Worst Company Disasters! | Top 6 Blunders - YouTube

Channel: ColdFusion

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You are watching ColdFusion TV.
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Hi. Welcome to another ColdFusion video.
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In previous ColdFusion videos, we've often seen the success stories
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of some of the largest and most influential companies.
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But what about the other side?
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What about the blunders?
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missed opportunities,
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and utter disasters that in turn,
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brought some companies to ruin.
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Well today, you're in luck,
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because here are six of such stories.
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let's get straight into it.
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Number six:
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Kodak had the first digital camera back in 1977.
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Whenever technology changes the landscape of an industry,
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there are some businesses that adapt and thrive,
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And others that continue to do the same old thing, until it's too late.
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For Kodak,
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who fell behind, due to the advent of the digital camera,
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the situation was a little different.
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Kodak actually patented the first digital camera back in 1977.
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It was one that used magnetic cassette
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to store images of about 100 kilobytes.
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However,
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Over the coming years,
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Kodak made so much money off of film,
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That they let the new technology gather dust, not realizing its potential.
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The company continued to focus on traditional film cameras
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Even it was clear that the market was moving towards digital.
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When Kodak finally gone to the digital market,
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They were selling cameras at a loss
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and still couldn't make up enough sales to catch up to those competitors,
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which have seen the potential of digital cameras early on.
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Currently,
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Kodak is losing over two hundred million dollars a year.
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The lesson learned:
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In the world of business,
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always keep an eye on the market,
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and be responsive to future trends.
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if not,
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it cost you everything.
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Number five:
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Excite could have bought Google for less than one million dollars.
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The year is 1999,
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and Excite was the number two search engine, behind Yahoo.
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Google back then was a nobody.
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The new kid on the block.
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It was in this setting, back in '99,
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That Larry Page,
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offered to sell Google to Excite for $750,000
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according to Excite's CEO at the time, George Bell,
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The $750,000 deal was 1% of Excite's worth,
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So financing wasn't an issue.
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The hiccup came when Larry insisted
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That if the sale went ahead,
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Excite was to replace all of its search technology with Google's.
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George of Excite, thought that this was too much, and refused the offer.
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Excite was eventually bought by Ask Jeeves (now Ask.com) in 2004.
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At the time,
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Ask had less than 2% search market share.
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Google, currently now known as Alphabet
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processes a billion search results everyday.
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They currently have around $147 billion in assets,
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which is more than 196,000 times what Excite would have payed for them.
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Ouch.
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Number four:
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Blockbuster Video turns down the opportunity to buy Netflix.
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The mid-80s to late 90s, where when VHS was king.
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The problem back then,
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was that VHS tapes would cost upwards of $97 per movie.
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For this reason,
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video rental stores, like Blockbuster
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came in to fill in that gap.
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They were the perfect solution,
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and became a regular part of weekend plans
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for hundreds of millions around the globe.
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[Blockbuster Commercial]
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Eventually,
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online video streaming services, like Netflix, Hulu and even Putlocker
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destroyed the old video rental business model.
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Ironically,
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In the year 2000,
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Netflix proposed that it would handle Blockbuster's online component
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and Blockbuster could host Netflix as an in-store component,
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thus eliminating the need to mail DVD's,
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which was Netflix's business model at the time.
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According to an interview with former Netflix CEO, Barry McCarthy
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Blockbuster just laughed Netflix out of their office.
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But, that's not the end of their story.
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By 2007,
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Blockbuster was well on the right track.
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They had an internet movie component,
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that was steamrolling over Netflix.
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Netflix was struggling,
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and their upper management wanted to sell the company to blockbuster to save face.
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Blockbuster's growth was very strong at the time, so they turned down the offer.
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In a strange twist later that year,
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there was a boardroom dispute over Blockbuster,
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that saw a change of CEO.
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The new CEO was James Keyes (formerly of Seven-Eleven)
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He came in with the wrong mindset,
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and thought that Blockbuster should be a retail business instead of an entertainment one.
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Because of this,
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He didn't see the value of an online component.
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Huge mistake.
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Within eighteen months,
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The new CEO had lost Blockbuster 85% of the company's value.
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And within three years, Blockbuster was filing for bankruptcy.
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Blockbuster went belly-up, and Netflix went on to thrive.
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Since then,
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Netflix is behind such original shows such as: House of Cards, BoJack Horseman, and Daredevil.
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With 83 million subscriptions worldwide,
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Netflix has altered the way many view the entertainment.
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Number three:
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A grade school math error cost NASA $125 million.
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Before the advent of Google,
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did you ever get frustrated with the conversions from feet to meters?
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Inches to centimeters?
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Did you find it difficult?
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Well, you're in good company.
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As it turns out,
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a similar math problem hindered some of the greatest minds in the western world.
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In 1999,
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A Mars orbiter, that Lockheed-Martin designed for NASA
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was lost in space due to a simple math error,
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in where the engineers at Lockheed used Imperial measurements while the NASA employees used metric ones.
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The mismatch led to the thrusters not recieving vital navigation information,
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which caused the 125 million dollar spacecraft to malfunction.
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The probe was forever lost while trying to get into orbit around Mars
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after a 286-day journey.
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There were numerous occasions where the errors should have been caught,
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but, it wasn't.
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Number two:
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Nokia outright refusing to use Android.
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Nokia.
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One of the most iconic brands of the 20th century
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and even up to the first decade of the 21st century.
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The company had about 51% market share on the mobile phone industry
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at their peak in 2007.
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But now, they're a shell of their former selves.
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A fond, but distant memory for many.
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The start of the company's fall from grace can be attributed to one moment in 2010,
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when Nokia CEO Anssi Vanjoki snobbed his nose up at the idea of using Google's Android software.
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You see, at the time, Nokia had their own operating system called Symbian.
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After the release of the iPhone in 2007,
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the software development team at Nokia realized that there was a threat.
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So they split into two.
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One team tried to revamp Symbian,
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and the other team created an entirely new operating system named MeeGo.
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The problem was,
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that the two teams were battling for resources from Nokia's top executives.
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So in essence,
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there was an internal struggle within the company.
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It was so bad, that whenever Nokia was dealing with outside stakeholders,
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like chip manufacturers for example,
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there was so much squabbling within the company,
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that it took the better part of the year to make a decision on anything.
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in the tech world, that's way too long.
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Competitor innovation waits for no one.
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The logical solution, in hindsight of course, was Android.
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Nokia could have used the open software platform, combine it with their in-house hardware,
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to quickly make up for lost time, at minimal cost.
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Instead,
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Nokia CEO at the time decided to skip on Android,
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calling it a short term solution likening the move to, Quote:
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"Pissing in your pants in winter to keep warm."
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Nokia kept on working on their own software efforts,
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throwing $5 billion a year of R&D at the problem, but no avail.
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As time went on,
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The iPhone and Android handsets dominated the market until Nokia's mobile division was left in the dust.
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not long after this, in 2013,
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the Nokia division brand was salvaged by Microsoft for scraps.
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Microsoft couldn't make the once legendary company stay afloat either,
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Wasting $8 billion before killing the Nokia mobile brand.
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Moral of the story,
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Move with innovation, and don't let your pride cloud your judgement.
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But wait a second, there is a twist here.
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Nokia, the company from Finland,
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is said to be returning in 2016, after signing an exclusive agreement with HMD Global.
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HMD Global is a new company, also based in Finland.
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The deal will see the creation of Nokia brand mobile phones and tablets for the next 10 years.
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So, I'll see how this one plays out.
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Number One:
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Xerox, yes the printer company
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hand one of the greatest inventions in computing history to Apple.
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Imagine having one of the greatest inventions of the 20th century in your hands
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and giving it away because you didn't understand what you are holding.
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Xerox did just that with the Xerox Alto.
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The Xerox Alto was an experimental computer from 1973,
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created at Xerox's Research Center.
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The Alto was way ahead of it's time.
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It was the first modern desktop PC, as we recognize them today.
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It had a mouse, windows, file managers, and
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it can copy and paste, delete and move files,
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It had icons, menus, graphics,
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and even a Local Area Network, that connected all the computers together.
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The idea was to mimic an office desk, but on a screen.
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A paperless office of the future.
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Absolutely revolutionary for 1973.
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What the Xerox Alto was demonstrating
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was the first Graphical User Interface, or GUI, in a desktop computer.
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For those of you not familiar with this time in computing technology,
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This is how a typical computer from the late 1970s looked and functioned.
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Before GUI's, to do absolutely anything to a computer
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you needed to type commands in lines of text.
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If you mistyped anything, that was too bad.
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The computer would just spit out an error, saying that it didn't understand.
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Pointing and clicking on a graphical object was a foreign idea.
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Thousands of Xerox Alto's were built at the Research Center, but never sold.
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Only used heavily in Xerox's offices and at a few universities.
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The Xerox upper management did not understand what they had,
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the managers just couldn't see, the vision of what the computer of the future will be.
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But, a man named Steve Jobs did know what the future of the computer could be.
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And Xerox handed it straight to him.
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Here's how it went down:
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Xerox at the time, needed a way to make their experimental technologies, like the Alto cheaper.
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They saw Apple pumping out their Apple II's for a cheap price.
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So in 1979, they invited Steve Jobs over to their research institute, to see if they could help reduce the cost of production.
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The deal saw Xerox gain a million shares of Apple's stock
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In exchange for Steve Jobs was getting the inside information
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for everything cool and revolutionary that was going on at the PARC Center.
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Nobody actually checked with the guys at the research center, but the Apple Business Development Team signed off the deal anyway.
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The following is from Larry Lester, a Xerox Research Center scientist, and an eyewitness to when Steve Jobs was handed everything.
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Lester: So, during that demo... uh,
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Steve again got very excited, he was pacing around the room and
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occasionally looked at the screen. He was mostly just looking and then reacting, and taking it all in and trying to process it.
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And uh,
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and one point, he said you still not showing us everything.
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And the meeting paused, and there was some phone calls, and okay, we gonna show you more.
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But, Jobs was there going:
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"What is going on here? You're sitting on a goldmine!"
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"Why aren't you doing something with this technology?"
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"You could change the world!"
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And,
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There were his buddies, who would trying to, you know arrange a negotiation of some kind.
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We're tying to quiet him down
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[audience laughs]
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Don't be so excited.
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But he was, he was really clear to him that we were never really gonna do anything with this.
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Ah, the irony was when they left, we'd still showed them like 1% of what PARC was doing.
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But it was enough, that it got really excited and decided that they were gonna retarget the LISA to be something like what they seen in terms of GUI,
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they fell in love with the mouse,
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and uh, that changed everything.
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And 7 months after that, I was working at Apple.
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Jobs: And,
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within
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you know, ten minutes,
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It was obvious to me that all computers would work like this, someday.
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Basically, they were copier heads, and just had no clue about, uh a computer, what it can do.
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And so they just grabbed the feet from the greatest victory in the computer industry.
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Xerox could have owned the entire computer industry today.
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The graphical approach to the computer appealed to the human mind
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because commands were now replaced with movements and objects.
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So, it felt natural,
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Typing lines of text was now a thing of the past.
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The ideas from the Alto would heavily influence the Apple LISA,
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whose technology trickles down to the Macintosh,
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which influenced Microsoft Windows.
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Both of which, were the eventual ancestors to the manner in which our phones operate today.
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An the sad thing is Xerox never gets mention for any of this.
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Anyway, that's the end of the video.
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Those were 6 huge blunders by some top companies.
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I hoped you liked it, give it a thumbs up if you did,
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subscribe if you are new to this channel,
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and this video was a lot of work, so i would appreciate it if you'd share this video with someone who would be interested.
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Also, as another point,
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If you guys would like to suggest videos, I've opened up the floor on my Patreon,
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So, if you are a Patreon, you can take part and suggesting what the next video's gonna be.
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Thanks again guys, This has been Dagogo, you have been watching ColdFusion, and I'll see you again soon next video.
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Cheers and have a good one.
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ColdFusion. It's new thinking.
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- Captions mostly done by 81wsk