
McNealy falls for Photoshop trick...
Published: 9 December 2004 13:05 GMT
Sun CEO taken in by Photoshop Oracle OpenWorld: While busy taking swipes at his hosts, Scott McNealy fell victim to an Internet myth, using a faked photo he believed to be real in his keynote
Sun Microsystems Chief Executive Scott McNealy showed a photo during a Wednesday speech to illustrate how rapidly technology improves--but instead illustrated another computing phenomenon: how easy it is to fall for an Internet hoax.
At a keynote address here at the Oracle OpenWorld show, McNealy made fun of a picture supposedly from the magazine "Popular Mechanics" showing how people in 1954 envisioned the home computer. Alas, in reality it is a doctored photo of a nuclear submarine control room mock-up, according to the myth-debunking site Snopes.com.
The black-and-white photo, which has circulated by email and Web postings, shows a man in an Eisenhower-era suit standing before a long panel studded with dozens of gauges and a single steering wheel. A bulky monitor looms above, and a keyboard is placed in front.
According to Snopes, the original image is a US Navy photograph taken of a Smithsonian exhibit. The modified version was submitted to an image modification contest.
Hoaxes are nothing new for the Internet. There have been bogus MP3 viruses, virus repairs and email taxes.
McNealy might be a hornswoggled high-tech CEO, but he showed some rightly skeptical instincts. "Being from Detroit, I have to wonder: What is the steering wheel for?" he asked the audience of thousands at the show.
And his next point certainly made sense: "It's hard to imagine where we'll be 50 years from now," he said.
McNealy shouldn't feel too bad about his gaffe; he has good company. Lotus founder Mitch Kapor posted the same bogus photo to his blog in November, later noting his mistake.
The final version of the doctored photograph.
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Michael Dixon
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Drew Edgar
The tractor-feed fanfold stationery terminal shoul...
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