My Turn

My Turn is Low End Mac's column for reader-submitted articles. It's your turn to share your thoughts on all things Mac (or iPhone, iPod, etc.) and write for the Mac web. Email your submission to Dan Knight .

OS Ascendant

- 2001.01.04

Here are two books that warrant the attention of serious LEM readers.

The Second Coming of Steve Jobs

You probably know about the first, The Second Coming of Steve Jobs. This book, by journalist Second Coming of Steve JobsAlan Deutschman, got a lot of attention a couple of months back.

Second Coming is the story of Steve Jobs's fall and rise. It begins with Jobs getting kicked out of Apple back in 1985, and ends, more or less, with his triumphant return.

For my money, the best parts in the book concern NeXT, the computer company Jobs formed after Apple, and Pixar, the Toy Story/Bug's Life folks. Deutschman got a lot of insider stuff I haven't seen in print before.

The book is scrupulously fair but utterly clear-eyed, and the Steve Jobs described in Second Coming is very much a mixed blessing. If you're like me, you won't find yourself rooting for him.

Free For All

On the other hand, I found lots of people to root for in Free For All.

Free For All is the story of Linux and the free software movement. Reporter Peter Wayner does a thorough job of Free For Alllaying out the divisions within the free software world, and Wayner also doesn't stop the story at Linux; much of the book (the best part, I think) is devoted to the various free BSD distributions of Unix.

(Bonus: there is a surprising amount about Apple and its clouded relationship to free software in Wayner's book.)

I read the books back to back over the holidays and was struck by the contrast between them.

One is the story of someone who demands everything his way; the other is the story of a worldwide collaboration, in which the "way" emerges through trial and error.

The question you're left with is: Which way is better? Free software is very, very good and very hardy, but it's not brilliant in the way the Mac is. OTOH, is "brilliant" more important than openness and generosity of spirit? Taken together, these books raise big issues about what we want from our computers, and what we have to give up to get it.

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