Apple 3.0
A distinguished philosopher and political scientist (Yale, Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Apple) Cohen gives extraordinary lectures for executives and engineers on three topics: New York's Central Park, the discovery of the Higgs boson and Glenn Gould's recordings of the Goldberg Variations. You've already learned more than I knew before this interview about that academic black hole called Apple University.
info_outline 07: Dan Rayburn on Apple's original TV contentApple 3.0
What is Reese Witherspoon making for Apple, and how will it fit into the post-Cable TV world? According to Dan Rayburn, principal analyst at Front & Sullivan, it won't be a Netflix-like series, and it won't be used to sell hardware. I learned a lot in this impromptu 10 minute Q&A .
info_outline 06: Daniel Eran Dilger on why Apple haters gotta hateApple 3.0
info_outline 05: John Markoff of the NYT on covering AppleApple 3.0
"Over 2,000 bylines, each one thoroughly reported, crisply rendered, and gloriously drenched with quiet authority."
info_outline 04: Ben Bajarin on Apple's silicon edgeApple 3.0
Apple’s semiconductor engineers are the envy of the industry.
info_outline 03: The Neil Cybart StoryApple 3.0
info_outline 02: Horace Dediu's Unified Theory of AppleApple 3.0
Clayton ("Innovator's Dilemma") Christensen famously predicted that the iPhone would fail. Where did his theory of disruptive innovation fall short? Horace Dediu, now a senior fellow at the Christensen's institute, is working on the answer, using Apple as the exception that proves a broader, more encompassing rule.
info_outline 01: Gene Munster's new hobbyhorseApple 3.0
In his first broadcast interview since he joined the other side -- as co-founder of a Minneapolis-based VC fund called -- the media’s favorite Apple analyst reveals, among other things, where he got the cockamamie idea that Apple would sell a TV set by 2011, 2012,… 2016.
info_outlineA distinguished philosopher and political scientist (Yale, Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Apple) Cohen gives extraordinary lectures for executives and engineers on three topics: New York's Central Park, the discovery of the Higgs boson and Glenn Gould's recordings of the Goldberg Variations. You've already learned more than I knew before this interview about Apple University. To outsiders it is a mysterious black hole that sucks up the best and brightest from academia never to be seen again. Not so, says Cohen, who takes us inside.