#16 - Thank You Steve
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Hello, and welcome to Developing Perspective.
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Developing Perspective is a near-daily podcast discussing the news of note in iOS, Apple,
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and the like.
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I'm your host, David Smith.
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I'm an independent iOS developer based in Herndon, Virginia.
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This is show number 16, and today is Thursday, August 25, 2011.
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The format of Developing Perspective is typically that I'll cover a handful of links and articles
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and then have a general discussion.
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But given the news of yesterday, specifically Steve Jobs' transition from being CEO to Chairman
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of the board at Apple, it seemed only right that that really was all I was going to talk
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about today.
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So the only link in the show notes today will be to the press release stating that and then
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the general discussion will take up most of the show.
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So yeah, so yesterday evening, after essentially after the markets closed and so on, it was
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announced that Steve Jobs has resigned as CEO and asked to be made chairman of the board,
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which I imagine has happened at this point.
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And Tim Cook has taken over as the day-to-day operational role of CEO of Apple.
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As an Apple fan, you can call me a fan boy, you can call me whatever you want, but I make
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my living in Apple.
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This is where I live.
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My desk is currently covered in Apple products.
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IMAX, cinema displays, iPhones, iPads, the whole thing is just where I live and breathe
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and spend my day.
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And so it certainly was sort of startling news, not in the sense that it was unexpected,
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but just it's one of those things that you know will happen, but you hope will never
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happen all the same.
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I guess is an interesting way to say it.
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It's sort of it's like anything that you sort of aren't wanting or don't want, but you know
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is going to happen eventually.
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You know, maybe it's like, when I think about, oh, it's, I know one day my children will
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move out, but I, and that day when that day comes, it'll still feel abrupt, even though
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So I've been looking forward to it for years.
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And so it was certainly a bit of a transition.
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I remember last night when I first found the news.
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At first, it was sort of the usual stages of grief,
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I guess you could say, where I was in denial for a little bit
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and thinking about, OK, is this actually happening?
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Is this some kind of joke or something like that?
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I was remembering the time when the Wall Street
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Journal or the New York Times accidentally
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posted an obituary for him and so on.
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And so at first, I was like, oh, I'm not sure if I'll trust it.
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And honestly, an interesting way to say it
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is I don't think I trusted it until I read it
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on the Daring Fireball.
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And that was the-- at that point for me,
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it's like, nope, this is legit.
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And then I found the Apple PR statement
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saying that this is what happened and so on.
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And so that's the news.
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That's the case.
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And while this has been a long time coming in terms
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of he's been stepping down and gradually transitioning out
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of that role, it's certainly something
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that I don't think you ever really
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expected to have happen.
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Now practically, it's interesting,
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because I was thinking about, well, what does that really mean?
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What does that change?
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And I think the thing that's most remarkable
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is that I don't think it'll actually change very much, at least
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for the foreseeable future.
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Apple is what it is because of what Steve has done,
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I think you could fairly say.
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He is the embodiment of all of the virtues and values that Apple has.
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And that embodiment is a powerful thing.
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And it's a focal point that allows
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people talking about Apple, people working at Apple,
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and so on, to have that singular point where they could sort
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of point their direction to.
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Say, is this something Steve would like, for example.
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But I think so much of what he likes, his style, his flavor,
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his tastes, are things that are fairly universal,
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that at this point within Apple.
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I'd have never worked at Apple myself.
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But from what I can understand, his style
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and his taste is now sort of indelibly pressed on almost everything that Apple does there.
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And so I'd be very surprised if anything changed.
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I mean, maybe if we sort of are looking back five, ten years from now, things will have changed.
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But for the next few years, I don't expect anything to really be different.
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I expect that really the same thing will continue happening.
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Apple will continue to innovate, to continue to create excellent products that have quality
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and design above affordability or those types of constraints.
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And as a result, I think Apple will continue to succeed.
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I think they will continue and, if anything,
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just continue just destroying their competition in a way that
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is just so good to see, to see that quality really can beat
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price, that their market share in all industries
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is continuing to grow, even though they're
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in very few industries, they're the low cost.
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They're the cheap thing.
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Their volumes and their profits are
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competitive with companies that are
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selling products for fractions of what Apple sells
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their products for.
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And that's just encouraging as an entrepreneur,
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as a developer, as someone who tries
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to make things that are good, that are quality,
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that are worth buying.
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It's good to know that people are
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willing to pay for that if you create the right marketing
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and the right product.
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I think also it's interesting and important to note about Tim
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Cook taking over at Apple.
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And I think his role there and his role
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in the success of Apple to date is often
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played down because of the focus placed on Steve
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and the focus that is rightfully his for turning the company
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But Tim Cook, before he became CEO,
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was the chief operations officer.
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And as best I understand it, what his expertise and the reason that he has done what he's
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done at Apple is his ability on the logistical front, his skill at executing a vision that
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is coming out of product development.
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And I think this is often something that's overlooked, but is nevertheless very significant
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to the company.
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I think if you think about the Apple's ability to produce with such incredible lead, in such
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incredibly tight tolerances, very complicated high tech devices on a large scale, ship them
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all over the world.
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I mean, for example, the most amazing thing I've always thought is whenever they launch
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a new product, the as best I can understand from conversations with Apple Store employees
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and things like that, the product that they are shipping, so say, for example, when the
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iPad 2 launched, or maybe even more strongly when the iPad launched in general, and no
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one had ever seen one.
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No one had even-- they've just seen it in that keynote
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that they gave.
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And then, as best I understand, it was the night before
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or a day or two before the actual launch.
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All of a sudden, iPads arrive at every Apple store
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all over the world where it was going to launch.
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And overnight, they take that store
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and transition it from whatever they were selling before,
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say it was the iPhone, all of a sudden now the iPad
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is front and center.
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And they're selling thousands or millions of them
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in just a few days.
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And the logistics of doing that, and it
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seems to have been able to continually do
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that with very minimal hiccups, is just
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a truly remarkable thing.
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And I think that is a big part of what has made Apple
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Because I think Steve has been able to drive the product
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and be able to create these amazing devices that truly
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are revolutionary or magical or whatever you want to call them.
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But what is, I think, the work of someone like Tim Cook
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has done is created a company that is able to actually then deliver on that at scale.
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And that is not to be downplayed. And I think it's important to talk and think about that
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moving forward, because that's the way Tim Cook's background is. And that's where likely
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he will be making perhaps the largest steps forward in the near future with his new authority
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and role. Fair enough, he's been acting CEO for quite some time over the last few years.
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But I think it's important to note that I think those things will continue to get better
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and better and better. And those are, in many ways, the areas that allow for the greatest
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immediate improvement in the user experience. They can continue to make the actual logistical
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part of buying an Apple product, getting it serviced, Genius bars, all those kinds of
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things that are more operational down pat.
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I mean, I think iCloud is another good example.
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That is very much an operational challenge
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in a way that is not as much of a technological challenge.
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It's not necessarily innovation that they're doing there.
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They're not creating something totally new.
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Cloud data storage and all these types of things
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aren't necessarily new.
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I'm not saying that they're not innovating in them.
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But what's really significant for Apple
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here is their ability to operationalize and execute
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this amazing vision that I think Steve
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has put out and I imagine will continue to put out and drive from the chairman role within
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And I think the last thing I was just going to say is sort of on a personal note, is just
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how sort of sad that the situation makes me not necessarily being that he is resigned,
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but the reason for his resignation and just sort of on the human level of seeing someone
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who is so passionate about what he does, that the only thing that can keep him from it is
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being physically unable to do the job that he knows he needs and wants to be able to
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do in a way that he can execute at a level that he is comfortable with.
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And I think that's part of the challenge of being someone like you him who you see is
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such a perfectionist as someone with such talent and skill that the only thing that
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can hold him back is when essentially his body is physically not allowing him to continue
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to do the thing that he is passionate about doing.
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I mean, that's a tragedy in all senses of the word.
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And it's just sort of a sad thing.
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And all you can say is sort of wish him the best, hope that he sort of gets well, and
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that hopefully taking a step back will allow him the rest and time that he needs to get
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And you just sort of hope for the best in that situation.
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I guess that's really all that you can do.
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But otherwise, that's the story.
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And that's, I think, an interesting day.
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I'll certainly remember, in some ways, they always say for major events, you always have
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remember where you were, how you found out.
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And I remember, I think I'll remember quite strongly that I discovered this happened,
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that Steve had resigned from a tweet by Sebastian DeWitt reading in tweet bot while sitting
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in my living room after putting my son to bed.
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And that's a very specific moment in time.
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And I think that'll sort of stick with me for the foreseeable future.
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Well, that's it for today's show.
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Like I said, it's very different than your sort of a typical show with lots of links
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and general discussion, but it just seemed appropriate given the news and the situation.
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So tomorrow I'll be back to normal.
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I think I'll be talking about recording your hours and hourly contracting, those types
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of things a bit more an extension of yesterday's discussion.
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But otherwise, I hope you have a good day.
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Happy coding.
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And if you like the show, make sure you tell a friend, tell two, tell three.
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So the more people who know about the show, the more motivated and excited I am about
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And if you have any questions, comments, concerns, hit me up on Twitter.
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I'm @_davidsmith.
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All right, thank you and have a great day.