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Authored by: Anonymous on Thursday, August 02 2012 @ 03:21 PM EDT |
So, what was the result of that 1989 case? Did the court find for Xerox or
Apple?[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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Authored by: jcr6 on Thursday, August 02 2012 @ 04:38 PM EDT |
Steve Jobs had his own reasons for visiting PARC. Apple
bought
access to the PARC by means of a stock deal that seemed lucrative to the
Xerox
managers on the East Coast: They might buy 100,000 Apple stocks for one
million dollars. Holding this admission ticket in the hand, Steve Jobs,
Apple’s president Mike Scott, Bill Atkinson, and a number of members of the
developing team marched up. “I think mostly … what we got in that hour and
a
half was inspiration and just sort of basically a bolstering of our convictions
that a
more graphical way to do things would make this business computer more
accessible.”
http://www.mac-history.net/computer-history/2012-03-
22/apple-and-
xerox-
parc
Not the smartest move on Xerox's part, pricing in
particular, but Apple didn't
steal
anything.
And the 1989 suit was specious,
IMHO.
[ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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