(no title)
ouked
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7 months ago
slightly off topic: I wonder if in an equivalent interview, Craig Federighi would need the same hint in the title "Interview with Apple's OS Leader Craig Federighi ", or whether his name is considered well known enough: "Interview with Craig Federighi". I wonder when its considered "safe" for a personality to stop being referred to as their job title (Founder of FaceBook, CEO of Microsoft, CEO of Spotify, CEO of ___?), and instead using their name (Zuckerberg, Nadella, ___?, Karp)...
kylecazar|7 months ago
It's a fuzzy science based on the author's estimation of how known a name is within their intended readership.
ouked|7 months ago
From a brief look (https://www.techradar.com/uk/search?searchTerm=Craig+Federig...), it looks like Tech Radar expects more of their readers to know who Craig is - going from "Apple exec Craig Federighi" to just "Craig Federighi".
I couldn't find another article with Sameer Samat.
I wonder if a media outlets' intended or real audience could be inferred from indicators like this.
jccalhoun|7 months ago
ouked|7 months ago
AndrewDucker|7 months ago
I don't work anywhere near Apple-related coding though, so that's hardly surprising.