« Il ne sert à rien de rêver la vie des autres, il vaut bien mieux s’atteler à faire que la sienne rejoigne son propre « rêve », seule œuvre vraiment constructive, intégrant ses forces, ses potentiels et aussi ses doutes ». Jean-Louis Etienne – Le pôle intérieur – Mener sa vie comme une aventure. »
The Empact100 recognizes the top 100 companies run by young entrepreneurs age 30 or younger who impact our
economy through job creation, innovation, and philanthropy. In 2011, several Empact100 honorees took a Pledge at the White House to give back to entrepreneurship.
In celebration of this year's Black History Month, U in the USA is providing you an expansive lineup of PBS and History programs profiling the rich history, culture and contributions of African Americans. Check documentaries
Now here
Check out this neighborhood-by-neighborhood plan which packs art excursions, food crawls, coffee stops, coastal rides and
surf shops into one big weekend. Click here
(Photo by John S. Dykes for The Wall Street Journal)
Triumph of the Nerds: The Rise of Accidental Empires (1996) is a
documentary film written and hosted by Robert X. Cringely and produced for British television by Oregon Public Broadcasting. The title refers to the 1984 film, Revenge of the Nerds, and the
documentary itself is based on Cringely's book Accidental Empires. The three-part film first premiered on PBS in June 1996. The documentary chronicles the rise of the personal computer/home
computer beginning in the 1970s with the Altair 8800, Apple I and Apple II and VisiCalc. It continues through the IBM PC and Apple Macintosh revolution through the 1980s and the mid 1990s, ending
at the beginning of the Dot-com boom with the release of Windows 95. It includes interviews with many influential figures in the PC industry, including Apple's Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak,
Microsoft's Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, and Oracle's Larry Ellison.
Episode 1of3: Tim Paterson's development of 86-DOS largely from duplicating Gary Kildall's CP/M operating system.
Microsoft purchased all rights to 86-DOS from Paterson's employer SCP for US$50,000 shortly before the release of the IBM PC. Microsoft's resulting MS-DOS was an operating system that could run
on any 8086-family computer.
Episode 2of3: Compaq's successful reverse-engineering of the IBM PC, which led to many competitors producing IBM-clones
that undercut IBM's own offering. While IBM was one of the key companies that fostered the growth of the PC industry and initially dominated it, by 1990 it had lost its lead. IBM's unsuccessful
attempt to recapture a dominant share in the PC market with the PS/2 and OS/2, the latter being the successor to MS-DOS. The proprietary nature of the PS/2 and exclusivity of OS/2 was intended to
drive sales of IBM's own hardware and made it difficult for other manufacturers of PC compatibles to compete. Microsoft had originally profited from the initial success of the IBM PC. It did even
better with the proliferation of clones as IBM's own market share shrunk, so Microsoft saw no business sense in following IBM's lead. Microsoft saw more potential in developing Windows, a project
they pursued parallel to their cooperating with IBM on OS/2, and Windows 3.0 proved to be a great success (along with MS-DOS) bundled with new PCs. This led to the split between the two titans,
with Microsoft setting the standard for PCs, while IBM concentrated on its mainframe and services businesses.
Episode 3of3: Steve Jobs, having viewed a demonstration of Xerox's Alto graphical user interface, developed a desktop
manager for the Macintosh with an icon-based interface modeled on the Alto. Cringely suggested that Xerox had the potential to be one of the key companies in the up and coming PC industry, had
they understood the game-changing value of the graphical user interface. Apple agreed to license parts of the Mac OS GUI to Microsoft who went on to develop Windows. Upon the release of Windows
2.0, Apple sued Microsoft in 1988 over the "look and feel" of the Mac OS. Apple lost the lawsuit in 1994, leaving Microsoft dominant in the operating system business. Steve Jobs had recruited
Pepsi-Cola executive John Sculley to become CEO of Apple, saying to the latter "do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life or do you want to come with me and change the world?" The
Apple Macintosh pioneered many of the features now standard in the PC, particularly ease of use. However, the Macintosh was considerably more expensive, so it was rapidly overtaken by the IBM PC,
with some pundits not only saying that IBM had won, but also that Apple could potentially go out of business. Chris Espinosa described Sculley's ouster of Jobs saying "The grandiose plans of what
Macintosh were going to be was just so far out of whack with the truth of what the product was doing and the truth of what the product was doing was not horrible it was salvageable but the gap
between the two was just so unthinkable that somebody had to do something and that somebody was John Sculley".
This video is a collaboration between Sheldon Neill
and Colin Delehanty. All timelapses were shot on the Canon 5D Mark II with a variety of Canon L and Zeiss CP.2 Lenses.
Michael Jordan to the Max is an American documentary released in IMAX in 2000. The film is about the life and career of
basketball player Michael Jordan, focusing mainly on him during the 1998 NBA Playoffs. It is narrated by Laurence Fishburne. The film includes appearances by numerous celebrities and professional
athletes including Phil Jackson, Doug Collins, Bob Costas, Bill Murray, Ken Griffey, Jr., Steve Kerr, Spike Lee, Willie Mays, Stan Musial, Ahmad Rashad, and Pat Riley.
A Great Motivation from the Basketball Great Air Jordan! A Must Watch!