@drdesire_0: #foryou #witch #witchcraft #lovespells

Dr Desire love spell home
Dr Desire love spell home
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Tuesday 09 June 2026 10:02:22 GMT
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ade347715
Ade :
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2026-06-14 13:05:35
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vijaya20682
V🦚 :
222 I claim
2026-06-10 03:22:20
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desmond.gee2
@Desmond Gee :
I claim my blessings 🛐 from God 🙏
2026-06-14 11:51:51
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In the mid-1980s, tensions erupted between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates over who really “invented” the modern computer interface. Apple had just launched the Macintosh in 1984, showcasing a revolutionary graphical user interface (GUI): windows, icons, menus, and a mouse. This wasn’t entirely Apple’s invention — Jobs had visited Xerox PARC, a research center where these concepts were first demonstrated, and he immediately saw their potential. Apple refined and commercialized the ideas, bringing them to the mass market. At the same time, Microsoft was a close partner of Apple. Gates’ team was developing applications like Word and Excel for the Mac. But in 1985, Microsoft unveiled Windows, a GUI-based operating system that looked strikingly similar to Apple’s. Jobs was furious. He called Gates to accuse him of theft, believing Microsoft had stolen Apple’s future. But Gates countered with a now-legendary quip: “Steve, I think it’s more like we both had this rich neighbor named Xerox. I broke into his house to steal the TV set, and you said you broke in first and found I’d already taken it.” In other words, Apple hadn’t created the GUI from scratch — they, too, had borrowed heavily from Xerox’s innovations. This confrontation highlighted a bigger truth about Silicon Valley: progress often comes less from isolated “inventions” and more from borrowing, adapting, and pushing ideas further. Ironically, despite their rivalry, Apple and Microsoft remained interdependent. A decade later, when Apple was on the brink of collapse, Gates’ $150 million investment in 1997 helped keep Jobs’ company alive — paving the way for Apple’s comeback. #billionaire #rich #succes #businessmindset #billgates
In the mid-1980s, tensions erupted between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates over who really “invented” the modern computer interface. Apple had just launched the Macintosh in 1984, showcasing a revolutionary graphical user interface (GUI): windows, icons, menus, and a mouse. This wasn’t entirely Apple’s invention — Jobs had visited Xerox PARC, a research center where these concepts were first demonstrated, and he immediately saw their potential. Apple refined and commercialized the ideas, bringing them to the mass market. At the same time, Microsoft was a close partner of Apple. Gates’ team was developing applications like Word and Excel for the Mac. But in 1985, Microsoft unveiled Windows, a GUI-based operating system that looked strikingly similar to Apple’s. Jobs was furious. He called Gates to accuse him of theft, believing Microsoft had stolen Apple’s future. But Gates countered with a now-legendary quip: “Steve, I think it’s more like we both had this rich neighbor named Xerox. I broke into his house to steal the TV set, and you said you broke in first and found I’d already taken it.” In other words, Apple hadn’t created the GUI from scratch — they, too, had borrowed heavily from Xerox’s innovations. This confrontation highlighted a bigger truth about Silicon Valley: progress often comes less from isolated “inventions” and more from borrowing, adapting, and pushing ideas further. Ironically, despite their rivalry, Apple and Microsoft remained interdependent. A decade later, when Apple was on the brink of collapse, Gates’ $150 million investment in 1997 helped keep Jobs’ company alive — paving the way for Apple’s comeback. #billionaire #rich #succes #businessmindset #billgates

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