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http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/01/10/MNGMPNFT581.DTLRobichaud couldn't risk that he might miss his only chance to hear Steve Jobs' keynote address at the annual Macworld Conference & Expo. You'd think that by arriving 8 1/2 hours before Jobs' speech on Tuesday morning, he'd be first in line.
He was 25th.
"I looked forward to this more than Christmas,'' said Robichaud, an accounts manager from Toronto. "I've spent the last six years watching the keynote on (streaming video) on my computer. This was my trip to the mother ship."
...
Jobs rarely disappoints. Part of that is that he is a charismatic speaker with a high-tech presentation. And part of it is that the real Apple freaks seem ready to cheer nearly everything he says.
When Jobs introduced this year's killer product, the iPhone, he held one up and noted that it didn't have a traditional keyboard. Instead, Jobs said, it has "a giant screen."
"Oh, my God!" gasped a man next to me, unable to control himself. And this was in the "credentialed media" section.
Now I have nothing against Apple per say, I would even consider buying a Mac if they were easily upgradable, not overpriced and could run something close to the majority of the programs on the planet. But the culture surrounding Apple bugs the crap out of me.
Oh and that includes their cringe worthy advertising! Remember the ads when Apple switched over to the x86 architecture? "For years now these CPU's have been trapped inside dull little boxes doing dull little tasks, now they are OMGzor 'cus they are in a Mac"*, and what was one of the biggest advantages of the switch, oh yeah - so they could run MS Windows . And I would hardly call playing HL2 a "dull little task" .
* paraphrased