Windows 95 lead architect is a Mac switcher, launches first iPhone app
Monday, July 21, 2008 - 09:01 AM EST "After he left Microsoft, Satoshi Nakajima, the lead architect of Windows 95 and a 'defining force' in the creation of Internet Explorer 3.0, wanted to understand why people were so into Apple. He picked up a Mac two years ago and decided he'd never use a PC again," Matt Buchanan reports for Gizmodo."Now his company, Big Canvas, develops apps for the iPhone... Their first app for the iPhone [is] PhotoShare," Buchanan reports.
"He has some interesting thoughts on the mobile market, like there's 'no business reason' to develop for Android and that 'Apple has proved that having a single app store does make sense to users as well as the offerers, so I believe Microsoft, Nokia and possibly Google will follow and we’ll have five stores, and that’s ideal,'" Buchanan reports.
Full article here.
Via Cult of Mac:
After working so long in the Windows environment, what attracted you to start exploring the Mac?
It was really just the look and feel, and also Apple was a competitor of Microsoft. We studied them as a competitor, so once I was outside Microsoft I felt like maybe I should learn more. So it was getting into it [initially] more like a competitor, and then to understand why some people are so into Apple products and yeah, I think I got it. The have some kind of emotional high that’s very strong, very attractive - most addictive (laughs).
MacDailyNews Take: "We studied them..." Noo, ya don't say? That has to be the understatement of the decade so far. Here's what we do when we find ourselves in the unlucky position of having to try to use a Windows PC: imagine a Mac designed not for the end user, but in order to skirt the legal system. Look for items, icons, system settings, etc. in the exact opposite, most counter-intuitive place and you'll have a much better chance of actually finding them. Windows is an upside-down and backwards Mac (originally in order to try to prevent a lawsuit from Apple) with fewer- and/or less-usable features. Plus, it's ugly, bloated, and just feels cheap and rickety, no matter how much lipstick they apply.
Full interview with Satoshi Nakajima via Cult of Mac here.


Yeah, they studied them all the way to the retail shelf. Everything about Windows was a ripoff of other peoples' work. First Post