作者zkow (無衣師尹)
看板MLB
標題[外電] Jobs' innovations changed baseball for better
時間Thu Oct 6 23:51:41 2011
Jobs' innovations changed baseball for better
Apple co-founder worked hand in hand with MLBAM
By Mark Newman / MLB.com | 10/05/11 10:40 PM ET
從中間轉起
Look around Major League Baseball today and the evidence of Jobs' historic
impact is clear. Many fans today launch an application on their iPhone, iPad
or iPod touch devices, allowing them to watch or listen to live games from
just about anywhere. It would have been such a far-flung fantasy a couple of
decades ago. And if it is not on an Apple device, then it is on one created
because of it. It's what many players use, it's what fans use.
Major League Baseball Advanced Media has developed its technology over recent
years in close conjunction with Apple, sending mobile developers to the
company's Silicon Valley headquarters to help bring Jobs' vision to fruition
within a world of 30 baseball team fan bases. We vividly recall the scene in
January of 2010 at the launch of the iPad, when Jobs hailed his newest
product as "way better than a laptop" and had MLBAM display the live-game
capabilities on stage. It was always a cooperative means to a better
experience.
Apple did not specify the cause of Jobs' death. He had battled pancreatic
cancer and several years ago received a liver transplant. In August, he
stepped down as CEO, handing the reins to Tim Cook. Not surprisingly, the
world reacted immediately to the news of Jobs' passing, and that included
tweet after tweet within the national pastime.
From Dexter Fowler of the Rockies: "R.I.P. Steve Jobs you will definitely be
remembered for your advances in technology!" Reds outfielder Yonder Alonso
added to the world trending topic with "R.I.P. Steve Jobs." Catcher Lucas May
tweeted: "Changed the world...to say the least." Phil Hughes of the Yankees
retweeted Weird Al Yankovic's tweet: "Thanks for improving life as we know
it."
Born Feb. 24, 1955, and then adopted, Jobs grew up in Cupertino, Calif. --
which would become home to Apple's headquarters -- and showed an early
interest in electronics. As a teenager, he phoned William Hewlett, president
of Hewlett-Packard, to request parts for a school project. He got them, along
with an offer of a summer job at HP.
Jobs dropped out of Oregon's Reed College after one semester, although he
returned to audit a class in calligraphy, which he says influenced Apple's
graceful, minimalist aesthetic. He quit one of his first jobs, designing
video games for Atari, to backpack across India. Those experiences, Jobs said
later, shaped his creative vision.
"You can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them
looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in
your future," he told Stanford University graduates during a commencement
speech in 2005. "You have to trust in something: your gut, destiny, life,
karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the
difference in my life."
http://ppt.cc/7gZl
內容大致講到賈伯斯蘋果公司改善大聯盟影音技術,以及人們利用iPad iPod
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