David Gewirtz American journalist
Maybe it's time for Apple to spin off the Mac as a separate company http://zdnet.com/article/maybe-its-time-for-apple-to-spin-off-the-mac-as-its-own-separate-company in ZDNet (2 January 2018)
'Man with a Golf Ball Heart', from The Dead Sea Poems.
David Gewirtz American journalist
Maybe it's time for Apple to spin off the Mac as a separate company http://zdnet.com/article/maybe-its-time-for-apple-to-spin-off-the-mac-as-its-own-separate-company in ZDNet (2 January 2018)
Viktor Schauberger (1885–1958) austrian philosopher and inventor
Implosion Magazine, No. 35, p. 16 (Callum Coats: Energy Evolution (2000))
Implosion Magazine
Wendy Mass Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life
Source: Jeremy Fink and the Meaning of Life
Richard Rumelt (1942) American economist
He did not attack my argument. He didn’t agree with it, either. He just smiled and said, "I am going to wait for the next big thing."
Source: Good Strategy Bad Strategy, 2011, p. 14; Similar story in Rumelt (2007)
“Sweeter than apples to children
The green water spurted through my pine-wood hull.”
Arthur Rimbaud (1854–1891) French Decadent and Symbolist poet
Plus douce qu'aux enfants la chair des pommes sures,<br>L'eau verte pénétra ma coque de sapin. <br class="br">St. 5 <br class="br"> Le Bateau Ivre http://www.mag4.net/Rimbaud/poesies/Boat.html (The Drunken Boat) (1871)
Arthur Miller (1915–2005) playwright from the United States
Commenting on After the Fall (1964) in The Saturday Evening Post (1 February 1964)
Henry Blodget (1966) American equity research analyst
Hey, Apple, Wake Up — It's Happening Again http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-hey-apple-wake-up-it-2010-1 in Business Insider (5 January 2010)
“Oh, to be home again, home again, home again!
Under the apple-boughs, down by the mill!”
James Thomas Fields (1817–1881) American writer and publisher
In a strange Land, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777–1855) German mathematician and physical scientist
As quoted by Robert Chambers, "Sir Isaac Newton and the Apple," The Book of Days (1832) Vol. 2 https://books.google.com/books?id=K0UJAAAAIAAJ, p. 757.