
• Steve Jobs, Apple: He won Barron's "MVP" slot on the list. If anyone knows how to make a splash, it's Jobs. Last summer's release of the iPhone 3GS caused a frenzy among both die-hard Apple fans and iPod fanatics. Despite all the snark thrown at the iPad for its poor choice of name or being called a big iPhone that can't make calls or take pictures, reports are that the device is already sold out pre-launch. Barron's also points out how Apple's stock price dipped precipitously when news of Jobs' health problems leaked out, making the case that Jobs is vital to his company's success. Truly the cult of personality. A returnee to the list. "From iPods to iPads, he mints money for shareholders."
• Jeffrey Bezos, Amazon: Two words: The Kindle. Maybe no gadget other than the iPhone/iPad has had as much buzz in the past year as the new Kindle. Book publishers tangled with the online retailer on prices, eventually caving. A Twitterstorm of controversy was lighted when some titles were accidentally deleted from customers' devices. And, you might not have known: Amazon has become one of the leading providers of cloud storage. This was not Bezos' first time on the list. "His Kindle is rewriting the way we read."
• John Chambers, Cisco: The man has been CEO of the company since 1995 and that alone might have been enough to put him on the list. But Barron's cites the many ventures Cisco has gotten its tentacles into: set-top boxes, Wi-Fi, video conferencing (if you watch 24, you've been aware of the last one on that list for years now). Plus, Cisco's continually expanding its business in other directions, such as proprietary servers. Not his first year on the list, unsurprisingly. "Finding new ways to keep a giant growing."
• Reed Hastings, Netflix: You're forgiven if you didn't know Hastings has been CEO of Netflix as long as Jobs has been CEO of Apple (1997). You're even forgiven if you didn't know Netflix existed in 1997. No matter to him, as his business seems to be the Blockbuster-killer. A generation of movie-viewers are growing up never seeing the inside of a video-rental store and the company makes more deals all the time to get more movies and television shows streamed directly online. The service streams through all major video-game systems (the discs for Wii streaming are in the mail) and faces little competition. Not his first time on the list. "Repeatedly beats the odds while building a DVD empire."
• Fujio Mitarai, Canon: Fujio keeps it a family business: His uncle founded the company. He's helped it expand beyond its film camera roots, Barron's said, to become a leader in digital photography - both the cameras and imaging equipment. But even more importantly, he took over a company in the Netherlands in the past year to "expand into high-end printing systems." Its shares rose an astounding 41 percent. Not too shabby. CEO since 1995, this is not his first time on the list. "Japanese business statesman negotiates the digital world."|
Via: Barron's (subscription required) | News Archive
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Tech,
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• Ma Huanteng, Tencent: Given that China's the most populous nation in the world, it shouldn't be a surprise that the largest internet messaging company in the world is Chinese. Not at all surprising, when that's where all the spammers operate from. If things continue the way they're going, I see China siphoning off data from the regular internet and hosting their own internal intranet without providing much if any data back out to the rest of the world (other than spam and hosting for dubiously legal sites). |
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Besides the Kindle, I think Amazon is great. I love shopping there because I don't get taxed and shipping is pretty fast. They even gave me free next day shipping on my Final Fantasy 13 release. So I basically got it the day it was launched (I didn't care to go to the midnight release). I've also dealt with their customer support and each time things went well.
Besides their online store, they do make a lot of money for selling their services to people who want to sell through them.
I found out this new thing they are trying out. I heard about it from my professor in a lecture. Amazon Mechanical Turk (LINK) I think it is an interesting concept. |
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Well that no tax on Amazon is about to change. I am sure you will see by the end of this year, the tax will be the same as your local best buy. So who on this list do you think got bailout monies? LOL This list reminds me of all the politicians throughout history who have gotten all the credit for winning the war, when someone else had to do the fighting. And someone else has to invent the weapons? except for a couple of them! And all the Apple fanatics, I must say Wozniak was the innovator, Jobs is just like Branson, all Flash and fireworks :P Kinda like actors :) Sorry felling kinda cynical today. |