By Cam Mather
I started selling computers in 1982.
Michelle and I had just returned from our two month long honeymoon
driving out west and down to California. I had no computer background at
all, but I was able to read a few books and bluff my way in job
was to the 8088. Microcomputers had just started to be introduced and
computer knowledge wasn’t really required. It was more important to have
sales experience and I had that in spades. I was offered a job after my
first interview. This concerned me. So I applied to a bunch of other
computer stores and got 5 job offers. This had never happened before,
and now I’m virtually unemployable so things sure have changed!
I
started selling Apple II computers and later IBM PCs. Apple had a
computer called the “LISA” which was the predecessor to the Macintosh,
but it never really took off.
I was working at a “Computerland”
store (it was like a “Best Buy” but only sold computers) and I remember
going to a sales meeting that Apple put on in 1983. They played the full
version of the “1984” Superbowl commercial in which a young athletic
woman was being chased by storm troopers and throws an anvil at the
screen while “Big Brother” was yammering away to the soma-doped masses.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OYecfV3ubP8
The message of course was that IBM and its PC represented Big Brother from George Orwell’s futuristic book “1984.”
As
a member of the audience, I remember being one of a thousand sales reps
that stood up and cheered when the commercial was over. And that was
the start of my relationship with Steve Jobs. As he toured the TV show
circuit promoting his new “Macintosh” computer, he always used Macpaint
to draw great stuff on the screen. He’d also write “Insanely Great” on
the screen, which caused his Public Relations people to have a fit. But
he was right. The Macintosh was insanely great. It was a fantastic piece
of technology that made the IBM PC look like a Chevy Chevette next to a
BMW.
Apple
had a program called “Own-a-Mac” which was designed to encourage
computer salespeople to purchase their own Macintosh computer. If you
walked into a Computerland and wanted to buy the Macintosh, with one
single-sided 400K diskette drive, with about 400K of RAM, the
ImageWriter dot matrix printer, and MacPaint, MacWrite and Multiplan
(Microsoft’s original Excel spreadsheet) it would cost you $5,000. Under
the “Own-a-Mac” program I was able to buy the same package for $1,500. I
wasn’t making much money at the time so Michelle, who was working as a
teacher, bought it for us.
It
was a brilliant concept. People would come into the store and discuss
computers and eventually they’d say “What computer do you use?” and of
course, I was the expert and I owned a Macintosh.
Apple also had a
“Test-Drive a Macintosh” program where you could come into the store
and leave with a Macintosh to use for the night or a weekend. Steve Jobs
knew that if you tried a Mac you would never want an IBM PC with its
clunky Disk Operating System (DOS) which was all text based. Macintosh
computers used icons and it was elegant.
And so began my almost 30
year relationship with the Macintosh computer. This is a terrifying
thing for me to write, because it seems like just yesterday that we
bought that first Mac.
For most of the time that I used and
endorsed Macintosh computers I went against the grain. Most people used
IBM PCs. They didn’t know why, they just did because everyone else did.
It was a crappy operating system. When Windows came out, which was a
horrible graphic user interface (GUI,) it sucked. And it still sucks.
It’s just a bad operating system. It’s not intuitive like the Macintosh.
I still sit down with people who have been using Windows machines for
years and they have no idea how to back up a file. Steve Jobs developed
an operating system on the Macintosh that was easy and logical.
People
would say to me “But Macs are more expensive.” “Compared to what?” I’d
ask, “What value do you put on your time?” A computer is a tool. It
shouldn’t make your life more difficult and for many people a
Windows-based machine did and still does.
The non-IBM PCs came
along from Compaq, and AT&T and dozens of others and now after the
dust has settled, Apple is the largest company on the planet by market
capitalization. Bigger than Chevron. Not bad for a company that was
close to bankruptcy a number of times. When I see Apple stock at $330 I
cringe at the number of times I thought about buying it at $20, or $50,
or $100. Who knew? Who knew the iPod would come along? And who knew that
the internet would make computers so generic that young people would
just instinctively buy a Mac because it was simply the best product out
there, and integrated so well with their iPod.
My daughters owe a
lot to Steve Jobs. They always had Macintosh computers around to use and
they used them very well and they were never intimidated by them. Katie
was home one summer and she filmed our “Grow Your Own Vegetables” DVD.
She shot the video of me in the garden, dumped it on to the Mac, and
used iMovie to edit it like a Hollywood pro. Both the girls got iPods
soon after they became available and both of them own iPhones now. I
love seeing how techno savvy they are. I was working with one of my
daughters and asked her how I could save photos to make it easier for me
to open them in Photoshop. She said “Why don’t you just use the “Open
in Photoshop” function on the desktop?” Oh. For years I had been using
the slow round about way to load the files so the files left an image of
the photo on the desktop. My daughters just knew instinctively an
easier way to do it.
Steve Jobs reminds me a lot of Bill Kemp who
wrote four of the books that we publish. Both Steve and Bill just get
this technology stuff. I don’t get it, so am always impressed to see
people who can figure out how to make all these things work so well. And
make them easy to use and understand.
I also felt a connection to
Steve Jobs because he had pancreatic cancer, which is what my mom died
of. If you’re going to get a cancer, pancreatic is not the one. It’s a
nasty with a very high mortality rate, usually within a couple years of
being diagnosed. He was diagnosed in 2004 and made it until 2011. He
looked pretty rough the last few times he was shown making new product
announcements but hopefully he was able to trade some of his stock
options for the best treatment he could find.
During one of the news reports of his death, they used some footage of his 2005 Commencement speech to Stanford.
http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html
It’s
worth reading. He had quite a remarkable life. And lots of failures.
And he makes some pretty profound observations about it all.
I
like reading stuff that reinforces the path I’ve chosen. In this speech,
Steve said that he looked in the mirror each morning and asked himself
“If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am
about to do today?”
These days I get up every morning excited
about what I’m doing. Right now we’re about to send our newest book
“Little House Off The Grid” off to the printer, I am finishing up the
e-Book version of “The Renewable Energy Handbook,” harvesting the last
of the potatoes, winterizing my drip irrigation system and getting the
greenhouse started in the barn foundation so I can extend my growing
season a bit for our CSA next summer. I am earning a ludicrously small
amount of money these days, but if today was my last day on this planet,
I will have lived it exactly as I wanted, doing exactly what I wanted
to do. I had a great breakfast with my potatoes and our eggs cooked on
the woodstove, and an amazing sandwich made with Michelle’s artisan
bread and our peppers and eggplant, onions and local cheese (grilled
using electricity generated from our solar panels) for lunch. I
harvested two wheelbarrows full of potatoes and I feel pretty exhausted.
Another red-letter day at Sunflower Farm!
Photos by Michelle Mather. For more information about Cam or his books please visit www.motherearthnews.com/contributors/Cam+Mather or www.aztext.com