Did you read the article? He co-hosted the "Macbreak Weekly" podcast
on TwiT with Leo Laporte for a couple of years.
"As a photographer, I’ve spent most of my career (well the part where
computers were around anyway) using Apple products. I bought the first
Apple II, the IIc, the Lisa the first Mac, the Mac II, the first
Powerbook, the G3, the G4, the G5, the first Mac Pro, the first iMac
and every Mac thereafter in both portable and desktop form. I’ve built
many businesses using Apple products. (While not an Apple product the
Next was a Steve Jobs product so that counts too and yes I even bought
a Next.)
Before I used Apple, I did have brief stints using an IBM (yes the
original IBM personal computer running DOS.) And I used Osborne (CPM)
and Epson’s Valdocs. And even after I started using Macs I did buy
some very powerful UNIX machines for my business from Silicon Graphics
and Sun.
But personally, as an individual photographer, I have almost always
used Macs. The early versions of Photoshop were optimized to run on
Macs. Most of the early graphics software and printer drivers were
optimized for Macs. And for a very long time, I feel that I got more
than my money’s worth using Macintosh computers and their laptop
counterparts.
I didn’t just use Apple products. I immersed myself in Apple culture.
For a while I owned lots of Apple stock. And I was a co-host, host or
guest on Leo Laporte’s famous MacBreak Weekly podcast more than one
hundred times. I spoke at MacWorld often. I was a member of every
Apple User Group that mattered. I subscribed to and even occasionally
wrote for some of the Mac-related magazines.
When Aperture came out, I was a very early adopter. I was asked to
co-teach the very first public Aperture class taught anywhere on the
planet (at MacWorld in San Francisco.) The product was so new that we
just had a partial manual in the form of a very skinny PDF and a few
days to learn what we were expected to turn around and teach.
I went on to attend one of the first Apple-sponsored training classes
on Aperture and ended up becoming one of the first Apple T3 Certified
Aperture trainers (T3 meaning not only could I train end users but I
could train the trainer.)
I started the first Aperture blog and podcast and served as technical
editor on a dozen Aperture books. I also recorded Aperture training
for
lynda.com and other online sources.
I bought the first iPhone and ran the first podcast and blog devoted
to the iPhone. My picture was on the front page of the San Francisco
Chronicle holding the first iPhone.
Most years, I’d be at the Apple WWDC conference in San Francisco
today, eagerly awaiting news of new Apple products and software.
In other words, my Apple/Mac credentials are pretty darn solid."
Steve