33 replies
This is closed.
#creativity #truth
  • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
    Not sure I'd be taking creative or technical advice from Steve Jobs. He was just a puppet of Apple's marketing machine. A great CEO, but he wasn't really involved in product development.

    The Apple with Steve Jobs the creative genius is more sexy than Steve Jobs the CEO sitting at his desk all day doing typical CEO things.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152623].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
      Banned
      Originally Posted by DubDubDubDot View Post

      Not sure I'd be taking creative or technical advice from Steve Jobs. He was just a puppet of Apple's marketing machine. A great CEO, but he wasn't really involved in product development.
      That is wrong on so many levels. Steve Jobs literally gave birth to the original Macintosh from the design standpoint using many of the things he saw at Xerox PARC.
      The Apple with Steve Jobs the creative genius is more sexy than Steve Jobs the CEO sitting at his desk all day doing typical CEO things.
      The man didn't even have a desk and as far as typical CEO duties, he was the first to admit that was not his strong suit.

      You're just making this stuff up, because there are no facts, at all, being presented. Please do some reading before you set out to besmirch one of the greatest minds in American technology who is the creator and visionary of the most successful company in the history of the world. Your comments are ludicrous and smack of Apple envy. Nothing more.

      Cheers. - Frank

      P.S. And, FYI - Steve Jobs WAS Apple's marketing machine. lol
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152715].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
        Originally Posted by BigFrank View Post

        You're just making this stuff up, because there are no facts, at all, being presented.
        FACT: The name Steve Jobs is not on any of Apple's patents.

        He invented absolutely nothing on the technical or design end.

        Argue with that.
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152865].message }}
        • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
          Banned
          Originally Posted by DubDubDubDot View Post

          Argue with that.
          He created the company. Argue with that. lol

          Cheers. - Frank
          {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152897].message }}
          • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
            Originally Posted by BigFrank View Post

            He created the company. Argue with that. lol
            .... with two other people. One was a meaningless "mentor" who quickly left and the other guy, Steve Wozniak, did literally 100% of the product development work. Wozniak built the Apple 1 without the help of anyone.
            {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152909].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author The Niche Man
      Originally Posted by DubDubDubDot View Post

      Not sure I'd be taking creative or technical advice from Steve Jobs. He was just a puppet of Apple's marketing machine. A great CEO, but he wasn't really involved in product development.

      The Apple with Steve Jobs the creative genius is more sexy than Steve Jobs the CEO sitting at his desk all day doing typical CEO things.
      Wow! That's a major scoop. He had "NO" involvement in product development? Could you direct me to your source? Or is that just your opinion? You do realize coming on a forum like this and making your comments without revealing a credible source sounds strange at best. It's like me saying Michael Jordan had nothing to do with his team winning 6 championships on a basketball forum.
      Be prepared to get shaking heads, eye-rolls or just ignored as lame.


      Originally Posted by Sirr View Post

      . Infact, I rely on cannabis to get certain things done.
      It's also great you mentioned Steve Jobs. He'd taken LSD, and smoked cannabis, for long enough to realise the powerful effects those "drugs" have on your mind. Maybe the true path to creativity is through the consumption of hallucinogens.
      Ah actually, you'd do better by taking up meditation.

      If you fact-check a little closer you'll discover he did drugs back in the 70's (Article).

      But he didn't get his major legendary break-throughs until he started meditating (Article).

      Note: The fact you said you rely on it is kinda troubling. Hope you at least explore other options. Works for me.
      Signature
      Download "Free 80 Page E-Book"
      "201 Ways To Live Better On Less Money".
      "Because The Easiest Way To Make Money is ... ... By Saving Some First!"
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152868].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
        Originally Posted by The Niche Man View Post

        He had "NO" involvement in product development?
        His role was to review prototypes and decide which direction to go. I won't discount his ability to look at a series of possibilities put down in front of him and predict which one would be successful. He is obviously legendary in that regard. But the fact remains that he invented none of it.
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152894].message }}
        • Profile picture of the author fantrom
          Originally Posted by DubDubDubDot View Post

          His role was to review prototypes and decide which direction to go. I won't discount his ability to look at a series of possibilities put down in front of him and predict which one would be successful. He is obviously legendary in that regard. But the fact remains that he invented none of it.
          Steven Paul "Steve" Jobs (February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American pioneer of the personal computer revolution of the 1970s (along with engineer, inventor, and Apple Computer co-founder, Steve Wozniak). By the time of his death in 2011, he was considered the entrepreneur, marketer, and inventor, who "revolutionized six industries: personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, and digital publishing."

          So your saying these are lies and he's a scrub? He's no inventor, visionary or pioneer?
          {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152908].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author AntonioSeegars1
      [DELETED]
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152912].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
        Banned
        Originally Posted by AntonioSeegars1 View Post

        I second this. If Steve Wozniak had better people skills, it's possible that he could of been the main guy at Apple, especially since it was his technical genius that got the company started in the first place.
        True - and if you flap your arms long and hard enough, maybe you could fly to the moon.

        "if." lol

        Cheers. - Frank
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152917].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
    Originally Posted by I Love Ganesha View Post

    "Creativity is just connecting things..."
    Of course, this is probably what he was talking about.....
    Braun vs Apple. It's obvious where Apple got their ideas.

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152632].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author nmwf
    Originally Posted by I Love Ganesha View Post

    "Creativity is just connecting things..."
    While I love conversations about creativity, the minute I hear or read a phrase that attempts to minimize its immensity, I get a little turned off.

    Creativity can never be "just" anything. It's too big, it's too complicated, and it's too wild for a tiny, four-letter word.
    Signature
    Write comprehensible articles on *any* topic in seconds with First Draft...
    First Draft's: Download | Add-Ons | Templates | Purchase | Support | Affiliates
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152641].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Sirr
    I can be truly creative (whether it's music, writing, design or programming) after I've smoked cannabis. Infact, I rely on cannabis to get certain things done. If I have a heavy workload I will smoke, and the heavy work load becomes enjoyable. If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.

    It's also great you mentioned Steve Jobs. He'd taken LSD, and smoked cannabis, for long enough to realise the powerful effects those "drugs" have on your mind. Maybe the true path to creativity is through the consumption of hallucinogens.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152725].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author nmwf
      Originally Posted by Sirr View Post

      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      Repeat:

      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.
      Signature
      Write comprehensible articles on *any* topic in seconds with First Draft...
      First Draft's: Download | Add-Ons | Templates | Purchase | Support | Affiliates
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152728].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author nmwf
      Originally Posted by Sirr View Post

      Maybe the true path to creativity is through the consumption of hallucinogens.
      One path. There are many, and they're different for everyone. For me, music works too.
      Signature
      Write comprehensible articles on *any* topic in seconds with First Draft...
      First Draft's: Download | Add-Ons | Templates | Purchase | Support | Affiliates
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152733].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author BigFrank
      Banned
      Originally Posted by Sirr View Post

      Maybe the true path to creativity is through the consumption of hallucinogens.
      It has always worked for me. :-)

      Cheers. - Frank
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152785].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author Steve B
        I'm always telling entrepreneurs to be a little creative and come up with things in their business that are unique, better than what's currently available, and something that has never been done in the niche.

        I'm all for creativity . . . however . . .

        To a majority of business people, the call to be creative can be a terrible stumbling block and an obstacle in their business path.

        They get it in their heads that the core business activity or idea must be creative and innovative or their business can't be successful as they are merely duplicating what's already in the market place. They see their new business as competing for a slice of the same pie in the niche which ultimately leads to more competition and a smaller profit potential for all the players.

        But I'm here to tell you that you don't have to have a "break through" idea or a totally disruptive innovation to take market share from the leaders in the niche.

        Sometimes, and I'm guessing actually most often, introducing a small bit of creativity into your selling system, your product, even your marketing can have a big impact on your bottom line. If your creativity gives added value, automates a time intensive chore, or even shows a better way to accomplish a task, you will benefit from being slightly different than the competition. And the more you can be creative, the more separation from others you can expect.

        Creativity doesn't have to be something huge and startling. It just has to affect the customer or prospect in a positive way.

        Little flashes of creativity in your business can pay big dividends.

        Steve
        Signature

        Steve Browne, online business strategies, tips, guidance, and resources
        SteveBrowneDirect

        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152800].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author QTeeKitty
      Originally Posted by Sirr View Post

      I can be truly creative (whether it's music, writing, design or programming) after I've smoked cannabis. Infact, I rely on cannabis to get certain things done. If I have a heavy workload I will smoke, and the heavy work load becomes enjoyable. If I want to feel creative, I smoke, and it always works.

      It's also great you mentioned Steve Jobs. He'd taken LSD, and smoked cannabis, for long enough to realise the powerful effects those "drugs" have on your mind. Maybe the true path to creativity is through the consumption of hallucinogens.


      Reminds me of a documentary on Netflix called "DMT The spirit molecule"
      (I think I got the title right) lol
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10153030].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author jackcolton
        Originally Posted by QTeeKitty View Post

        Reminds me of a documentary on Netflix called "DMT The spirit molecule"
        (I think I got the title right) lol
        Not to get off topic, but I've been to the Amazon jungle and spent a week there on Ayahuasca. To say it opens your mind would be.........an understatement.
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10157012].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author winnermarketing
    Ok, I let you a little trick:

    want to be creative for a while?
    step your right nostril and breath only with the left nostril for some minutes.
    The repeat if you need..... it could works
    Signature

    Free Guide to Make Money Online [Now!]
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152824].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author dog8food
      Originally Posted by winnermarketing View Post

      Ok, I let you a little trick:

      want to be creative for a while?
      step your right nostril and breath only with the left nostril for some minutes.
      The repeat if you need..... it could works
      Lol. I'm going to remember this one
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10153173].message }}
  • Creativity can be a very good thing.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10152904].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author yukon
    Banned
    Read between the lines...

    The genius isn't creative Apple products, the genius is how Apple created lifelong buyers for basically the same products, over and over and over...
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10153085].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Patrick Brown
    Banned
    My 2 cents.

    Creativity is for me a very complicated thing, if you may allow me to call it that.

    He just takes a pencil and starts from nowhere on the white piece of paper and in a few minutes he has created something to look and marvel at.

    Or, he just takes a piece of paper and pen and writes you a story that will blow your mind. Or even a poem with sense and rhyme.

    Creativity is complicated. Creativity to me is more like a talent that has to be nurtured with practice.

    You can NEVER say creativity is just about connecting 'things'. To the term, to the creative people and to those who appreciate creative artistic works, that would be an insult.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10153206].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author JohnGravelle
    Originally Posted by I Love Ganesha View Post

    If you want to know the truth about creativity, just listen to Steve Job's advice on how to be creative: "Creativity is just connecting things..."

    That's also how you innovate. Observe the things around you and come up with interesting ways to connect those things.

    I hope this helps you on whatever journey you are!

    Have a great day friends.
    Amen to that brother, Amen to that
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10153504].message }}
    • Profile picture of the author Bradtastic
      I think "connecting things" is a good place to start in business creativity. Not always in artistic endeavors, though.

      In writing fiction, an exercise I learned early on was to look around the room, pick three items, and write a story involving all of them. However, that's just to get you moving while you practice skills like point of view, dialogue, etc.

      Eventually you have to stop connecting things (at least consciously) and move from a realm of input and consideration, to output and flow. That's the end goal - just doing your art. Connecting things can provide a useful building block, but it's a means, not an end.
      {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10154408].message }}
      • Profile picture of the author amuro
        That's a great idea.

        To be honest, writing books is what got me started in internet marketing after my 2 books got rejected by local publisher in 2008.

        So I went online to look for ideas and that's how I stumbled upon internet marketing.
        {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10154411].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author writeaway
    It's also about being AWARE

    Invest in your personal consciousness by practicing practical daily MINDFULNESS

    Never underestimate the power of a CLEAR MIND

    I write books on this and I practice this.

    POWERFUL STUFF!
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10154435].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Brent Tracey
    I find this to be helpful BECAUSE creativity is such a complex thing. The quote from Steve Jobs just makes it a lot easier to use creativity practically in business and other areas!
    Signature

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10154505].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author PaulHadfield
    Nice, we really need more messages like these on the forum..
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10155206].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Tom Addams
    Originally Posted by I Love Ganesha View Post

    If you want to know the truth about creativity, just listen to Steve Job's advice on how to be creative: "Creativity is just connecting things..."

    That's also how you innovate. Observe the things around you and come up with interesting ways to connect those things.

    I hope this helps you on whatever journey you are!

    Have a great day friends.
    I agree somewhat. But "connecting things" is what we do to force an idea.

    Take storytelling, for instance. If you espouse the Michael Hauge school of screenwriting then you can force an idea by asking the simple "What would happen if . . ?" question.

    What would happen if an amateur boxer was given a shot at being the heavy weight champion of the world? Rocky.

    What would happen if a kid was being bullied in school and received Karate training from an expert? The Karate Kid.

    What would happen if a boy encountered an alien from another planet in his own home and made friends? E.T: The Extraterrestrial.

    And throughout the storytelling process, these "What would happen if . . ?" questions are continued to be asked.

    Writers, throughout the course of a novel or screenplay, must continue to ask, "What would this character do now?" Not, what would I do, but what would the character do? In other words: making connections.

    Like I say, though - "forcing" creativity. Pure creativity is a different matter. It can never be explained. It just comes.

    Stephen King, for instance, is so tired of the question, "Where do your ideas come from?" that when he was younger, and less tolerant I suppose, he would give a different answer each time. My favourite went something like this (I'm paraphrasing): "I buy them from 483 Main Street in downtime Bangor, Maine."

    The truth is, you can't turn on the magic. It just happens all on its own. And the biggest fear of every creative person? Someday it stops.

    Tom
    Signature

    I Coach: Learn More | My Latest WF Thread: Dead Domains/ Passive Traffic

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10155303].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author Model
    Creativity comes natural, it isn't forced.

    Relax, clear your mind.. it will come when it's ready
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10156431].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author DubDubDubDot
    Good timing for the thread with the new controversial trailer out.....

    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10156621].message }}
  • Profile picture of the author FreedomBlogger
    Steve Jobs! ... one of my heroes! hehe

    Yeah... he said it right!

    Creativity is all about looking from outside the box and from the inside of the box. Basically, look at things from every angle, side, part, possible!

    Expand your mind as much as possible. Stretch your imagination. Exercise it. Just like a muscle. Make your imagination stronger and stronger with daily exercises.

    Break things down in as many pieces as possible - then study each tiny piece, and connect them with other tiny or big pieces. Just let your mind run, like the water falling in a waterfall! ... think about each droplet, but never forget everything is connected!

    Get inspired!

    Thanks for sparking up this topic!
    Signature
    At the beginning, I thought making money online with a blog was super super hard. Not anymore. Learn the art of making money online blogging - step by step - HERE.
    {{ DiscussionBoard.errors[10156847].message }}

Trending Topics