Apple CEO tells college graduates: ‘We’ve failed you’
蘋果CEO給大學畢業生的致詞
蘋果執行長庫克(Tim Cook)於5月18日應邀至杜蘭大學(Tulane Univeristy)做畢業典禮演講(Commencement Speech),內容是鼓勵畢業生處理困難的問題,有勇氣嘗試找出解決問題的方法,並以20年前的親身經驗告訴年輕學子,為何當年從前途似錦的科技業巨擘康柏公司(Compaq),投入前途黯淡的蘋果公司。
杜蘭大學是位於紐奧良的研究型私立大學,有「南方常春藤」之稱,以下摘錄庫克的演講內容:
∎ Life will always find lots of ways to tell you no, that you can't, that you shouldn't, that you'd be better off if you didn't try. But New Orleans teaches us there is nothing more beautiful or more worthwhile than trying.
人生總會用很多方式告訴你,這個不可以、那個做不到、你不應該這麼做,或是你最好連試都別試。但紐奧良教導我們,沒什麼比嘗試更美妙,更有價值。
∎ For me, it was that search for greater purpose that brought me to Apple in the first place. I had a comfortable job at a company called Compaq that at the time looked like it was going to be on top forever.
對我來說,當初就是為了尋找更大的目的,才讓我來到蘋果。我原本在康柏的工作很舒服,而且那時康柏看來將永遠處於顛峰。
∎ As it turns out, most of you are probably too young to even remember its name. But in 1998, Steve Jobs convinced me to leave Compaq behind to join a company that was on the verge of bankruptcy.
你們大多數人可能都太年輕,不記得康柏的名字,但在1998年,賈伯斯說服了我離開康柏,加入一家處於破產邊緣的公司。
∎ They made computers, but at that moment at least, people weren't interested in buying them. Steve had a plan to change things. And I wanted to be a part of it.
他們生產電腦,但至少那時大家沒什麼興趣買電腦。賈伯斯想要改變這個局面,而我想參與其中。
∎ It wasn't just about the iMac, or the iPod, or everything that came after. It was about the values that brought these inventions to life.
這不只攸關iMac或iPod,或之後問世的所有東西,而是關於把這些創新真正做出來的價值。
∎ The idea that putting powerful tools in the hands of everyday people helps unleash creativity and move humanity forward. That we can build things that help us imagine a better world and then make it real.
這個想法是將強大工具放到一般人的手中,釋放出創造力,推動人類前進;也就是我們可以打造的東西,能讓我們想像出更美好的世界,再實現這個夢想。
∎ Try something. You may succeed. You may fail. But make it your life's work to remake the world because there is nothing more beautiful or more worthwhile than working to leave something better for humanity.
去多多嘗試,你可能成功,也可能失敗,但要把改造世界變成你的人生目標,努力留下任何東西讓人類更好,沒有什麼比這麼做更美妙、更值得。
以下是演講內容全文:
Hello Tulane! Thank you, President Fitts, Provost Forman, distinguished ( ) faculty ( ), other faculty [laughs], and the entire Tulane family, including the workers, ushers ( ), [and] volunteers who prepared this beautiful space. And I feel duty-bound ( ) to also recognize the hard-working bartenders at The Boot. Though they’re not here with us this morning, I’m sure some of you are reflecting on their contributions as well. [The Boot is a popular college bar right next to Tulane’s campus which has been around for decades.]
And just as many of you have New Orleans in your veins ( ), and perhaps your livers, some of us at Apple have New Orleans in our blood as well. When I was a student at Auburn, the Big Easy was our favorite getaway ( ). It’s amazing how quickly those 363 miles fly by when you’re driving toward a weekend of beignets and beer. And how slowly they go in the opposite direction. Apple’s own Lisa Jackson is a proud Tulane alum ( ). Yes. She brought the Green Wave all the way to Cupertino where she heads our environment and public policy work. We’re thrilled to have her talent and leadership on our team.
OK, enough about us. Let’s talk about you. At moments like this, it always humbles me to watch a community come together to teach, mentor ( ), advise, and finally say with one voice, congratulations to the class of 2019!
Now there’s another very important group: your family and friends. The people who, more than anyone else, loved, supported, and even sacrificed ( ) greatly to help you reach this moment. Let’s give them a round of applause ( ). This will be my first piece of advice. You might not appreciate until much later in your life how much this moment means to them. Or how that bond of obligation ( ), love, and duty between you matters more than anything else.
In fact, that’s what I really want to talk to you about today. In a world where we obsessively ( ) document our own lives, most of us don’t pay nearly enough attention to what we owe one another. Now, this isn’t just about calling your parents more, although I’m sure they’d be grateful if you did that. It’s about recognizing that human civilization began when we realized that we could do more together. That the threats and danger outside the flickering firelight got smaller when we got bigger. And that we could create more — more prosperity ( ), more beauty, more wisdom, and a better life — when we acknowledge certain shared truths and acted collectively.
Maybe I’m biased ( ), but I’ve always thought the South, and the Gulf Coast in particular ( ), have hung on to ( ) this wisdom better than most. [Tim Cook grew up in Robertsdale, Alabama, which is about an hour from New Orleans and is similarly close to the Gulf of Mexico.] In this part of the country, your neighbors check up on you if they haven’t heard from you in a while. Good news travels fast because your victories are their victories too. And you can’t make it through someone’s front door before they offer you a home-cooked meal.
Maybe you haven’t thought about it very much, but these values have informed your Tulane education too. Just look at the motto ( ): not for one’s self, but for one’s own. You’ve been fortunate to live, learn, and grow in a city where human currents blend into ( ) something magical and unexpected. Where unmatched beauty, natural beauty, literary beauty, musical beauty, cultural beauty, seem to spring ( ) unexpectedly from the bayou. The people of New Orleans use two tools to build this city: the unlikely and the impossible. Wherever you go, don’t forget the lessons of this place. Life will always find lots of ways to tell you no, that you can’t, that you shouldn’t, that you’d be better off if you didn’t try. But New Orleans teaches us there is nothing more beautiful or more worthwhile than trying. Especially when we do it not in the service of one’s self, but one’s own.
For me, it was that search for greater purpose that brought me to Apple in the first place. I had a comfortable job at a company called Compaq that at the time looked like it was going to be on top forever. As it turns out, most of you are probably too young to even remember its name. But in 1998, Steve Jobs convinced me to leave Compaq behind to join a company that was on the verge of bankruptcy. They made computers, but at that moment at least, people weren’t interested in buying them. Steve had a plan to change things. And I wanted to be a part of it.
It wasn’t just about the iMac, or the iPod, or everything that came after. It was about the values that brought these inventions to life. The idea that putting powerful tools in the hands of everyday people helps unleash creativity and move humanity forward. That we can build things that help us imagine a better world and then make it real.
There’s a saying that if you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life. At Apple, I learned that’s a total crock ( ). You’ll work harder than you ever thought possible, but the tools will feel light in your hands. As you go out into the world, don’t waste time on problems that have been solved. Don’t get hung up on what other people say is practical. Instead, steer ( ) your ship into the choppy ( ) seas. Look for the rough spots, the problems that seem too big, the complexities ( ) that other people are content to work around. It’s in those places that you will find your purpose. It’s there that you can make your greatest contribution. Whatever you do, don’t make the mistake of being too cautious. Don’t assume that by staying put, the ground won’t move beneath your feet. The status quo ( ) simply won’t last. So get to work on building something better.
In some important ways, my generation has failed you in this regard ( ). We spent too much time debating. We’ve been too focused on the fight and not focused enough on progress. And you don’t need to look far to find an example of that failure. Here today, in this very place, in an arena where thousands once found desperate shelter ( ) from a 100-year disaster, the kind that seem to be happening more and more frequently, I don’t think we can talk about who we are as people and what we owe to one another without talking about climate change.
[applause] Thank you. Thank you.
This problem doesn’t get any easier based on whose side wins or loses an election. It’s about who has won life’s lottery and has the luxury of ignoring this issue and who stands to lose everything. The coastal communities, including some right here in Louisiana, that are already making plans to leave behind the places they’ve called home for generations and head for higher ground. The fishermen whose nets come up empty. The wildlife preserves ( ) with less wildlife to preserve. The marginalized ( ), for whom a natural disaster can mean enduring poverty.
Just ask Tulane’s own Molly Keogh, who’s getting her Ph.D. this weekend. Her important new research shows that rising sea levels are devastating ( ) areas of Southern Louisiana more dramatically than anyone expected. Tulane graduates, these are people’s homes. Their livelihoods ( ). The land where their grandparents were born, lived, and died.
When we talk about climate change or any issue with human costs, and there are many, I challenge you to look for those who have the most to lose and find the real, true empathy ( ) that comes from something shared. That is really what we owe one another. When you do that, the political noise dies down, and you can feel your feet firmly planted on solid ground. After all, we don’t build monuments ( ) to trolls ( ), and we’re not going to start now.
If you find yourself spending more time fighting than getting to work, stop and ask yourself who benefits from all the chaos. There are some who would like you to believe that the only way that you can be strong is by bulldozing ( ) those who disagree or never giving them a chance to say their peace in the first place. That the only way you can build your own accomplishments is by tearing down ( ) the other side.
We forget sometimes that our preexisting beliefs have their own force of gravity ( ). Today, certain algorithms ( ) pull toward you the things you already know, believe, or like, and they push away everything else. Push back. It shouldn’t be this way. But in 2019, opening your eyes and seeing things in a new way can be a revolutionary act. Summon the courage not just to hear but to listen. Not just to act, but to act together.
It can sometimes feel like the odds ( ) are stacked ( ) against you, that it isn’t worth it, that the critics are too persistent and the problems are too great. But the solutions to our problems begin on a human scale with building a shared understanding of the work ahead and with undertaking it together. At the very least, we owe it to each other to try.
It’s worked before. In 1932, the American economy was in a free-fall ( ). Twelve million people were unemployed, and conventional ( ) wisdom said the only thing to do was to ride it out, wait, and hope that things would turn around ( ). But the governor ( ) of New York, a rising star named Franklin Roosevelt, refused to wait. He challenged the status quo and called for action ( ). He needed people to stop their rosy ( ) thinking, face the facts, pull together ( ), and help themselves out of a jam. He said: “The country demands bold, persistent experimentation. It is common sense to take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it and try another. But above all, try something.”
This was a speech to college students fearful ( ) about their future in an uncertain world. He said: “Yours is not the task of making your way in the world, but the task of remaking the world.” The audacious ( ) empathy of young people, the spirit that says we should live not just for ourselves, but for our own. That’s the way forward. From climate change to immigration, from criminal justice reform to economic opportunity, be motivated by your duty to build a better world. Young people have changed the course of history time and time again. And now it’s time to change it once more.
I know, I know the urgency of that truth is with you today. Feel big because no one can make you feel strong. Feel brave because the challenges we face are great but you are greater. And feel grateful because someone sacrificed to make this moment possible for you. You have clear eyes and a long life to use them. And here in this stadium, I can feel your courage.
Call upon your grit ( ). Try something. You may succeed. You may fail. But make it your life’s work to remake the world because there is nothing more beautiful or more worthwhile than working to leave something better for humanity.
Thank you very much, and congratulations class of 2019!
#高雄人 #學習英文 請找 #多益達人林立英文
#高中英文
#成人英文
#多益家教班
#商用英文
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過2,220的網紅Elise Go,也在其Youtube影片中提到,So I know it's already June...(& I self-roasted in the video) B U T I really wanted to make this video what being an Asian American Artist means to m...
this american life ok go 在 小粉紅Pink Facebook 的最佳貼文
今天忙了一整天,因為我們在抵達LA的6天之後,我們終於能入住學生宿舍了!我們決定先安頓一切,所以先跑去採購生活用品,和食材因為我們有一個超大的冰箱,後來我們決定騎檸檬(電動滑板車回來)😄,身上太重了,(超大罐牛奶和一堆瓶罐)慢慢走17分鐘,可能會直接躺平,很幸運的是宿舍巷口,有一間美金💲1 元商品店,瘋狂的隨性採買!
另一件幸運🌟的事,我們到達宿舍時發現竟然有兩間房間,本來很擔心自己睡不好,還準備好耳塞來,沒想到這問題再一陣驚喜中解決了!
正式的美國生活開始了,鐵粉們看我前一週死命的玩樂應該白眼🙄️翻了我不少吧?!😄,明天學校就正式開學了,明天開始就要真的認真當學生了,祝我好運🍀!也祝福大家一切幸運🌟⋯⋯但我待在這太久....會不會被你們遺忘啊!?😂討拍ing...
Today pretty busy all day long ...when we arrived school apartment....that’s really crazy...we go shopped got everything we need,and the surprise things is we have 2 room by us , I was worried about I can’t sleep pretty well coz someone snore .
So when we found we got two rooms pretty excited,and we also got a pretty nice kitchen and living room,this apartment over we was thought! That's why we so excited! Ok... The really American styles life starting Now... Tomorrow really have to be a real student in LA, good luck to me ,and good luck to everyone!
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📍 #travel #travelling #toptags #vacation #visiting #traveler #instatravel #instago #wanderlust #trip #holiday #photooftheday #lifeofadventure #doyoutravel #tourism #tourist #instapassport #instatraveling #mytravelgram #travelgram #travelingram #igtravel #instalife #ig_worldphoto #lovelife #traveling #travelblog #instago
this american life ok go 在 矽谷阿雅 Anya Cheng Facebook 的最佳解答
【勇敢地失敗吧!】
今天台大財金系的Penny和同學做職涯規劃報告採訪我,最後問我有什麼建言,讓我用最近看的電影《她其實沒那麼壞》the Last Word裡頭女主角的話跟大家分享:「(勇敢地)去失敗吧!你不會創造失敗,而是失敗創造你!(You don’t make mistakes; mistakes made you!) 因為當你失敗,你學習;當你失敗,你活在當下。」
我來美國十年,其中一件學到的事情就是跟台灣人比起來,美國教育普遍比較鼓勵接受風險,有冒險犯難精神。這或許跟美國是移民國家有關係,這些祖先從歐洲來的「大老粗」能到新的國度開墾,就是有著「賭一把」的精神。甚至美國國歌裡頭有「這個自由的國土,勇敢(勇士)的家鄉。」(land of the free and the home of the brave!)
人生抉擇不是投資報酬率可以解答的
記得我來美國西北大學念整合行銷傳播研究所以前,在台灣是蘋果日報記者,當年怎麼算,留學都不划算,當記者不用有國外學位,也不用學行銷傳播,花兩年青春歲月,留學又要花錢,回來如果又回去當記者,好不容易經營的人脈都冷掉了。
但心裡就是覺得沒到世界看一看有遺憾。我告訴自己:就申請那些最好的學校,如果上了,就去吧!關於投資報酬率的問題,之後再來煩惱。
現在回頭看,其實即使當年算了投資報酬率,根本也不準,因為知道的太少,根本沒辦法想像畢業之後人生會變得如何「你不知道你還不知道的是什麼」(You don’t know what you don’t know)。但,決定出國留學,是我人生最重要也最正確的決定之一,如果我算了投資報酬率,或許不會有今天的我。
我可以接受最糟的情況嗎?
但人生也不是真的可以「賭一把」,那怎麼做抉擇呢?你網路搜尋可以發現企業管理上有很多關於「決定科學」的公式模板。不過我通常用比較簡單的方法:問自己最糟的情況是怎樣?我能不能接受?如果最糟的情況真的發生,我要怎麼處理?
比如說,當初出國留學,我就想,最糟就是回台灣欠了學生貸款要還很多年,浪費兩年,然後回去要再當記者而且重頭經營人脈。我問我自己,可以接受嗎?如果可以,那就去做吧!
我驚訝的是,大部分問我這個問題的都是年輕人。大家還年輕,有很多學習的機會,不要害怕,放手勇敢地去失敗吧!
好讀版
https://medium.com/@anyacheng/%E5%8B%87%E6%95%A2%E5%9C%B0%E5%A4%B1%E6%95%97%E5%90%A7-daf0e50ed8c1
Be Brave! Go Fail!
Today there were few Taiwan University students interviewed me for a school project about career development. They asked what advices I have for college students. I think I would use the conversation from movie The Last Word, “(Be brave) Fail Spectacularly. You don’t make mistakes; mistakes made you! When you fail, you learn; when you fail, you live.”
I have been lived in the U.S. for ten years, and one key thing I learned is that most Americans seems a bit more risk-taking than Taiwanese. The education here encourages people to take risk and make mistakes. This may be related to the immigration culture – you take risk as an immigrant. Even the national anthem of the United States of America “The Star-Spangled Banner” says “O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!”
Life Choice is Not Just ROI
When I decided to come to the U.S. for my master degree in Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC) in Northwestern University, I was a reporter in Taiwan. Being a reporter, ROI of getting a master degrees sounds horrible – reporter doesn’t need a master degree in IMC, especially from an expensive American private school and takes two years.
However, I felt that I may regret it if I don’t travel around the world and see something different. I told myself, “apply for the best schools and if I get in, I will go. I will figure out the ROI later.” End up studying abroad was one of the best decisions in my life. Without that, I may not have what I have today.
Can I Accept The Worst Scenario?
Yes, life is not gamble, so still need to think through decisions. There are many decision-making frameworks online such as Decision Tree, but I used the simply framework – “what’s the worst scenario? Can I accept it? What would I do if that happens?”
For example, I asked myself when I studied abroad, “what will be the worst scenario?” ok, I can accept that chance that I would go back to do my old job, waste two years, and have to pay back student loan. So, I did it!
Surprisingly, most people who asked me this question are young people. You guys are young and have lots of chances to fail and to learn. Go ahead; don’t be afraid. Be brave and go fail!
#失敗精神 #Fail #RiskTaking #冒險精神 #勇敢 #Brave #Career #職涯規劃 #矽谷精神 #SiliconValleyCulture #她其實沒那麼壞 #TheLastWord
this american life ok go 在 Elise Go Youtube 的最佳解答
So I know it's already June...(& I self-roasted in the video) B U T
I really wanted to make this video what being an Asian American Artist means to me. I've had all these thoughts for the longest time & with May being Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, I finally got the nerve to share!
In this video I deconstruct my childhood idol, LeeHom Wang's song "花田錯 HuaTianCuo" and discuss his impact on my life. I also talk about current Asian American artists that are killin' the game (shoutout to Eric Nam, Bohan Phoenix, and Ross Butler.......... ???but honestly @ EVERY ONE I TALKED ABOUT IN THIS VIDEO Y'ALL RAWK OK)
What type of other content would you like to see? Videos like this one? Let me know what you think in the comments below ?
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