- Competing as Software Goes to Web – New York Times
John Markoff contrasts Apple’s and Microsoft’s operating-system-software development cultures. Everybody’s talking about incremental improvement. But:
“Software is like the tax code,” said Jean-Louis Gassée, a venture capitalist and a former Apple executive, who in the 1990s developed an operating system called Be. “You add lines, but you never take anything away.”
- The Specter Haunting Your Office – The New York Review of Books
James Lardner’s essay on three books (by John Bogle, Louis Uchitelle and Greg LeRoy) about what’s wrong with corporate America.
Most Americans are troubled by the culture of dealmaking and financial engineering and insider self-enrichment that Bogle deplores; by the callous treatment of workers and work life that Uchitelle describes; by the erosion of communities and community institutions that LeRoy examines. Not very far below the political surface, most of us feel some version of the same vexed ambivalence toward corporate America — dazzled by the conveniences and comforts it delivers, yet resentful of the tradeoffs that it continually demands; few Americans would be anything but grateful if our corporations and financial institutions could develop some respect for our non-material and non-individualistic selves. It is hard to imagine such a fundamental transformation of these giant institutions. It is even harder to imagine a better world in which they remain essentially what they are.
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