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The Most Awkward Moments in Tech is accused of running cult

Technology can take shape in the world we live in today. But there are many tech lovers who still find themselves a bit awkward. As someone once said from a room full of people playing with vampires – The Mascade: Bloodlines was one of the most memorable moments of my life, it was the kind of pattern I can tell.

But this is not the only fan who can fight in the industry many times over the years. Here are some of the most common toes flexed.

Mark Zuckerberg may have exuded confidence today. But in a 2010 interview with Walt Mossberg and Cara Swisher, Facebook CEOs were so upset that she seemed to be slowly fading.

As he wandered for several minutes without saying anything, his need to escape was quite painful. The timing of removing his microphone is a bit awkward. But not as much when Swisher suggested that he used a cult.

Michael Bay walked off stage at a Samsung event

While the last two shows were as spectacular as they were, they were strange. But this item is hard to see, it can bend your bones inwards.

In Michael Bay, the director of low-cost Hollywood action films such as Transformers and Bad Boy, it seemed that Samsung had made a big debut at CES 2014 to promote its curved screen TV, but that has changed things. Quickly demurs horrors

As soon as BE came on stage in front of compiled magazines and industry experts, he took on a masculine appearance elsewhere.

For less than a minute in the presentation, he lost his spot on the teleprompter, at which point Bey announced that he would “feather it”, while no doubt wanted to jump into TV that he wouldn’t promote having had.

After squeezing his hand too much, they were in danger of turning to dust, Bay then left his peace when asked how the TV curve would affect the audience.

“I’m sorry,” the director apologized as he survived Zoidberg-style, leaving Samsung executive Joe Stinziano optimistic, asking the audience to applaud onstage for a minute and ten seconds.

Steve Ballmer – “I love this company”

If there’s one name you can make your jaw a little mixture of jerk, horror and fear, it’s Steve Ballmer. Many of the former Microsoft CEO’s antics have meant that he has appeared on more than one show on the list. But these are personal favorites.

It was a Microsoft incident in 2000 when Ballmer took the stage with the power of a man who smoked every gram of cocaine in 1980 (he was not).

Having managed to find the right combination of sweaty enthusiasm, fear and the right aggression, his performance undoubtedly inspired employees, who at this point may fear their lives if they do not show the same level of respect.

This event is a time that will remain forever in the records of technology history. The bus was teased in HBO’s Silicon Valley when Jack Barker mimicked his stage routine at Holly-Con.

iTunes and U2 albums

U2 may have sold over 150 million albums worldwide. But partly thanks to the antics of frontman Bono, they are following Nickleback in the “Most Disliked Band” category.

So what could be a better way to force the popularity of the ’80s than bringing your new album to half a billion iTunes accounts?

At the iPhone 6 launch event in September 2014, U2 made a surprise appearance on the stage. The Irish rocker continues to announce that their new 11-track album is available to everyone with iTunes – for free!

With less than 1 percent of iTunes users choosing to download the album, Apple decided that people should not realize that they were going through a great opportunity. In the context of marketing that can be described as “drunk”, the company decides to download it automatically.

Surprisingly, many people do not like music. ‘A Quiet Song of Innocence’ in the middle of the road, which received some rave reviews – it has Apple devices.

In what must surely feel like a strange move on Apple’s part, iPhone makers had to create a web page explaining how to delete an album. But the most turbulent moment could be Bono’s explanation of why the band went:

“The decline of megalomania, a touch of generosity, self-promotion, and the deep fear that these songs we have devoted to life over the years may not be heard.” Thank you!

Coincidentally, Tim Cook’s painful “Rock” / High Five and Bono Monster Horn deserve his own admission.

Bill Gates and his elusive slide show

What’s worse than publicly promoting your company’s products and going wrong when that company is Microsoft? You are Bill Gates. Notices Gates fights for fun while Conan O’Brien laughs at him when his praised technique has repeatedly failed.

Back at CES 2005, Gates shared the stage with the talk show host.

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