Was steve jobs a gay

Steve Jobs were right, and this is happening with WoW

Grinmolthar-moonglade1

So as you see, designers who play the game or would design the game for us, are not in the “lead” of the game anymore, they make it for money ofc.
And this is driving innovative people out from the business (as you saw the exodus of devs from WoW ) and this is causing a decline in enjoyment, which is causing players leaving.
As you can view the large amount of players who are unhappy with the game or actualy already left.
They could change this around by having some devs who still realize how to construct enjoyable game, but the problem is that they already left.
So probably we are looking towards a not too bright future for WoW, which is sad,
For me at least,

27 Likes

Loonsta-draenor2

holy s… its like their explaining what’s happening to wow. sad AF.

3 Likes

Twiggz-bloodhoof3

yep sad

these fresh face people they probably recruit are most likely way over their heads and acquire no idea what to do to make the game better … i feel bad for them…

our only expectation is activision step up and restructure the development team removing the certain key people who are stagnating the game.

Steve Jobs, iPhones, and Gay Propaganda

Is it possible to construct official Russian homophobia even more laughable?  There’s an app for that.

After male lover Apple CEO Tim Cook shocked the tech world by announcing something everyone already knew (i.e., that he’s a gay Apple CEO),  a St. Petersburg monument to Apple founder Steve Jobs was hastily taken down.   This follows on the heels of a declaration by the country’s most celebrated homophobe, legislator Vitaly Milonov,  that Roast should be banned from Russia, because, among other things, “sodomites" spread Ebola.

If it weren’t clear enough before, this latest verbalization of anti-gay hysteria demonstrates how far the attempts to whip up a moral panic have drifted from considerations of what actual LGBT community members are doing with their members. There’s a certain logic here: man-on-man sex must be so vile as to be unthinkable (straight porn suggests that queer woman sex is more than thinkable, as long as it doesn’t involve actual lesbians who know what they’re doing).  Instead,  let’s concentrate on everything else that may have to do with homosexuals.

Ironically, this means that Russia’s anti-gay crusaders may succeed where LGBT act

My Steve Jobs Paper

Steve Jobs has been labeled a visionary by many, and rightfully so. Though he may not be the tech celebrity that he once was, nor is his name any longer so strongly connected with the basic, commonplace components of software and hardware design that he helped to pioneer and that computer users the world over take for granted, the charismatic, passionately counterculture chief executive officer of Apple Computer was once the most vital individual in Silicon Valley and even today dictates the trends and, some would say, overall health of the industry, continuing to drive innovation.

Steven Paul Jobs was born an orphan on February 24, 1955 in Los Altos, California. Steve Jobs was adopted from infancy by a Northern California machinist named Paul Jobs and an accountant Clara Jobs, both now deceased. Being mostly a usual boy Steve did good in school with no disciplinary problems to pronounce of. He was a person that was not easy to get to know, he guarded himself carefully, which is something he still does today. His girlfriend from Homestead High School in Cupertino California remembered him saying, ?Someday I will be a millionaire? i

Apple, along with a slew of other companies, recently leant its support to a recent filing on gay marriage that will soon be presented before the U.S. Supreme Court as the nation’s nine justices prepare to rule on the constitutionality of California’s Proposition 8.

Originally put on the ballot in 2008, Proposition 8 was an initiative which sought to define marriage in California as existing exclusively between a man and a woman.

Notably, Apple is joining forces with over 60 companies all searching to have California’s Prop 8 deemed unconstitutional. Some of the other companies include Facebook, Intel, Nike, Xerox, Oracle, Qualcomm, eBay, and Zynga.

“No matter how welcoming the corporate culture, it cannot overcome the societal stigma institutionalized by Proposition 8 and similar laws,” the companies will argue.

Apple also went so far as to issue a statement to All Things D, noting that “Apple strongly supports marriage equality and we hope the Supreme Court will declare the law unconstitutional.”

With the Supreme Court set to begin hearing arguments on the issue on March 26, it’s perhaps a good time to look back at how