• Steve Jobs faked full signal strength and swapped devices during the first iPhone demo due to fragile prototypes and bug-riddled software.

• Engineers got drunk during the presentation to calm their nerves.

• Despite the challenges, Jobs successfully completed the 90-minute demonstration without any noticeable issues.

    • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      I know it’s already normalized, but…

      Maybe it’s just me, but maybe we shouldn’t be normalizing outright deceiving people when you’re selling a product.

      How is that not false advertising? Why should companies be allowed to magic up a fake example of their product actually working, and sell that to customers, when the real product doesn’t actually work yet?

      Just because it’s “perfectly normal” doesn’t make it okay to peddle propaganda and lie to people for profit.

      It’s like the Tesla “robot” that was clearly a person in a weird suit. Why are they allowed to advertise things that functionally don’t exist? Why are they allowed to sell unfinished products with promise they may one day be finished (cough full self driving cough)?

      I mean holy fuck it’s like Beeper offering paid access to a service that allows Android and PC users to use iMessage, but Apple keeps breaking each new iteration every few days… Like there was no long-term plan to make sure that the service would work long-term before asking people to pay for it.

      It’s all fucking bonkers, man. We’ve just allowed snake-oil salesmen to rule the roost. The bigger the lie, the bigger the profit.

      • PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh, I agree with you! And I’m sure we can have this discussion about almost any current product launch, too.

        • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
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          How is that not false advertising? Why should companies be allowed to magic up a fake example of their product actually working, and sell that to customers, when the real product doesn’t actually work yet?

          If when they ship the actual thing to the customer it’s not like they claimed then it’s fraud (or “false advertising” which is the lenient version).

          Strictly for presentation ahead of time I think it’s borderline. Negative hype can kill a product that could have been good. Sure, complete honesty would be ideal, but if you say “well it sucks right now but we promise it will be ok when you buy it”, not many people would rush to order one. Many good products never made it to market because of insufficiently good perception. On the flip side, creating positive hype out of smoke and mirrors can be used to kill a competitor’s product for no good reason, so it’s not quite ok either.

          • 1847953620@lemmy.world
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            Negative hype can kill a product that could have been good.

            Positive false hype can deceive people into wasting money.

            Sure, complete honesty would be ideal, but if you say “well it sucks right now but we promise it will be ok when you buy it”, not many people would rush to order one.

            And they shouldn’t. It’s just another way of saying “people acting rationally based on truthful information”

            Many good products never made it to market because of insufficiently good perception.

            That should be a separate issue. It’s not the only available path, just one often taken because it’s the most forgiving of shoddy business practices, doesn’t justify its existence, either.

            On the flip side, creating positive hype out of smoke and mirrors can be used to kill a competitor’s product for no good reason, so it’s not quite ok either.

            I think people are starting to realize the depth of corporate deception and bad-faith practices and how that affects everyone at large, and so they’re rightly tired of them and trying to reset it all back to simple, effective, and fair ethical standards.

          • Ottomateeverything@lemmy.world
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            Strictly for presentation ahead of time I think it’s borderline.

            I disagree, I think this is equally as bad. These presentations are still false advertising, just to a different audience.

            These presentations are selling investors and press and attention on something that doesn’t exist yet. Sure, sometimes it works out where the product works, but other times, it’s wasted money from investors and attention from the public that wasn’t warranted.

            I don’t see this any differently than the current shit show with The Day Before. Both are promising smoke and mirrors. Apple succeeded and is praised and people are here defending it saying it’s okay. The Day Before didn’t, and everyone’s at their throats saying it shouldn’t be allowed and that they should be sued for false advertising and for the amount of time wasted on hype for something that never came.

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        I agree, but what’s more, I am not trying to defend the behavior of Jobs here. But…to me anyway there is a material difference between say this, where the product did live up to the demo ultimately. In this case the demo was done on pre-release versions and so problems were expected and planned for.

        Contrast this with say the cyber truck launch. Similar situation but 1. they failed to properly anticipate and plan for failure (broken window?) and 2. they made promises about wishes and desires, because the delivered product thus far does not live up to the promises.

        The whole behavior is shitty to be sure, but I’d be ok going back to demos about planned yet achievable and deliverable features.

          • dave881@lemmy.world
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            I think that’s kind of rhe point of these sorts to demos to begin with.

            The company says we’re developing a product that, we are not ready to ship today, but will be this awesome. Give us some money and you can see how awesome it will be.

            I generally assume that anything a company says about a product/service that is not shipping today is the best possible spin on the best version of what they’d like to sell. What you buy probably won’t be what is shown as an early demo

            • 1847953620@lemmy.world
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              Just because you’ve adapted to the lies doesn’t make them ok, nor the best version of what is possible

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        Eh I think it’s fine because they weren’t selling the public engineering samples, they were selling finished devices. As long as the product they sold worked as shown on stage, that’s fine.

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        It would absolutely have been false advertising if the first iPhone hadn’t been the absolute phenomenon that it was. That’s literally how simple it is. Apple delivered.

      • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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        How is that not false advertising? Why should companies be allowed to magic up a fake example of their product actually working, and sell that to customers, when the real product doesn’t actually work yet?

        For Apple, we can stop right here, the product worked as described. Apple did the demo, and then released the things they said they would in the time they said they would.

        It’s like the Tesla “robot” that was clearly a person in a weird suit. Why are they allowed to advertise things that functionally don’t exist? Why are they allowed to sell unfinished products with promise they may one day be finished (cough full self driving cough)?

        Snake oil salesman in the dictionary should just be updated to a picture of Elon Musk. Elon has a long track record of saying shit and not doing it, whether that’s full self driving, cybertruck (well, that finally came out), solving world hunger, etc.

        I mean holy fuck it’s like Beeper offering paid access to a service that allows Android and PC users to use iMessage, but Apple keeps breaking each new iteration every few days… Like there was no long-term plan to make sure that the service would work long-term before asking people to pay for it.

        Yeah, I totally agree.

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        There’s a very simple reason… The world is absurd, and we’ve designed an idiotic financial system full of issues

        Here’s the thing… If Apple didn’t fool investors into giving them money, they might not have had the money to get through the difficult problem of getting to a production chain. And if Apple was honest and Google staged their demo, investors are going to be drawn to the party faking it

        Obviously, there’s many problems with this, and the fact that they can just cash out and never deliver cough Tesla cough. There’s also the issue that this makes marketing and hype far more monetarily valuable than actual performance… It doesn’t matter to investors if Tesla or Apple lies, they made real money if they time it correctly

        The government is supposed to put boundaries on this kind of behavior, because if anyone does this, it lets scammers take resources that should go to companies playing honestly and actually making things

        But know what else produces extreme return on investment? Spending money to shape regulations

      • Alex@feddit.ro
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        Beeper stopped charging customers for the time Apple broke their app.

        • Snot Flickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          So each time Apple breaks it, they have to stop charging customers? Sounds like a real winning business plan to lose money each time you need to code up a new solution to the original problem. /s

          • Alex@feddit.ro
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            1 year ago

            That shows they actually care about billing their users fairly. They lost some money but gained some trust, just like how Apple would’ve lost some money if they didn’t fake their demo

      • AnneBonny@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Why should companies be allowed to magic up a fake example of their product actually working, and sell that to customers, when the real product doesn’t actually work yet?

        The way Apple does things is insane, but they weren’t selling iPhones yet.

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        Who’s normalizing it?

        I have exactly zero control over what these people do. They’re gonna do what they’re gonna do, and I have fuck all to do with it.

        And don’t tell me we have influence en masse. If that were true, then this stuff wouldn’t be happening. Quite the opposite, clearly most people don’t want to look past the smoke and mirrors for the stuff they’re hyped about. (We’re all susceptible to this kind of thing).

        A quote from 230+ years ago kind of sums it up nicely:

        Happy will it be if our [decisions] should be directed by a judicious estimate of our true interests, unperplexed and unbiased by considerations not connected with the public good. But this is a thing more ardently to be wished than seriously to be expected.

        He’s talking about public good, but you could insert any subject, eg. Perspective on a sales presentation (all of them are lies, to greater and lesser degrees).

        I’m sure I could find similar quotes from the Stoics (~1000 years ago), Sun Tzu (~1900 years ago) or even Hammurabi (~3800 years ago), showing this ain’t new. It’s part of human nature.

        Liars gonna lie, telling myself I can change that is just delusion, which gets me nowhere.

    • distantsounds@lemmy.world
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      Maybe a demo should be just that; not a magic show. Normalizing deception for profit doesn’t seem like a healthy thing for anyone, but that’s only because I** didn’t own any stock in apple back then. Edit: Yes, I am still salty about the purchasing Starfield also

      • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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        Eh I think it’s fine because they weren’t selling the public engineering samples, they were selling finished devices. As long as the product they sold worked as shown on stage, that’s fine.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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      Yeah I think the industry learned from Bill Gates’ flub when demoing Win98.

      For those too young, it bluescreened and crashed on a giant projector screen in front of thousands of people when they plugged in a scanner to demonstrate “plug and play”.

      • PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world
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        That was an early beta of Win95, very iconic. He famously closed the laptop, smiled, and said “I guess that’s why we’re not shipping yet.”

        And yes, that’s exactly the kind of situation you want to avoid on stage.

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          Right. You definitely want to avoid that because Bill Gates is a billionaire and Windows still dominates the market. Looks like Microsoft paid a heavy price for that transparency.

      • gullible@kbin.social
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        Even more worth a laugh is the Surface presentation where both the presentation model and the backup froze within a minute of each other.

  • aeronmelon@lemm.ee
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    Calling the stage units prototypes is being nice. The reality was that at that point the iPhone had barely gotten to a proof of concept stage. Months before this event, the developers were still using a giant desktop tower to simulate the phone’s hardware.

    That the photos of the phone were real and not concept art, that the stage units weren’t just unusable rubber dummies was a magic trick itself.

    When the developers revealed years later that the iPhone presentation (just the presentation, not even the actual launch) was a make or break moment for the company, they absolutely were not kidding.

    And then they went from “should not even be working” test units to fully functional production units in six months!

    Whatever your opinion of Jobs or Apple, credit where credit is due.

    • Mereo@lemmy.ca
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      This is marketing. Showing the phone as a working product ready to be shipped is a tactic to scare off the competition, demonstrate that you have the upper hand, and entice customers to buy it.

      That is marketing in our capitalist system. I’m not saying it’s right, just that it’s a fact.

        • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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          Android, Windows Phone (the “metro” rewrite from scratch - not the WinCE one), Palm WebOS, etc were all well and truly in development and close to launch and most of them were being developed in the open. Apple who was cutting corners everywhere to leapfrog those products. It took Apple just four years to go from initial planning to a shipping product.

          Symbian was starting to look pretty good too — my last “feature” phone ran Symbian, and it was better than an iPhone in a lot of ways. For example it had an “app store” well before Apple did.

          It was the ARM CPU that kicked it off. At the time even a shitty slow Intel CPU only got a third of a day battery life with a 100Wh battery. ARM had just worked out how to design a processor that could last all day on a 10Wh battery and with decent performance.

          Apple was a founding partner of ARM - decades before iPhone, so they knew it was coming and what was on the roadmap. They also likely knew other phone companies were ramping up production taking advantage of the new generation of processors.

          • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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            Android, Windows Phone (the “metro” rewrite from scratch - not the WinCE one), Palm WebOS, etc were all well and truly in development and close to launch and most of them were being developed in the open. Apple who was cutting corners everywhere to leapfrog those products. It took Apple just four years to go from initial planning to a shipping product.

            This is ranges from just misleading to factually wrong. WebOS, for example, didn’t launch until 2009, 2 years after the iPhone demo in question.

            Windows Phone:

            In 2008, Microsoft reorganized the Windows Mobile group and started work on a new mobile operating system.

            Android:

            An early prototype had a close resemblance to a BlackBerry phone, with no touchscreen and a physical QWERTY keyboard, but the arrival of 2007’s Apple iPhone meant that Android “had to go back to the drawing board”.

            For ARM, I have to go with a “sort of?” Apple has been tied to ARM 80’s so that’s correct, but my phone prior to the first iPhone was one of these bad boys: the Palm Treo. It used a Intel PXA270 312 MHz. In my use, the Treo had better battery life, though admittedly that may just be because I rarely even tried to do things like use the internet on it because it was such a jank experience, so my primary use was planner types of things, texts, and since it was 2005-6, phone calls.

            Anyway, back to the poster you responded to:

            What competition? At that point it was BlackBerry and WinCE. Oh, and PalmPilot. [sic: by this point they had dropped “Pilot” which was actually a device type, not a company/brand.]

            The actual timeline makes it pretty clear that this comment is almost objectively correct. However, even this is not correct because Apple didn’t set out to compete with what we considered “smartphones”:

            He said Apple had set the goal of taking 1 percent of the world market for cellphones by the end of 2008. That may seem small, but with a billion handsets sold last year worldwide, that would mean 10 million iPhones — a healthy supplement to the 39 million iPods that Apple sold last year.

            Bold added for emphasis.

            Or, you can hear it straight from the horse’s mouth: Jobs at the original iPhone keynote.

            Anyway, I was alive for all of this, iPhone 10000% caught literally everyone flatfooted.

          • Mbourgon everywhere@lemmy.world
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            Android was still a year+ out at that time (first beta came out in Nov 2007, though). Thanks, I did forget Symbian. Thanks for the opportunity to dig through the rest, though.

    • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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      You say that like there’s a single system in the history of the world which doesn’t. Capitalism isn’t novel with regard to humans taking advantage of one another.

      • PopOfAfrica@lemmy.world
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        The difference is that in other systems, when people behave like that, it’s then gaming the system. Capitalism is the only system that incentivizes it in rewards it directly, As a matter of principle.

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          It doesn’t reward it anymore than even local government control over resources. You act like nobody has ever tried to get out of a speeding ticket or fake their way to impress their lead.

          • owen@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            It incentivises producing a perceived value. So faking value works just as well as providing real value

          • Copernican@lemmy.world
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            Not sure why you are down voted. Marx argues that the secret to value is human labor, and capitalists exploit labor to capture surplus value.

              • Copernican@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                I think some folks, especially of the marxist POV, argue that labor is the work that you sell to make money. Progress and government require work. It’s not necessarily labor.

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            I had to give my head an actual shake - this can’t be a real comment. A normal, sentient human would not produce a sentence like this unironically.

            The only explanation I can come up with is the OP is a first-year economics student.

    • Copernican@lemmy.world
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      You think that’s limited to capitalism?

      Edit. Not sure why downvoted. But also, despite the controlled nature of the demo, didn’t apple kind of deliver on the marketing to an acceptable degree?

      Also, think of the self proclaimed communist leaders projecting how they solve all society’s problems, or will do so, without any proof of concept.

    • deafboy@lemmy.world
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      Ever heard of Lysenko? The con artists and their bullshit are everywhere.

  • danielfgom@lemmy.world
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    This is old news. We all know this. These were prototypes and still buggy but Steve knew he had to present it first, ASAP, to the public to earn and keep the excitement.

    It was a gamble they worked. People were super exited and for months the anticipation built resulting in a strong launch with massive sales.

    Even to this day, it’s that presentation they keeps the fans buying.

    • cm0002@lemmy.world
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      I wonder where we’d be if the iPhone was a flop. Android was well in development, but as an independent company, the success of the iPhone is what prompted Google to buy Android a year later

        • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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          Yes but the first android prototype was a blackberry clone with horizontal tiny screen and all physical keyboard. The iPhone changed everything even if on paper was worse (no apps, ultra closed, expensive on contract)

          For example only for the specs the HTC universal was better in every single part and it launched two years earlier. Bigger screen, higher resolution, full keyboard, lots of buttons, stylus, 3g modem, expandable memory, replaceable battery, an operating system that allowed to install any app. But then the user experience…

            • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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              I don’t really think so. Google took another two years to release the HTC dream and at release was shipped in beta. If they were already developing a “touch first” handset it wouldn’t have been that long. They shipped the device without an on screen keyboard! It came only later with updates

              And the start menù of win mobile 6.5 with the nice hexagons was just a nice menu, the rest of the os still required stylus and tiny buttons on those terrible resistive touch screens

      • danielbln@lemmy.world
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        Android’s interface was all BlackBerry in terms of UI too. The full touch control came after iPhones launch.

        • Railison@aussie.zone
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          Phone I remember using Symbian on my N95. It was really pushed to the limits on that phone and it showed

      • Jrockwar@feddit.uk
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        Oh no, stop the presses! They missed a C! ⚠️ Their whole argument is invalid!

  • serial_crusher@lemmy.basedcount.com
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    Every tech demo ever is fake, with the possible exception of the original Cybertruck demo, but I suspect even that one just wasn’t faked very well.

      • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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        Apple had already done 30 years of development (starting with ARM and NeXT) when he did this keynote, and the product shipped a few months later. It might have been barely ready for the demo - but it wasn’t that far off.

  • samus7070@programming.dev
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    People laughed their assess off at Bill Gates’s epic failed demo of usb on windows 95. Live on stage he plugged in a peripheral and the machine blue screened. No way in hell would Jobs have taken that risk.

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    This article is terribly written and seems to repeat itself a bit. Almost seems like it was written by a GPT system.

  • Dra@lemmy.zip
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    This is how all demos used to be. If the author/publisher of the ai prompt wasnt born less than 20 years ago they would know this

    • Potatos_are_not_friends@lemmy.world
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      Used to be?

      Even as early as a few years ago, game demos at E3 were extremely controlled environments to avoid the journalist player crashing the game.

      • sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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        I’ve been at Gamescom once where we considered backup consoles and HDMI switches in the cable aisle to ensure we could rapidly switch onto a running game when the first instance crashed. Stability improved enough that it wasn’t required in the end but yeah, software for trade shows was always hot as hell.

    • whofearsthenight@lemm.ee
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      I have a hard time even figuring out what the issue here is? it’d be one thing if the first iPhone shipped and was riddled with bugs and promised/demoed features weren’t there, but that wasn’t the case. Launched more or less rock solid, and iPhoneOS 1.0 (as it was called then) was far from the buggiest wide release.

      • Pohl@lemmy.world
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        Yeah. Am I supposed to be upset by this? Fuggen thing worked when it shipped. Are people angry that the marketing campaign started before every single engineering problem was solved? Why?

        • GladiusB@lemmy.world
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          I’m not upset at all. Because I understand. But maybe they are upset they promised something they didn’t know they could deliver.

        • intensely_human@lemm.ee
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          Why?

          Because they’ve never solved a complex problem, or accomplished anything that took the conscious coordination of multiple people.

  • Rakonat@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Find a demo that Apple/Jobs didn’t fake. He was infamous for this shit.

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Most top level shit is.

      While it’s a mistake to fake what you can’t build (I have cautionary tales about folks that did that), faking what you can and will build in order to build momentum to launch is not as uncommon as people might think.

      • aceshigh@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Reminds me of Elizabeth Holmes. She really really believed it would be built. She just needed more time and money. Sometimes it’s a challenge to accept a failure, and move on.

  • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    “Demo magic”, it’s everywhere. Always has been, always will be.

    • Something_Complex@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That was on him for going out the script. He could have made a cult like Apple.

      Instead he did whatever the hell this is

        • kameecoding@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          i think Tesla’s and Elons cult is gonna be much different, he has succesfully alienated most of the so called “woke liberal” crowd with his fascists free speech absolutist sex offender shit, and then right wingers wont purchase his shit because they deny climate change and want their gas guzzlers, so he is stuck with the niche, crypto fun tech bros to worship him and his shitty “cars”

          And he elegantly timef his shit to alienate his main purchase demographics to be at the time when the big automakers start coming out with their own offerings

          Tesla will be a charging provider at best in a decade if they survive all the class action lawsuits over his fake claims that is

      • Ann Archy@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        That is the one single example when a product was unveiled on stage and the presenter perfectly expressed my feelings on it.

    • EtherWhack@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Same with using a custom, presentation-only UI.

      They wanted to show what it could do in a perfect setting, so they would have connected it to a remote system in the back. You never trust tech to work flawlessly for a presentation as the risk is too high.