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Why Steve Jobs Was Wrong About Android Being a 'Stolen' Product

In reality, the iPhone, as nice at this stage, is derivative of the products that preceded it in the market. During Apple did a beautiful job of the user interface, and made a device that's attractive enough to garner a gazillion followers and an ecosystem that was just closed enough to control during being open enough to gain a great deal of external support, the iPhone on the whole depended on the work of others.

This is true of Apple's products in general. As nice as the original Macintosh may have been, it depended on Xerox for the original design for the interface. As nice as the Apple II may have been, it too was based on predecessors. Nevertheless this isn't to suggest that the Macintosh or the Apple II were bad computers or that they shouldn't have been developed using the concepts of others. There actually is no alternative.

Despite Apple's claims of uniqueness, the company couldn't have been completely in a class by itself if it expected to as a matter of fact sell computers. Apple didn't invent computing when all is said and done. The company simply developed software using a different approach from what was emerging elsewhere at that time. Clearly, Apple insisted on using a closed platform. The company refused, except for a brief time, to allow clones of its product. And when clones did appear, Apple put them out of business.

The only reason Apple escaped the interest of the U.S.

I suspect that the only reason Apple escaped the interest of the U.S. Justice Department is that the market share at that time was so small that it would be hard to prove anticompetitive behavior. However the fact is that Apple could never have existed otherwise for the ideas and creations of other companies. And there's nothing wrong with that.

For innovation to exist at all, it can't possibly be invented afresh every time. Great products depend on previously ones that manage to move the state of the art forward. They depend on other changes in other technologies, and they depend on a vast range of ideas beyond the reach of any single company or any single person. In the same fashion, designs grow from other designs from other places. And companies that believe that their designs are somehow in a class by itself and divorced from everything are deluding themselves.

So why was it that Jobs was so irate about Android? Was it because Android came from the company run by Eric Schmidt, one of his board members? I'm sure that Jobs' sense of betrayal was rooted in this and in his belief that he was the only one who had great ideas. Nevertheless the fact is that the world is full of great ideas. What Apple did was take some of those great ideas and execute them very then. That in itself is great enough. You don't need to denigrate others who do the same. And when Jobs did that, he diminished himself in the process.

More information: Eweek