fortunes to charities....
I wonder how many jobs would have been created had superior technologies been allowed to prosper but for their "pull" with government and existing industry insiders (IBM, for example).
There are many myths abounding in the modern world (Jap cars were actually superior in the 70s, illegal aliens are decent, hard-working folk, etc) and among them is the idea that there was just Microsoft and Apple, and everything they did was superior to the competition, which is demonstrably false.
Rand's philosophy asserts, as I understand it, that free market competition will bring about superior products, yet that *hasn't* been the case in the OS/personal computer field.
And, with the unbridled success of iToys and the emergence of Windows 8, the decades old goal of these two nears fruition...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8CtjhWhw2...
Can you picture just how many jobs these two created?
Or the wealth for their investors?
Or the sideline businesses that support their products?