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Steven Paul Jobs (February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American entrepreneur, industrial designer, media proprietor, and investor. He was the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple; the chairman and majority shareholder of Pixar; a member of The Walt Disney Company’s board of directors following its acquisition of Pixar; and the founder, chairman, and CEO of NeXT. He is widely recognized as a pioneer of the personal computer revolution of the 1970s and 1980s, along with his early business partner and fellow Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs Headshot 2010-CROP (cropped 2).jpg

Jobs introducing the iPhone 4 in 2010

Born February 24, 1955

San Francisco, California, U.S.

Died October 5, 2011 (aged 56)

Palo Alto, California, U.S.

Resting place Alta Mesa Memorial Park
Education Reed College (attended)
Occupations
  • Entrepreneur
  • industrial designer
  • media proprietor
  • investor
Years active 1971–2011
Known for
  • Pioneer of the personal computer revolution with Steve Wozniak
  • Co-creator of the Apple II, Macintosh, iPod, iPhone, iPad, and first Apple Stores
Title
  • Co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple Inc.
  • Co-founder, primary investor, and chairman of Pixar
  • Founder, chairman, and CEO of NeXT
Board member of
  • The Walt Disney Company[1]
  • Apple Inc.
Spouse

Laurene Powell

(m. )​

Partner Chrisann Brennan (1972–1977)
Children 4, including Lisa and Eve
Relatives
  • Mona Simpson (sister)
  • Bassma Al Jandaly (cousin)
  • Malek Jandali (cousin)
Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg Presidential Medal of Freedom (posthumous, 2022)
Signature
Steve Jobs signature.svg

Jobs was born in San Francisco to a Syrian father and German-American mother. He was adopted shortly after his birth. Jobs attended Reed College in 1972 before withdrawing that same year. In 1974, he traveled through India seeking enlightenment before later studying Zen Buddhism. He and Wozniak co-founded Apple in 1976 to sell Wozniak’s Apple I personal computer. Together the duo gained fame and wealth a year later with production and sale of the Apple II, one of the first highly successful mass-produced microcomputers. Jobs saw the commercial potential of the Xerox Alto in 1979, which was mouse-driven and had a graphical user interface (GUI). This led to the development of the unsuccessful Apple Lisa in 1983, followed by the breakthrough Macintosh in 1984, the first mass-produced computer with a GUI. The Macintosh introduced the desktop publishing industry in 1985 with the addition of the Apple LaserWriter, the first laser printer to feature vector graphics.

In 1985, Jobs was forced out of Apple after a long power struggle with the company’s board and its then-CEO, John Sculley. That same year, Jobs took a few Apple employees with him to found NeXT, a computer platform development company that specialized in computers for higher-education and business markets. In addition, he helped to develop the visual effects industry when he funded the computer graphics division of George Lucas’s Lucasfilm in 1986. The new company was Pixar, which produced the first 3D computer-animated feature film Toy Story (1995) and went on to become a major animation studio, producing over 25 films since.

In 1997, Jobs returned to Apple as CEO after the company’s acquisition of NeXT. He was largely responsible for reviving Apple, which was on the verge of bankruptcy. He worked closely with English designer Jony Ive to develop a line of products that had larger cultural ramifications, beginning with the «Think different» advertising campaign and leading to the Apple Store, App Store (iOS), iMac, iPad, iPod, iPhone, iTunes, and iTunes Store. In 2001, the original Mac OS was replaced with the completely new Mac OS X (now known as macOS), based on NeXT’s NeXTSTEP platform, giving the operating system a modern Unix-based foundation for the first time. In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. He died of respiratory arrest related to the tumor on October 5, 2011, at the age of 56. In 2022, he was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Background

Family

Steven Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco, California, on February 24, 1955, to Joanne Carole Schieble and Abdulfattah Jandali (Arabic: عبد الفتاح الجندلي).[2] His cousin, Bassma Al Jandaly, maintains that his birth name was Abdul Lateef Jandali.[3] He was adopted by Clara (née Hagopian) and Paul Reinhold Jobs.[2]

Abdulfattah «John» Jandali was born and raised in an Arab Muslim household in Homs, Syria. As an undergraduate at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, he was a student activist and was imprisoned for his political activities.[4] He pursued a PhD at the University of Wisconsin, where he met Joanne Schieble, an American Catholic of German and Swiss descent.[4][5] Both of the same age, Jandali was a doctoral candidate and a teaching assistant for a course Schieble was taking.[6] Novelist Mona Simpson, Jobs’s biological sister, noted that Schieble’s Catholic parents were unhappy that their daughter was with a Muslim.[7] Jobs’s biographer Walter Isaacson states that Schieble’s dying father «threatened to disown her if she wed Abdulfattah»,[6] so they remained an unmarried couple.[5]

Paul Jobs was a Coast Guard mechanic.[8] After leaving the Coast Guard, he married Clara Hagopian, an American of Armenian descent, in 1946.[9] An ectopic pregnancy led them to consider adoption in 1955.[8][9][10] Hagopian’s parents were survivors of the Armenian genocide.[11]

Early life

Of all the inventions of humans, the computer is going to rank near or at the top as history unfolds and we look back. It is the most awesome tool that we have ever invented. I feel incredibly lucky to be at exactly the right place in Silicon Valley, at exactly the right time, historically, where this invention has taken form.

—Steve Jobs, 1995[12]

Schieble became pregnant with Jobs in 1954, when she and Jandali spent the summer with his family in Homs. According to Jandali, Schieble deliberately did not involve him in the process: «Without telling me, Joanne upped and left to move to San Francisco to have the baby without anyone knowing, including me.»[13]

Schieble gave birth to Jobs in San Francisco on February 24, 1955, and chose an adoptive couple for him that was «Catholic, well-educated, and wealthy»,[14][15] but the couple later changed their minds.[14] He was then placed with Paul and Clara Jobs, who lacked wealth and college education, and Schieble refused to sign the adoption papers.[16] She asked the court to find a different family,[14] but consented when Paul and Clara pledged to fund his college education.[17]

In his youth, his parents took him to a Lutheran church.[18] When he was in high school, Clara admitted to his girlfriend, Chrisann Brennan, that she «was too frightened to love [Steve] for the first six months of his life … I was scared they were going to take him away from me. Even after we won the case, Steve was so difficult a child that by the time he was two I felt we had made a mistake. I wanted to return him.» When Chrisann shared this comment with Steve, he stated that he was already aware,[14] and later said he had been deeply loved and indulged by Paul and Clara. Many years later, Jobs’s wife Laurene also noted that «he felt he had been really blessed by having the two of them as parents.»[19][page needed] Jobs would «bristle» when Paul and Clara were referred to as his “adoptive parents”, and he regarded them as his parents “1,000%”. Jobs referred to his biological parents as «my sperm and egg bank. That’s not harsh, it’s just the way it was, a sperm bank thing, nothing more.»[8]

Childhood

I always thought of myself as a humanities person as a kid, but I liked electronics… then I read something that one of my heroes, Edwin Land of Polaroid, said about the importance of people who could stand at the intersection of humanities and sciences, and I decided that’s what I wanted to do.

—Steve Jobs[20]

Paul Jobs worked in several jobs that included a try as a machinist,[21]
several other jobs,[22] and then «back to work as a machinist».

Paul and Clara adopted Jobs’s sister Patricia in 1957[23] and by 1959 the family had moved to the Monta Loma neighborhood in Mountain View, California.[24] Paul built a workbench in his garage for his son in order to «pass along his love of mechanics”. Jobs, meanwhile, admired his father’s craftsmanship «because he knew how to build anything. If we needed a cabinet, he would build it. When he built our fence, he gave me a hammer so I could work with him … I wasn’t that into fixing cars … but I was eager to hang out with my dad.»[25] By the time he was ten, Jobs was deeply involved in electronics and befriended many of the engineers who lived in the neighborhood.[26][page needed] He had difficulty making friends with children his own age, however, and was seen by his classmates as a «loner».[26][page needed]

Childhood family home of Steve Jobs on Crist Drive in Los Altos, California, and the original site of Apple Computer. The home was added to a list of historic Los Altos sites in 2013.[27]

Jobs had difficulty functioning in a traditional classroom, tended to resist authority figures, frequently misbehaved, and was suspended a few times. Clara had taught him to read as a toddler, and Jobs stated that he was «pretty bored in school and [had] turned into a little terror… you should have seen us in the third grade, we basically destroyed the teacher.»[26][page needed] He frequently played pranks on others at Monta Loma Elementary School in Mountain View. His father Paul (who was abused as a child) never reprimanded him, however, and instead blamed the school for not challenging his brilliant son.[28]

Jobs would later credit his fourth grade teacher, Imogene «Teddy» Hill, with turning him around: «She taught an advanced fourth grade class, and it took her about a month to get hip to my situation. She bribed me into learning. She would say, ‘I really want you to finish this workbook. I’ll give you five bucks if you finish it.’ That really kindled a passion in me for learning things! I learned more that year than I think I learned in any other year in school. They wanted me to skip the next two years in grade school and go straight to junior high to learn a foreign language, but my parents very wisely wouldn’t let it happen.» Jobs skipped the 5th grade and transferred to the 6th grade at Crittenden Middle School in Mountain View[26][page needed] where he became a «socially awkward loner».[29] Jobs was often «bullied» at Crittenden Middle, and in the middle of 7th grade, he gave his parents an ultimatum: either they would take him out of Crittenden or he would drop out of school.[30]

Though the Jobs family was not affluent and used all savings in 1967 to buy a new home, allowing Jobs to change schools.[26][page needed] The new house (a three-bedroom home on Crist Drive in Los Altos, California) was in the better Cupertino School District, Cupertino, California,[31] and was embedded in an environment even more heavily populated with engineering families than the Mountain View area was.[26][page needed] The house was declared a historic site in 2013, as the first site of Apple Computer.[27] As of 2013, it was owned by Jobs’s sister, Patty, and occupied by his stepmother, Marilyn.[32]

When he was 13, in 1968, Jobs was given a summer job by Bill Hewlett (of Hewlett-Packard) after Jobs cold-called him to ask for parts for an electronics project.[26][page needed]

Homestead High

The location of the Los Altos home meant that Jobs would be able to attend nearby Homestead High School, which had strong ties to Silicon Valley.[20] He began his first year there in late 1968 along with Bill Fernandez,[26][page needed] who introduced Jobs to Steve Wozniak, and would become Apple’s first employee. Neither Jobs nor Fernandez (whose father was a lawyer) came from engineering households and thus decided to enroll in John McCollum’s Electronics I class.[26][page needed] Jobs had grown his hair long and become involved in the growing counterculture, and the rebellious youth eventually clashed with McCollum and lost interest in the class.[26][page needed]

He underwent a change during mid-1970: «I got stoned for the first time; I discovered Shakespeare, Dylan Thomas, and all that classic stuff. I read Moby Dick and went back as a junior taking creative writing classes.»[26][page needed] Jobs later noted to his official biographer that «I started to listen to music a whole lot, and I started to read more outside of just science and technology—Shakespeare, Plato. I loved King Lear … when I was a senior I had this phenomenal AP English class. The teacher was this guy who looked like Ernest Hemingway. He took a bunch of us snowshoeing in Yosemite.» During his last two years at Homestead High, Jobs developed two different interests: electronics and literature.[33] These dual interests were particularly reflected during Jobs’s senior year as his best friends were Wozniak and his first girlfriend, the artistic Homestead junior Chrisann Brennan.[34]

In 1971, after Wozniak began attending University of California, Berkeley, Jobs would visit him there a few times a week. This experience led him to study in nearby Stanford University’s student union. Instead of joining the electronics club, Jobs put on light shows with a friend for Homestead’s avant-garde jazz program. He was described by a Homestead classmate as «kind of brain and kind of hippie … but he never fit into either group. He was smart enough to be a nerd, but wasn’t nerdy. And he was too intellectual for the hippies, who just wanted to get wasted all the time. He was kind of an outsider. In high school everything revolved around what group you were in, and if you weren’t in a carefully defined group, you weren’t anybody. He was an individual, in a world where individuality was suspect.» By his senior year in late 1971, he was taking freshman English class at Stanford and working on a Homestead underground film project with Chrisann Brennan.[35][36]

Around that time, Wozniak designed a low-cost digital «blue box» to generate the necessary tones to manipulate the telephone network, allowing free long-distance calls. He was inspired by an article titled «Secrets of the Little Blue Box» from the October 1971 issue of Esquire.[37] Jobs decided then to sell them and split the profit with Wozniak. The clandestine sales of the illegal blue boxes went well and perhaps planted the seed in Jobs’s mind that electronics could be both fun and profitable.[38] In a 1994 interview, he recalled that it took six months for him and Wozniak to design the blue boxes.[39] Jobs later reflected that had it not been for Wozniak’s blue boxes, «there wouldn’t have been an Apple».[40] He states it showed them that they could take on large companies and beat them.[41][42]

By his senior year of high school, Jobs began using LSD.[43] He later recalled that on one occasion he consumed it in a wheat field outside Sunnyvale, and experienced «the most wonderful feeling of my life up to that point».[44] In mid-1972, after graduation and before leaving for Reed College, Jobs and Brennan rented a house from their other roommate, Al.[45]

Reed College

In September 1972, Jobs enrolled at Reed College in Portland, Oregon.[46] He insisted on applying only to Reed, although it was an expensive school that Paul and Clara could ill afford.[47] Jobs soon befriended Robert Friedland,[48] who was Reed’s student body president at that time.[26][page needed] Brennan remained involved with Jobs while he was at Reed. He later asked her to come and live with him in a house he rented near the Reed campus, but she refused.[citation needed]

After just one semester, Jobs dropped out of Reed College without telling his parents.[49] Jobs later explained this was because he did not want to spend his parents’ money on an education that seemed meaningless to him. He continued to attend by auditing his classes,[50] including a course on calligraphy that was taught by Robert Palladino. In a 2005 commencement speech at Stanford University, Jobs stated that during this period, he slept on the floor in friends’ dorm rooms, returned Coke bottles for food money, and got weekly free meals at the local Hare Krishna temple. In that same speech, Jobs said: “If I had never dropped in on that single calligraphy course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts.”[51]

1974–1985

I was lucky to get into computers when it was a very young and idealistic industry. There weren’t many degrees offered in computer science, so people in computers were brilliant people from mathematics, physics, music, zoology, whatever. They loved it, and no one was really in it for the money […] There are people around here who start companies just to make money, but the great companies, well, that’s not what they’re about.

—Steve Jobs[52]

Pre-Apple

In February 1974, Jobs returned to his parents’ home in Los Altos and began looking for a job.[53] He was soon hired by Atari, Inc. in Los Gatos, California, as a technician.[53][54] Back in 1973, Steve Wozniak designed his own version of the classic video game Pong and gave its electronics board to Jobs. According to Wozniak, Atari only hired Jobs because he took the board down to the company, and they thought that he had built it himself.[55] Atari’s cofounder Nolan Bushnell later described him as «difficult but valuable», pointing out that «he was very often the smartest guy in the room, and he would let people know that.»[56]

During this period, Jobs and Brennan remained involved with each other while continuing to see other people. By early 1974, Jobs was living what Brennan describes as a “simple life” in a Los Gatos cabin, working at Atari, and saving money for his impending trip to India.[citation needed]

Jobs traveled to India in mid-1974[57] to visit Neem Karoli Baba[58] at his Kainchi ashram with his Reed friend (and eventual Apple employee) Daniel Kottke, searching for spiritual enlightenment. When they got to the Neem Karoli ashram, it was almost deserted because Neem Karoli Baba had died in September 1973. Then they made a long trek up a dry riverbed to an ashram of Haidakhan Babaji.[54]

After seven months, Jobs left India[59] and returned to the US ahead of Daniel Kottke.[54] Jobs had changed his appearance; his head was shaved, and he wore traditional Indian clothing.[60][61] During this time, Jobs experimented with psychedelics, later calling his LSD experiences «one of the two or three most important things [he had] done in [his] life».[62][63] He spent a period at the All One Farm, a commune in Oregon that was owned by Robert Friedland. Brennan joined him there for a period.[citation needed]

During this time period, Jobs and Brennan both became practitioners of Zen Buddhism through the Zen master Kōbun Chino Otogawa. Jobs was living in his parents’ backyard toolshed, which he had converted into a bedroom.[citation needed] Jobs engaged in lengthy meditation retreats at the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, the oldest Sōtō Zen monastery in the US.[64] He considered taking up monastic residence at Eihei-ji in Japan, and maintained a lifelong appreciation for Zen.[65]

In mid-1975, after returning to Atari, Jobs was assigned to create a circuit board for the arcade video game Breakout.[66] According to Bushnell, Atari offered $100 (equivalent to about $500 in 2021) for each TTL chip that was eliminated in the machine. Jobs had little specialized knowledge of circuit board design and made a deal with Wozniak to split the fee evenly between them if Wozniak could minimize the number of chips. Much to the amazement of Atari engineers, Wozniak reduced the TTL count to 46, a design so tight that it was impossible to reproduce on an assembly line.[67] According to Wozniak, Jobs told him that Atari paid them only $700 (instead of the actual $5,000), and that Wozniak’s share was thus $350.[68] Wozniak did not learn about the actual bonus until ten years later, but said that if Jobs had told him about it and explained that he needed the money, Wozniak would have given it to him.[69]

Jobs and Wozniak attended meetings of the Homebrew Computer Club in 1975, which was a stepping stone to the development and marketing of the first Apple computer.[15]

Apple (1976–1985)

Basically Steve Wozniak and I invented the Apple because we wanted a personal computer. Not only couldn’t we afford the computers that were on the market, those computers were impractical for us to use. We needed a Volkswagen. The Volkswagen isn’t as fast or comfortable as other ways of traveling, but the VW owners can go where they want, when they want and with whom they want. The VW owners have personal control of their car.

—Steve Jobs[26][page needed]

By March 1976, Wozniak completed the basic design of the Apple I computer and showed it to Jobs, who suggested that they sell it; Wozniak was at first skeptical of the idea but later agreed.[70] In April of that same year, Jobs, Wozniak, and administrative overseer Ronald Wayne founded Apple Computer Company (now called Apple Inc.) as a business partnership in Jobs’s parents’ Crist Drive home on April 1, 1976. The operation originally started in Jobs’s bedroom and later moved to the garage.[71][72] Wayne stayed briefly, leaving Jobs and Wozniak as the active primary cofounders of the company.[73] The two decided on the name «Apple» after Jobs returned from the All One Farm commune in Oregon and told Wozniak about his time in the farm’s apple orchard.[74] Jobs originally planned to produce bare printed circuit boards of the Apple I and sell them to computer hobbyists for $50 (equivalent to about $240 in 2021) each. To fund the first batch, Wozniak sold his HP scientific calculator and Jobs sold his Volkswagen van.[75][76] Later that year, computer retailer Paul Terrell purchased 50 fully assembled Apple I units for $500 each.[77][78] Eventually about 200 Apple I computers were produced in total.[79]

External image
  Jobs and Steve Wozniak with an Apple I circuit board, c. 1976.

A neighbor on Crist Drive recalled Jobs as an odd individual who would greet his clients “with his underwear hanging out, barefoot and hippie-like”. Another neighbor, Larry Waterland, who had just earned his PhD in chemical engineering at Stanford, recalled dismissing Jobs’s budding business compared to the established industry of giant mainframe computers with big decks of punchcards: “Steve took me over to the garage. He had a circuit board with a chip on it, a DuMont TV set, a Panasonic cassette tape deck and a keyboard. He said, ‘This is an Apple computer.’ I said, ‘You’ve got to be joking.’ I dismissed the whole idea.” Jobs’s friend from Reed College and India, Daniel Kottke, recalled that as an early Apple employee, he “was the only person who worked in the garage … Woz would show up once a week with his latest code. Steve Jobs didn’t get his hands dirty in that sense.” Kottke also stated that much of the early work took place in Jobs’s kitchen, where he spent hours on the phone trying to find investors for the company.[32]

They received funding from a then-semi-retired Intel product marketing manager and engineer Mike Markkula.[80] Scott McNealy, one of the cofounders of Sun Microsystems, said that Jobs broke a «glass age ceiling» in Silicon Valley because he’d created a very successful company at a young age.[42] Markkula brought Apple to the attention of Arthur Rock, which after looking at the crowded Apple booth at the Home Brew Computer Show, started with a $60,000 investment and went on the Apple board.[81] Jobs was not pleased when Markkula recruited Mike Scott from National Semiconductor in February 1977 to serve as the first president and CEO of Apple.[82][83]

For what characterizes Apple is that its scientific staff always acted and performed like artists – in a field filled with dry personalities limited by the rational and binary worlds they inhabit, Apple’s engineering teams had passion. They always believed that what they were doing was important and, most of all, fun. Working at Apple was never just a job; it was also a crusade, a mission, to bring better computer power to people. At its roots, that attitude came from Steve Jobs. It was «Power to the People”, the slogan of the sixties, rewritten in technology for the eighties and called Macintosh.

—Jeffrey S. Young, 1987[26][page needed]

After Brennan returned from her own journey to India, she and Jobs fell in love again, as Brennan noted changes in him that she attributes to Kobun (whom she was also still following). It was also at this time that Jobs displayed a prototype Apple I computer for Brennan and his parents in their living room. Brennan notes a shift in this time period, where the two main influences on Jobs were Apple Inc. and Kobun. By early 1977, she and Jobs would spend time together at her home at Duveneck Ranch in Los Altos, which served as a hostel and environmental education center.[citation needed]

In April 1977, Jobs and Wozniak introduced the Apple II at the West Coast Computer Faire.[84] It is the first consumer product to have been sold by Apple Computer. Primarily designed by Wozniak, Jobs oversaw the development of its unusual case and Rod Holt developed the unique power supply.[85] During the design stage, Jobs argued that the Apple II should have two expansion slots, while Wozniak wanted eight. After a heated argument, Wozniak threatened that Jobs should «go get himself another computer». They later agreed on eight slots.[86] The Apple II became one of the first highly successful mass-produced microcomputer products in the world.[87]

As Jobs became more successful with his new company, his relationship with Brennan grew more complex. In 1977, the success of Apple was now a part of their relationship, and Brennan, Daniel Kottke, and Jobs moved into a house near the Apple office in Cupertino.[citation needed] Brennan eventually took a position in the shipping department at Apple.[88] Brennan’s relationship with Jobs deteriorated as his position with Apple grew, and she began to consider ending the relationship. In October 1977, Brennan was approached by Rod Holt, who asked her to take «a paid apprenticeship designing blueprints for the Apples».[citation needed] Both Holt and Jobs believed that it would be a good position for her, given her artistic abilities. Holt was particularly eager that she take the position, and puzzled by her ambivalence toward it. Brennan’s decision, however, was overshadowed by the fact that she realized she was pregnant, and that Jobs was the father. It took her a few days to tell Jobs, whose face, according to Brennan, “turned ugly” at the news. At the same time, according to Brennan, at the beginning of her third trimester, Jobs said to her: «I never wanted to ask that you get an abortion. I just didn’t want to do that.»[citation needed] He also refused to discuss the pregnancy with her.[89] Brennan turned down the internship and decided to leave Apple. She stated that Jobs told her «If you give up this baby for adoption, you will be sorry» and «I am never going to help you.»[citation needed] According to Brennan, Jobs «started to seed people with the notion that I slept around, and he was infertile, which meant that this could not be his child.» A few weeks before she was due to give birth, Brennan was invited to deliver her baby at the All One Farm. She accepted the offer.[citation needed] When Jobs was 23 (the same age as his biological parents when they had him)[89] Brennan gave birth to her baby, Lisa Brennan, on May 17, 1978.[90] Jobs went there for the birth after he was contacted by Robert Friedland, their mutual friend and the farm owner. While distant, Jobs worked with her on a name for the baby, which they discussed while sitting in the fields on a blanket. Brennan suggested the name «Lisa» which Jobs also liked and notes that Jobs was very attached to the name “Lisa” while he «was also publicly denying paternity». She would discover later that during this time, Jobs was preparing to unveil a new kind of computer that he wanted to give a female name (his first choice was “Claire” after St. Clare). She stated that she never gave him permission to use the baby’s name for a computer and he hid the plans from her. Jobs worked with his team to come up with the phrase, «Local Integrated Software Architecture» as an alternative explanation for the Apple Lisa.[91] Decades later, however, Jobs admitted to his biographer Walter Isaacson that «obviously, it was named for my daughter».[92]

When Jobs denied paternity, a DNA test established him as Lisa’s father.[clarification needed] It required him to pay Brennan $385 (equivalent to about $1,000 in 2021) monthly in addition to returning the welfare money she had received. Jobs paid her $500 (equivalent to about $1,400 in 2021) monthly at the time when Apple went public and made him a millionaire. Later, Brennan agreed to interview with Michael Moritz for Time magazine for its Time Person of the Year special, released on January 3, 1983, in which she discussed her relationship with Jobs. Rather than name Jobs the Person of the Year, the magazine named the generic personal computer the «Machine of the Year».[93] In the issue, Jobs questioned the reliability of the paternity test, which stated that the «probability of paternity for Jobs, Steven… is 94.1%».[94] He responded by arguing that «28% of the male population of the United States could be the father». Time also noted that «the baby girl and the machine on which Apple has placed so much hope for the future share the same name: Lisa».[94]

In 1978, at age 23, Jobs was worth over $1 million (equivalent to $4.15 million in 2021). By age 25, his net worth grew to an estimated $250 million (equivalent to $745 million in 2021).[95] He was also one of the youngest «people ever to make the Forbes list of the nation’s richest people—and one of only a handful to have done it themselves, without inherited wealth».[26][page needed]

In 1982, Jobs bought an apartment on the top two floors of The San Remo, a Manhattan building with a politically progressive reputation. Although he never lived there,[96] he spent years renovating it thanks to I. M. Pei. In 2003, he sold it to U2 singer Bono.[citation needed]

In 1983, Jobs lured John Sculley away from Pepsi-Cola to serve as Apple’s CEO, asking, «Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water, or do you want a chance to change the world?»[97]

In 1984, Jobs bought the Jackling House and estate, and resided there for a decade. Thereafter, he leased it out for several years until 2000 when he stopped maintaining the house, allowing weathering to degrade it. In 2004, Jobs received permission from the town of Woodside to demolish the house to build a smaller, contemporary styled one. After a few years in court, the house was finally demolished in 2011, a few months before he died.[98]

Jobs took over development of the Macintosh in 1981, from early Apple employee Jef Raskin, who had conceived the project. Wozniak and Raskin had heavily influenced the early program, and Wozniak was on leave during this time due to an airplane crash earlier that year.[99][100][101] On January 22, 1984, Apple aired a Super Bowl television commercial titled «1984», which ended with the words: «On January 24th, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh. And you’ll see why 1984 won’t be like 1984[102] On January 24, 1984, an emotional Jobs introduced the Macintosh to a wildly enthusiastic audience at Apple’s annual shareholders meeting held in the Flint Auditorium at De Anza College.[103][104] Macintosh engineer Andy Hertzfeld described the scene as «pandemonium».[105] The Macintosh was inspired by the Lisa (in turn inspired by Xerox PARC’s mouse-driven graphical user interface),[106][107] and it was widely acclaimed by the media with strong initial sales.[108][109] However, its low performance and limited range of available software led to a rapid sales decline in the second half of 1984.[108][109][110]

External video
  The Machine That Changed The World, The Paperback Computer; Interview with Steve Jobs, 1990, 50:08, May 14, 1990, WGBH Media Library & Archives[111]

Sculley’s and Jobs’s respective visions for the company greatly differed. Sculley favored open architecture computers like the Apple II, targeting education, small business, and home markets less vulnerable to IBM. Jobs wanted the company to focus on the closed architecture Macintosh as a business alternative to the IBM PC. President and CEO Sculley had little control over chairman of the board Jobs’s Macintosh division; it and the Apple II division operated like separate companies, duplicating services.[112] Although its products provided 85% of Apple’s sales in early 1985, the company’s January 1985 annual meeting did not mention the Apple II division or employees. Many left, including Wozniak, who stated that the company had «been going in the wrong direction for the last five years» and sold most of his stock.[113] Though frustrated with the company’s and Jobs’s dismissal of the Apple II in favor of the Macintosh, Wozniak left amicably and remained an honorary employee of Apple, maintaining a lifelong friendship with Jobs.[114][115][116]

By early 1985, the Macintosh’s failure to defeat the IBM PC became clear,[108][109] and it strengthened Sculley’s position in the company. In May 1985, Sculley—encouraged by Arthur Rock—decided to reorganize Apple, and proposed a plan to the board that would remove Jobs from the Macintosh group and put him in charge of «New Product Development». This move would effectively render Jobs powerless within Apple.[26][page needed] In response, Jobs then developed a plan to get rid of Sculley and take over Apple. However, Jobs was confronted after the plan was leaked, and he said that he would leave Apple. The Board declined his resignation and asked him to reconsider. Sculley also told Jobs that he had all of the votes needed to go ahead with the reorganization. A few months later, on September 17, 1985, Jobs submitted a letter of resignation to the Apple Board. Five additional senior Apple employees also resigned and joined Jobs in his new venture, NeXT.[26][page needed]

The Macintosh’s struggle continued after Jobs left Apple. Though marketed and received in fanfare, the expensive Macintosh was hard to sell.[117]: 308–309  In 1985, Bill Gates’s then-developing company, Microsoft, threatened to stop developing Mac applications unless it was granted «a license for the Mac operating system software. Microsoft was developing its graphical user interface … for DOS, which it was calling Windows and didn’t want Apple to sue over the similarities between the Windows GUI and the Mac interface.»[117]: 321  Sculley granted Microsoft the license which later led to problems for Apple.[117]: 321  In addition, cheap IBM PC clones that ran Microsoft software and had a graphical user interface began to appear. Although the Macintosh preceded the clones, it was far more expensive, so «through the late 1980s, the Windows user interface was getting better and better and was thus taking increasingly more share from Apple».[117]: 322  Windows-based IBM-PC clones also led to the development of additional GUIs such as IBM’s TopView or Digital Research’s GEM,[117]: 322  and thus «the graphical user interface was beginning to be taken for granted, undermining the most apparent advantage of the Mac…it seemed clear as the 1980s wound down that Apple couldn’t go it alone indefinitely against the whole IBM-clone market.»[117]: 322 

1985–1997

NeXT computer

Following his resignation from Apple in 1985, Jobs founded NeXT Inc.[118] with $7 million. A year later he was running out of money, and he sought venture capital with no product on the horizon. Eventually, Jobs attracted the attention of billionaire Ross Perot, who invested heavily in the company.[119] The NeXT computer was shown to the world in what was considered Jobs’s comeback event,[120] a lavish invitation-only gala launch event[121] that was described as a multimedia extravaganza.[122] The celebration was held at the Louise M. Davies Symphony Hall, San Francisco, California, on Wednesday, October 12, 1988. Steve Wozniak said in a 2013 interview that while Jobs was at NeXT he was «really getting his head together».[99]

NeXT workstations were first released in 1990 and priced at $9,999 (equivalent to about $21,000 in 2021). Like the Apple Lisa, the NeXT workstation was technologically advanced and designed for the education sector, but was largely dismissed as cost-prohibitive.[123] The NeXT workstation was known for its technical strengths, chief among them its object-oriented software development system. Jobs marketed NeXT products to the financial, scientific, and academic community, highlighting its innovative, experimental new technologies, such as the Mach kernel, the digital signal processor chip, and the built-in Ethernet port. Making use of a NeXT computer, English computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1990 at CERN in Switzerland.[124]

The revised, second generation NeXTcube was released in 1990. Jobs touted it as the first «interpersonal» computer that would replace the personal computer. With its innovative NeXTMail multimedia email system, NeXTcube could share voice, image, graphics, and video in email for the first time. «Interpersonal computing is going to revolutionize human communications and groupwork», Jobs told reporters.[125] Jobs ran NeXT with an obsession for aesthetic perfection, as evidenced by the development of and attention to NeXTcube’s magnesium case.[126] This put considerable strain on NeXT’s hardware division, and in 1993, after having sold only 50,000 machines, NeXT transitioned fully to software development with the release of NeXTSTEP/Intel.[127] The company reported its first yearly profit of $1.03 million in 1994.[128] In 1996, NeXT Software, Inc. released WebObjects, a framework for Web application development. After NeXT was acquired by Apple Inc. in 1997, WebObjects was used to build and run the Apple Store,[127] MobileMe services, and the iTunes Store.

Pixar and Disney

External video
  Presentation by Jobs on the future of computer-animated films, March 31, 1998, C-SPAN

In 1986, Jobs funded the spinout of The Graphics Group (later renamed Pixar) from Lucasfilm’s computer graphics division for the price of $10 million, $5 million of which was given to the company as capital and $5 million of which was paid to Lucasfilm for technology rights.[129]

The first film produced by Pixar with its Disney partnership, Toy Story (1995), with Jobs credited as executive producer,[130] brought financial success and critical acclaim to the studio when it was released. Over the course of Jobs’s life, under Pixar’s creative chief John Lasseter, the company produced box-office hits A Bug’s Life (1998); Toy Story 2 (1999); Monsters, Inc. (2001); Finding Nemo (2003); The Incredibles (2004); Cars (2006); Ratatouille (2007); WALL-E (2008); Up (2009); Toy Story 3 (2010); and Cars 2 (2011). Brave (2012), Pixar’s first film to be produced since Jobs’s death, honored him with a tribute for his contributions to the studio.[131] Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up, Toy Story 3 and Brave each received the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, an award introduced in 2001.[132][133]

In 2003 and 2004, as Pixar’s contract with Disney was running out, Jobs and Disney chief executive Michael Eisner tried but failed to negotiate a new partnership,[134] and in January 2004, Jobs announced that he would never deal with Disney again.[135] Pixar would seek a new partner to distribute its films after its contract expired.

In October 2005, Bob Iger replaced Eisner at Disney, and Iger quickly worked to mend relations with Jobs and Pixar. On January 24, 2006, Jobs and Iger announced that Disney had agreed to purchase Pixar in an all-stock transaction worth $7.4 billion. When the deal closed, Jobs became The Walt Disney Company’s largest single shareholder with approximately seven percent of the company’s stock.[136] Jobs’s holdings in Disney far exceeded those of Eisner, who holds 1.7%, and of Disney family member Roy E. Disney, who until his 2009 death held about 1% of the company’s stock and whose criticisms of Eisner—especially that he soured Disney’s relationship with Pixar—accelerated Eisner’s ousting. Upon completion of the merger, Jobs received 7% of Disney shares, and joined the board of directors as the largest individual shareholder.[136][137][138] Upon Jobs’s death his shares in Disney were transferred to the Steven P. Jobs Trust led by Laurene Jobs.[139]

After Jobs’s death, Iger recalled in 2019 that many warned him about Jobs, “that he would bully me and everyone else”. Iger wrote, “Who wouldn’t want Steve Jobs to have influence over how a company is run?», and that as an active Disney board member “he rarely created trouble for me. Not but rarely”. He speculated that they would have seriously considered merging Disney and Apple had Jobs lived.[135] Floyd Norman, of Pixar, described Jobs as a «mature, mellow individual” who never interfered with the creative process of the filmmakers.[140] In early June 2014, Pixar cofounder and Walt Disney Animation Studios President Ed Catmull revealed that Jobs once advised him to «just explain it to them until they understand” in disagreements. Catmull released the book Creativity, Inc. in 2014, in which he recounts numerous experiences of working with Jobs. Regarding his own manner of dealing with Jobs, Catmull writes:[141][page needed]

In all the 26 years with Steve, Steve and I never had one of these loud verbal arguments, and it’s not my nature to do that. … but we did disagree fairly frequently about things. … I would say something to him and he would immediately shoot it down because he could think faster than I could. … I would then wait a week … I’d call him up, and I give my counterargument to what he had said, and he’d immediately shoot it down. So I had to wait another week, and occasionally this went on for months. But ultimately one of three things happened. About a third of the time he said, «Oh, I get it, you’re right.» And that was the end of it. And it was another third of the time in which [I’d] say, «Actually I think he is right.» The other third of the time, where we didn’t reach consensus, he just let me do it my way, never said anything more about it.[142]

1997–2011

Return to Apple

In 1996, Apple announced that it would buy NeXT for $400 million. The deal was finalized in February 1997, bringing Jobs back to the company he had cofounded.[143] Jobs became de facto chief after then-CEO Gil Amelio was ousted in July 1997. He was formally named interim chief executive on September 16.[144] In March 1998, to concentrate Apple’s efforts on returning to profitability, Jobs terminated several projects, such as Newton, Cyberdog, and OpenDoc. In the coming months, many employees developed a fear of encountering Jobs while riding in the elevator, “afraid that they might not have a job when the doors opened. The reality was that Jobs’s summary executions were rare, but a handful of victims was enough to terrorize a whole company.»[145] Jobs changed the licensing program for Macintosh clones, making it too costly for the manufacturers to continue making machines.

With the purchase of NeXT, much of the company’s technology found its way into Apple products, most notably NeXTSTEP, which evolved into Mac OS X. Under Jobs’s guidance, the company increased sales significantly with the introduction of the iMac and other new products; since then, appealing designs and powerful branding have worked well for Apple. At the 2000 Macworld Expo, Jobs officially dropped the «interim» modifier from his title at Apple and became permanent CEO.[146] Jobs quipped at the time that he would be using the title «iCEO».[147]

The company subsequently branched out, introducing and improving upon other digital appliances. With the introduction of the iPod portable music player, iTunes digital music software, and the iTunes Store, the company made forays into consumer electronics and music distribution. On June 29, 2007, Apple entered the cellular phone business with the introduction of the iPhone, a multi-touch display cell phone, which also included the features of an iPod and, with its own mobile browser, revolutionized the mobile browsing scene. While nurturing open-ended innovation, Jobs also reminded his employees that «real artists ship».[148]

Jobs had a public war of words with Dell Computer CEO Michael Dell, starting in 1987, when Jobs first criticized Dell for making «un-innovative beige boxes».[149] On October 6, 1997, at a Gartner Symposium, when Dell was asked what he would do if he ran the then-troubled Apple Computer company, he said: «I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.”[150] Then, in 2006, Jobs emailed all employees when Apple’s market capitalization rose above Dell’s. It read:

Team, it turned out that Michael Dell wasn’t perfect at predicting the future. Based on today’s stock market close, Apple is worth more than Dell. Stocks go up and down, and things may be different tomorrow, but I thought it was worth a moment of reflection today. Steve.[151]

Jobs was both admired and criticized for his consummate skill at persuasion and salesmanship, which has been dubbed the «reality distortion field» and was particularly evident during his keynote speeches (colloquially known as «Stevenotes») at Macworld Expos and at Apple Worldwide Developers Conferences.[152]

Jobs usually went to work wearing a black long-sleeved mock turtleneck made by Issey Miyake, Levi’s 501 blue jeans, and New Balance 991 sneakers.[153][154] Jobs told his biographer Walter Isaacson «…he came to like the idea of having a uniform for himself, both because of its daily convenience (the rationale he claimed) and its ability to convey a signature style.»[153]

Jobs was a board member at Gap Inc. from 1999 to 2002.[155]

Jobs and Bill Gates at the fifth D: All Things Digital conference (D5) in May 2007

In 2001, Jobs was granted stock options in the amount of 7.5 million shares of Apple with an exercise price of $18.30. It was alleged that the options had been backdated, and that the exercise price should have been $21.10. It was further alleged that Jobs had thereby incurred taxable income of $20,000,000 that he did not report, and that Apple overstated its earnings by that same amount. As a result, Jobs potentially faced a number of criminal charges and civil penalties. The case was the subject of active criminal and civil government investigations,[156] though an independent internal Apple investigation completed on December 29, 2006, found that Jobs was unaware of these issues and that the options granted to him were returned without being exercised in 2003.[157]

In 2005, Jobs responded to criticism of Apple’s poor recycling programs for e-waste in the US by lashing out at environmental and other advocates at Apple’s annual meeting in Cupertino in April. A few weeks later, Apple announced it would take back iPods for free at its retail stores. The Computer TakeBack Campaign responded by flying a banner from a plane over the Stanford University graduation at which Jobs was the commencement speaker. The banner read «Steve, don’t be a mini-player—recycle all e-waste.»

In 2006, he further expanded Apple’s recycling programs to any US customer who buys a new Mac. This program includes shipping and «environmentally friendly disposal» of their old systems.[158] The success of Apple’s unique products and services provided several years of stable financial returns, propelling Apple to become the world’s most valuable publicly traded company in 2011.[159]

Jobs was perceived as a demanding perfectionist[160][161] who always aspired to position his businesses and their products at the forefront of the information technology industry by foreseeing and setting innovation and style trends. He summed up this self-concept at the end of his keynote speech at the Macworld Conference and Expo in January 2007, by quoting ice hockey player Wayne Gretzky:

There’s an old Wayne Gretzky quote that I love. «I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.» And we’ve always tried to do that at Apple. Since the very, very beginning. And we always will.[162]

On July 1, 2008, a $7 billion class action suit was filed against several members of the Apple board of directors for revenue lost because of alleged securities fraud.[163][164]

In a 2011 interview with biographer Walter Isaacson, Jobs revealed that he had met with US President Barack Obama, complained about the nation’s shortage of software engineers, and told Obama that he was «headed for a one-term presidency».[165] Jobs proposed that any foreign student who got an engineering degree at a US university should automatically be offered a green card. After the meeting, Jobs commented, «The president is very smart, but he kept explaining to us reasons why things can’t get done . . . . It infuriates me.»[165]

Health problems

In October 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with cancer. In mid-2004, he announced to his employees that he had a cancerous tumor in his pancreas.[166] The prognosis for pancreatic cancer is usually very poor;[167] Jobs stated that he had a rare, much less aggressive type, known as islet cell neuroendocrine tumor.[166]

Jobs resisted his doctors’ recommendations for medical intervention for nine months,[168] in favor of alternative medicine. According to Harvard researcher Ramzi Amri, this «led to an unnecessarily early death». Other doctors agree that Jobs’s diet was insufficient to address his disease. However, cancer researcher and alternative medicine critic David Gorski wrote that «it’s impossible to know whether and by how much he might have decreased his chances of surviving his cancer through his flirtation with woo. My best guess was that Jobs probably only modestly decreased his chances of survival, if that.»[169][170] Barrie R. Cassileth, the chief of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center’s integrative medicine department,[171] on the other hand, said, «Jobs’s faith in alternative medicine likely cost him his life … He had the only kind of pancreatic cancer that is treatable and curable … He essentially committed suicide.»[172] According to biographer Walter Isaacson, «for nine months he refused to undergo surgery for his pancreatic cancer – a decision he later regretted as his health declined».[173] «Instead, he tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies, and other treatments he found online, and even consulted a psychic. He was also influenced by a doctor who ran a clinic that advised juice fasts, bowel cleansings and other unproven approaches, before finally having surgery in July 2004».[174][175] He underwent a pancreaticoduodenectomy (or «Whipple procedure») that appeared to remove the tumor successfully.[176][177] Jobs did not receive chemotherapy or radiation therapy.[166][178] During Jobs’s absence, Tim Cook, head of worldwide sales and operations at Apple, ran the company.[166]

In January 2006, only Jobs’s wife, his doctors, and Iger and his wife knew that his cancer had returned. Jobs told Iger privately that he hoped to live to see his son Reed’s high school graduation in 2010.[135] In early August 2006, Jobs delivered the keynote for Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference. His «thin, almost gaunt» appearance and unusually «listless» delivery,[179][180] together with his choice to delegate significant portions of his keynote to other presenters, inspired a flurry of media and internet speculation about the state of his health.[181] In contrast, according to an Ars Technica journal report, Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) attendees who saw Jobs in person said he «looked fine».[182] Following the keynote, an Apple spokesperson said that «Steve’s health is robust.»[183]

Two years later, similar concerns followed Jobs’s 2008 WWDC keynote address.[184] Apple officials stated that Jobs was victim to a «common bug» and was taking antibiotics,[185] while others surmised his cachectic appearance was due to the Whipple procedure.[178] During a July conference call discussing Apple earnings, participants responded to repeated questions about Jobs’s health by insisting that it was a «private matter». Others said that shareholders had a right to know more, given Jobs’s hands-on approach to running his company.[186][187] Based on an off-the-record phone conversation with Jobs, The New York Times reported, «While his health problems amounted to a good deal more than ‘a common bug’, they weren’t life-threatening and he doesn’t have a recurrence of cancer.»[188]

On August 28, 2008, Bloomberg mistakenly published a 2500-word obituary of Jobs in its corporate news service, containing blank spaces for his age and cause of death. News carriers customarily stockpile up-to-date obituaries to facilitate news delivery in the event of a well-known figure’s death. Although the error was promptly rectified, many news carriers and blogs reported on it,[189] intensifying rumors concerning Jobs’s health.[190] Jobs responded at Apple’s September 2008 Let’s Rock keynote by paraphrasing Mark Twain: «Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.»[191][192] At a subsequent media event, Jobs concluded his presentation with a slide reading «110/70», referring to his blood pressure, stating he would not address further questions about his health.[193]

On December 16, 2008, Apple announced that marketing vice-president Phil Schiller would deliver the company’s final keynote address at the Macworld Conference and Expo 2009, again reviving questions about Jobs’s health.[194][195] In a statement given on January 5, 2009, on Apple.com, Jobs said that he had been suffering from a «hormone imbalance» for several months.[196][197]

On January 14, 2009, Jobs wrote in an internal Apple memo that in the previous week he had «learned that my health-related issues are more complex than I originally thought».[198] He announced a six-month leave of absence until the end of June 2009, to allow him to better focus on his health. Tim Cook, who previously acted as CEO in Jobs’s 2004 absence, became acting CEO of Apple, with Jobs still involved with «major strategic decisions».[198]

In 2009, Tim Cook offered a portion of his liver to Jobs, since both share a rare blood type and the donor liver can regenerate tissue after such an operation. Jobs yelled, «I’ll never let you do that. I’ll never do that.»[199]

In April 2009, Jobs underwent a liver transplant at Methodist University Hospital Transplant Institute in Memphis, Tennessee.[200][201][202] Jobs’s prognosis was described as «excellent».[200]

Resignation

On January 17, 2011, a year and a half after Jobs returned to work following the liver transplant, Apple announced that he had been granted a medical leave of absence. Jobs announced his leave in a letter to employees, stating his decision was made «so he could focus on his health». As it did at the time of his 2009 medical leave, Apple announced that Tim Cook would run day-to-day operations and that Jobs would continue to be involved in major strategic decisions at the company.[203][204] While on leave, Jobs appeared at the iPad 2 launch event on March 2, the WWDC keynote introducing iCloud on June 6, and before the Cupertino City Council on June 7.[205]

On August 24, 2011, Jobs announced his resignation as Apple’s CEO, writing to the board, «I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come.»[206] Jobs became chairman of the board and named Tim Cook as his successor as CEO.[207][208] Jobs continued to work for Apple until the day before his death six weeks later.[209][210][211]

Death

Flags flying at half-staff outside Apple HQ in Cupertino, on the evening of Jobs’s death

Jobs died at his Palo Alto, California, home around 3 p.m. (PDT) on October 5, 2011, due to complications from a relapse of his previously treated islet-cell pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor,[15][212][213] which resulted in respiratory arrest.[214] He had lost consciousness the day before and died with his wife, children, and sisters at his side.[215] His sister, Mona Simpson, described his death thus: «Steve’s final words, hours earlier, were monosyllables, repeated three times. Before embarking, he’d looked at his sister Patty, then for a long time at his children, then at his life’s partner, Laurene, and then over their shoulders past them. Steve’s final words were: ‘Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow.'» He then lost consciousness and died several hours later.[215] A small private funeral was held on October 7, 2011, the details of which, out of respect for Jobs’s family, were not made public.[216]

Apple[217] and Pixar each issued announcements of his death.[218] Apple announced on the same day that they had no plans for a public service, but were encouraging «well-wishers» to send their remembrance messages to an email address created to receive such messages.[219] Apple and Microsoft both flew their flags at half-staff throughout their respective headquarters and campuses.[220][221]

Bob Iger ordered all Disney properties, including Walt Disney World and Disneyland, to fly their flags at half-staff from October 6 to 12, 2011.[222] For two weeks following his death, Apple displayed on its corporate Web site a simple page that showed Jobs’s name and lifespan next to his grayscale portrait.[223][224][225] On October 19, 2011, Apple employees held a private memorial service for Jobs on the Apple campus in Cupertino. It was attended by Jobs’s widow, Laurene, and by Tim Cook, Bill Campbell, Norah Jones, Al Gore, and Coldplay. Some of Apple’s retail stores closed briefly so employees could attend the memorial. A video of the service was uploaded to Apple’s website.[226]

California Governor Jerry Brown declared Sunday, October 16, 2011, to be «Steve Jobs Day».[227] On that day, an invitation-only memorial was held at Stanford University. Those in attendance included Apple and other tech company executives, members of the media, celebrities, politicians, and family and close friends of Jobs. Bono, Yo-Yo Ma, and Joan Baez performed at the service, which lasted longer than an hour. The service was highly secured, with guards at all of the university’s gates, and a helicopter overhead from an area news station.[228][229] Each attendee was given a small brown box as a «farewell gift» from Jobs, containing a copy of the Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda.[230]

Childhood friend and fellow Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak,[231] former owner of what would become Pixar, George Lucas,[232] former rival, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates,[233] and President Barack Obama[234] all offered statements in response to his death.

At his request, Jobs was buried in an unmarked grave at Alta Mesa Memorial Park, the only nonsectarian cemetery in Palo Alto.[235][236]

Innovations and designs

Jobs’s design aesthetic was influenced by philosophies of Zen and Buddhism. In India, he experienced Buddhism while on his seven-month spiritual journey,[237] and his sense of intuition was influenced by the spiritual people with whom he studied.[237] He also learned from many references and sources, such as modernist architectural style of Joseph Eichler,[citation needed] and the industrial designs of Richard Sapper[238] and Dieter Rams.[citation needed]

According to Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, «Steve didn’t ever code. He wasn’t an engineer and he didn’t do any original design…»[239][240] Daniel Kottke, one of Apple’s earliest employees and a college friend of Jobs, stated: «Between Woz and Jobs, Woz was the innovator, the inventor. Steve Jobs was the marketing person.»[241]

He is listed as either primary inventor or co-inventor in 346 United States patents or patent applications related to a range of technologies from actual computer and portable devices to user interfaces (including touch-based), speakers, keyboards, power adapters, staircases, clasps, sleeves, lanyards, and packages. His contributions to most of his patents were to «the look and feel of the product». He and his industrial design chief Jonathan Ive are named for 200 of the patents.[242] Most of these are design patents as opposed to utility patents or inventions; they are specific product designs such as both original and lamp-style iMacs, and PowerBook G4 Titanium.[243][244] He holds 43 issued US patents on inventions.[243] The patent on the Mac OS X Dock user interface with «magnification» feature was issued the day before he died.[245] Although Jobs had little involvement in the engineering and technical side of the original Apple computers,[240] Jobs later used his CEO position to directly involve himself with product design.[246]

Involved in many projects throughout his career was his long-time marketing executive and confidant Joanna Hoffman, known as one of the few employees at Apple and NeXT who could successfully stand up to Jobs while also engaging with him.[247]

Even while terminally ill in the hospital, Jobs sketched new devices that would hold the iPad in a hospital bed.[215] He despised the oxygen monitor on his finger, and suggested ways to revise the design for simplicity.[248]

Since his death, he has won 141 patents, more than most inventors during their lifetimes. He holds over 450 patents in total.[249]

Apple I

Although entirely designed by Steve Wozniak, Jobs had the idea of selling the desktop computer, which led to the formation of Apple Computer in 1976. Both Jobs and Wozniak constructed several of the Apple I prototypes by hand, funded by selling some of their belongings. Eventually, 200 units were produced.[79]

Apple II

An Apple II with an external modem, designed primarily by Wozniak

The Apple II is an 8-bit home computer, one of the world’s first highly successful mass-produced microcomputer products,[87] designed primarily by Wozniak, and Jobs oversaw the development of the Apple II’s unusual case[250] and Rod Holt developed the unique power supply.[85] It was introduced in 1977 at the West Coast Computer Faire by Jobs and Wozniak as the first consumer product sold by Apple.

Apple Lisa

The Lisa is a personal computer developed by Apple from 1978 and sold in the early 1980s. It is the first personal computer with a graphical user interface for business users.[251] The Lisa sold poorly, at 100,000 units.[252]

In 1982, after Jobs was forced out of the Lisa project,[253] he took over the Macintosh project, adding inspiration from Lisa. The final Lisa 2/10 was modified and sold as the Macintosh XL.[254]

Macintosh

Once he joined the Macintosh team, Jobs took over the project after Wozniak had experienced a traumatic airplane accident and temporarily left the company.[99] Jobs launched the Macintosh on January 24, 1984, as the first mass-market personal computer featuring an integral graphical user interface and mouse.[255] This first model was later renamed to Macintosh 128k among the prolific series. Since 1998, Apple has phased out the Macintosh name in favor of «Mac», though the product family has been nicknamed «Mac» or «the Mac» since inception. The Macintosh was introduced by a US$1.5 million Ridley Scott television commercial, «1984».[256] It aired during the third quarter of Super Bowl XVIII on January 22, 1984, received as a «watershed event»[257] and a «masterpiece».[258] Regis McKenna called the ad «more successful than the Mac itself».[259] It uses an unnamed heroine to represent the coming of the Macintosh (indicated by a Picasso-style picture of the computer on her white tank top) to save humanity from the conformity of IBM’s domination of the computer industry. The ad alludes to George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, which describes a dystopian future ruled by a televised «Big Brother.»[260][261]

The Macintosh, however, was expensive, which hindered its ability to be competitive in a market already dominated by the Commodore 64 for consumers, and the IBM Personal Computer and its accompanying clone market for businesses.[262] Macintosh systems still found success in education and desktop publishing and kept Apple as the second-largest PC manufacturer for the next decade.

NeXT Computer

After Jobs was forced out of Apple in 1985, he started NeXT, a workstation computer company. The NeXT Computer was introduced in 1988 at a lavish launch event. Using the NeXT Computer, Tim Berners-Lee created the world’s first web browser, the WorldWideWeb. The NeXT Computer’s operating system, named NeXTSTEP, begat Darwin, which is now the foundation of most of Apple’s products such as Macintosh’s macOS and iPhone’s iOS.[263][264]

iMac

The original iMac, introduced in 1998, was the first consumer-facing Apple product to debut under Jobs’s return.

Main article: iMac

Apple iMac G3 was introduced in 1998 and its innovative design was directly the result of Jobs’s return to Apple. Apple boasted «the back of our computer looks better than the front of anyone else’s.»[265] Described as «cartoonlike», the first iMac, clad in Bondi Blue plastic, was unlike any personal computer that came before. In 1999, Apple introduced the Graphite gray Apple iMac and since has varied the shape, color and size considerably while maintaining the all-in-one design. Design ideas were intended to create a connection with the user such as the handle and a «breathing» light effect when the computer went to sleep.[266] The Apple iMac sold for $1,299 at that time. The iMac also featured forward-thinking changes, such as eschewing the floppy disk drive and moving exclusively to USB for connecting peripherals. This latter change resulted, through the iMac’s success, in the interface being popularized among third-party peripheral makers—as evidenced by the fact that many early USB peripherals were made of translucent plastic (to match the iMac design).[267]

iTunes

iTunes is a media player, media library, online radio broadcaster, and mobile device management application developed by Apple. It is used to play, download, and organize digital audio and video (as well as other types of media available on the iTunes Store) on personal computers running the macOS and Microsoft Windows operating systems. The iTunes Store is also available on the iPod Touch, iPhone, and iPad.

Through the iTunes Store, users can purchase and download music, music videos, television shows, audiobooks, podcasts, movies, and movie rentals in some countries, and ringtones, available on the iPhone and iPod Touch (fourth generation onward). Application software for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch can be downloaded from the App Store.

iPod

Main article: iPod

The first generation of iPod was released October 23, 2001. The major innovation of the iPod was its small size achieved by using a 1.8″ hard drive compared to the 2.5″ drives common to players at that time. The capacity of the first generation iPod ranged from 5 GB to 10 GB.[268] The iPod sold for US$399 and more than 100,000 iPods were sold before the end of 2001. The introduction of the iPod resulted in Apple becoming a major player in the music industry.[269] Also, the iPod’s success prepared the way for the iTunes music store and the iPhone.[270] After the first few generations of iPod, Apple released the touchscreen iPod Touch, the reduced-size iPod Mini and iPod Nano, and the screenless iPod Shuffle in the following years.[269]

iPhone

Apple began work on the first iPhone in 2005 and the first iPhone was released on June 29, 2007. The iPhone created such a sensation that a survey indicated six out of ten Americans were aware of its release. Time declared it «Invention of the Year» for 2007 and included it in the All-TIME 100 Gadgets list in 2010, in the category of Communication.[271] The completed iPhone had multimedia capabilities and functioned as a quad-band touch screen smartphone. A year later, the iPhone 3G was released in July 2008 with three key features: support for GPS, 3G data and tri-band UMTS/HSDPA. In June 2009, the iPhone 3GS, whose improvements included voice control, a better camera, and a faster processor, was introduced by Phil Schiller.[272] The iPhone 4 was thinner than previous models, had a five megapixel camera capable of recording video in 720p HD, and added a secondary front-facing camera for video calls.[273] A major feature of the iPhone 4S, introduced in October 2011, was Siri, a virtual assistant capable of voice recognition.[274]

iPad

Jobs introducing the iPad in San Francisco on January 27, 2010

Main article: iPad

The iPad is an iOS-based line of tablet computers designed and marketed by Apple. The first iPad was released on April 3, 2010. The user interface is built around the device’s multi-touch screen, including a virtual keyboard. The iPad includes built-in Wi-Fi and cellular connectivity on select models. As of April 2015, more than 250 million iPads have been sold.[275]

Personal life

Jobs’s house with abundant fruit trees in Palo Alto

Marriage

In 1989, Jobs first met his future wife, Laurene Powell, when he gave a lecture at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, where she was a student. Soon after the event, he stated that Laurene «was right there in the front row in the lecture hall, and I couldn’t take my eyes off of her … kept losing my train of thought, and started feeling a little giddy.»[19][page needed] After the lecture, he met her in the parking lot and invited her out to dinner. From that point forward, they were together, with a few minor exceptions, for the rest of his life.[19][page needed]

Jobs proposed on New Year’s Day 1990 with «a fistful of freshly picked wildflowers».[19][page needed] They married on March 18, 1991, in a Buddhist ceremony at the Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park.[19][page needed] Fifty people, including Jobs’s father, Paul, and his sister Mona, attended. The ceremony was conducted by Jobs’s guru, Kobun Chino Otogawa. The vegan wedding cake was in the shape of Yosemite’s Half Dome, and the wedding ended with a hike and Laurene’s brothers’ snowball fight. Jobs reportedly said to Mona: «You see, Mona […], Laurene is descended from Joe Namath, and we’re descended from John Muir.»[276]

Jobs’s and Powell’s first child was born in 1991.[277] Jobs’s father, Paul, died a year and a half later, on March 5, 1993. Jobs’s childhood home remains a tourist attraction and is currently owned by his stepmother (Paul’s second wife), Marilyn Jobs.[278]

Jobs and Powell had two more children; Eve Jobs, born in 1998, is a fashion model.[277] The family lived in Palo Alto, California.[279]

Although a billionaire, Jobs made it known that, like Bill Gates, he had stipulated that most of his monetary fortune would not be left to his children.[280][281] Both men had limited their children’s access, age appropriate, to social media, computer games, and the Internet.[282][283]

Family

Chrisann Brennan notes that after Jobs was forced out of Apple, «he apologized many times over for his behavior» towards her and Lisa. She said Jobs «said that he never took responsibility when he should have, and that he was sorry».[284] By this time, Jobs had developed a strong relationship with Lisa and when she was nine, Jobs had her name on her birth certificate changed from «Lisa Brennan» to «Lisa Brennan-Jobs».[14][page needed] Jobs and Brennan developed a working relationship to co-parent Lisa, a change which Brennan credits to the influence of his newly found biological sister, Mona Simpson, who worked to repair the relationship between Lisa and Jobs.[14][page needed] Jobs had found Mona after first finding his birth mother, Joanne Schieble Simpson, shortly after he left Apple.[285]

Jobs did not contact his birth family during his adoptive mother Clara’s lifetime, however. He would later tell his official biographer Walter Isaacson: «I never wanted [Paul and Clara] to feel like I didn’t consider them my parents, because they were totally my parents […] I loved them so much that I never wanted them to know of my search, and I even had reporters keep it quiet when any of them found out.»[285] However, in 1986, when Jobs was 31, Clara was diagnosed with lung cancer. He began to spend a great deal of time with her and learned more details about her background and his adoption, information that motivated him to find his biological mother. Jobs found on his birth certificate the name of the San Francisco doctor to whom Schieble had turned when she was pregnant. Although the doctor did not help Jobs while he was alive, he left a letter for Jobs to be opened upon his death. As he died soon afterwards, Jobs was given the letter which stated that «his mother had been an unmarried graduate student from Wisconsin named Joanne Schieble.»[285]

Jobs only contacted Schieble after Clara died in early 1986 and after he received permission from his father, Paul. In addition, out of respect for Paul, he asked the media not to report on his search.[286] Jobs stated that he was motivated to find his birth mother out of both curiosity and a need «to see if she was okay and to thank her, because I’m glad I didn’t end up as an abortion. She was twenty-three and she went through a lot to have me.»[287] Schieble was emotional during their first meeting (though she wasn’t familiar with the history of Apple or Jobs’s role in it) and told him that she had been pressured into signing the adoption papers. She said that she regretted giving him up and repeatedly apologized to him for it. Jobs and Schieble would develop a friendly relationship throughout the rest of his life and would spend Christmas together.[288]

During this first visit, Schieble told Jobs that he had a sister, Mona, who was not aware that she had a brother.[287] Schieble then arranged for them to meet in New York where Mona worked. Her first impression of Jobs was that «he was totally straightforward and lovely, just a normal and sweet guy.»[289] Simpson and Jobs then went for a long walk to get to know each other.[289] Jobs later told his biographer that «Mona was not completely thrilled at first to have me in her life and have her mother so emotionally affectionate toward me … As we got to know each other, we became really good friends, and she is my family. I don’t know what I’d do without her. I can’t imagine a better sister. My adopted sister, Patty, and I were never close.»[289]

I grew up as an only child, with a single mother. Because we were poor and because I knew my father had emigrated from Syria, I imagined he looked like Omar Sharif. I hoped he would be rich and kind and would come into our lives (and our not-yet-furnished apartment) and help us. Later, after I’d met my father, I tried to believe he’d changed his number and left no forwarding address because he was an idealistic revolutionary, plotting a new world for the Arab people. Even as a feminist, my whole life I’d been waiting for a man to love, who could love me. For decades, I’d thought that man would be my father. When I was 25, I met that man, and he was my brother.

—Mona Simpson[215]

Jobs then learned his family history. Six months after he was given up for adoption, Schieble’s father died, she wed Jandali, and they had a daughter, Mona.[4][290] Jandali states that after finishing his PhD he returned to Syria to work, and then Schieble left him.[4] They divorced in 1962[20] and he said then he lost contact with Mona for a time:

I also bear the responsibility for being away from my daughter when she was four years old, as her mother divorced me when I went to Syria, but we got back in touch after 10 years. We lost touch again when her mother moved and I didn’t know where she was, but since 10 years ago we’ve been in constant contact, and I see her three times a year. I organized a trip for her last year to visit Syria and Lebanon and she went with a relative from Florida.[4]

A few years later, Schieble married an ice skating teacher, George Simpson. Mona Jandali took her stepfather’s last name, as Mona Simpson. In 1970, after divorcing her second husband, Schieble took Mona to Los Angeles and raised her alone.[290]

When Simpson found that their father, Abdulfattah Jandali, was living in Sacramento, California, Jobs had no interest in meeting him as he believed Jandali didn’t treat his children well[291] and allegedly because of finding a Seattle Times article about Jandali’s abandonment of his students on a trip to Egypt in 1974.[5] Simpson went to Sacramento alone and met Jandali, who worked in a small restaurant. They spoke for several hours, and he told her that he had left teaching for the restaurant business. He said he and Schieble had given another child away for adoption but that «we’ll never see that baby again. That baby’s gone.» He said he once managed a Mediterranean restaurant near San Jose and that «all of the successful technology people used to come there. Even Steve Jobs … oh yeah, he used to come in, and he was a sweet guy and a big tipper.» At the request of Jobs, Simpson did not tell Jandali that she had met his son.[292]

After hearing about the visit, Jobs recalled that «it was amazing … I had been to that restaurant a few times, and I remember meeting the owner. He was Syrian. Balding. We shook hands.» However, Jobs still did not want to meet Jandali because «I was a wealthy man by then, and I didn’t trust him not to try to blackmail me or go to the press about it … I asked Mona not to tell him about me.»[292] Jandali later discovered his relationship to Jobs through an online blog. He then contacted Simpson and asked «what is this thing about Steve Jobs?» Simpson told him that it was true and later commented, «My father is thoughtful and a beautiful storyteller, but he is very, very passive … He never contacted Steve.» Because Simpson herself researched her Syrian roots and began to meet the family, she assumed that Jobs would eventually want to meet their father, but he never did. Jobs also never showed an interest in his Syrian heritage or the Middle East. Simpson fictionalized the search for their father in her 1992 novel The Lost Father.[288] Malek Jandali is their cousin.[293]

Philanthropy

Jobs’s views and actions on philanthropy and charity are a public mystery.[294] He maintained privacy over his occasional few such actions which were publicly known. He has been a key figure in public discussions about societal obligations of the wealthy and powerful. Through his career, the media investigated and criticized him and Apple as unusually and inexplicably mysterious or absent among powerful leaders and especially billionaires. His name is absent from the Million Dollar List of all large global philanthropy.[295] Some have speculated about his possible secret role in large anonymous donations.[294]

Mark Vermilion, former charitable leader for Joan Baez, Apple, and Jobs, attributed Jobs’s lifelong minimization of direct charity to his perfectionism and limited time. Jobs, Vermilion, and supporters said over the years that corporate products were Jobs’s superior contributions to culture and society instead of direct charity.[295] In 1985, Jobs said, «You know, my main reaction to this money thing is that it’s humorous, all the attention to it, because it’s hardly the most insightful or valuable thing that’s happened to me.»[294]

Shortly after leaving Apple, he formed the charitable Steven P. Jobs Foundation, led by Mark Vermilion, hired away from Apple’s community leadership. Jobs wanted a focus on nutrition and vegetarianism but Vermilion wanted social entrepreneurship. That year, Jobs soon launched NeXT and closed the foundation with no results. Upon his 1997 return to Apple, Jobs optimized the failing company to the core, such as eliminating all philanthropic programs, never to be restored. In 2007, Stanford Social Innovation Review magazine listed Apple among «America’s least philanthropic companies». A few months after another unflattering news report, Apple started a program to match employees’ charitable gifts.[295] Jobs has declined to sign The Giving Pledge, launched in 2010 by Warren Buffett and Bill Gates for fellow billionaires.[295][294] He donated $50 million to Stanford hospital and contributed to efforts to cure AIDS.[296] Bono reported «tens of millions of dollars» given by Apple while Jobs was CEO, to AIDS and HIV relief programs in Africa, which inspired other companies to join.[295]

Honors and awards

Statue of Jobs at Graphisoft Park, Budapest[297]

  • 1985: National Medal of Technology (with Steve Wozniak), awarded by US President Ronald Reagan[298]
  • 1987: Jefferson Award for Public Service[299]
  • 1989: Entrepreneur of the Decade by Inc.[300]
  • 1991: Howard Vollum Award from Reed College[301]
  • 2004–2010: Listed among the Time 100 Most Influential People in the World on five separate occasions[302]
  • 2007: Named the most powerful person in business by Fortune magazine[303]
  • 2007: Inducted into the California Hall of Fame, located at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts[304]
  • 2012: Grammy Trustees Award, an award for those who have influenced the music industry in areas unrelated to performance[305]
  • 2012: Posthumously honored with an Edison Achievement Award for his commitment to innovation throughout his career[306]
  • 2013: Posthumously inducted as a Disney Legend[307]
  • 2017: Steve Jobs Theatre opens at Apple Park[308]
  • 2022: Posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by US President Joe Biden, the country’s highest civilian honor[309]

In popular culture

See also

  • Seva Foundation
  • Timeline of Steve Jobs media

References

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Bibliography

  • Isaacson, Walter (2011). Steve Jobs. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781451648546.
  • Isaacson, Walter (2015). Steve Jobs. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781501127625.
  • Linzmayer, Owen W. (2004). Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World’s Most Colorful Company. No Starch Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-1-59327-010-0. Retrieved April 15, 2014.

External links

  • Steve Jobs official memorial page at Apple
  • Steve Jobs discography at Discogs
  • Steve Jobs at IMDb
  • Steve Jobs profile at Forbes
  • Steven Paul Jobs The Vault at FBI Records
  • Steve Jobs at Andy Hertzfeld’s The Original Macintosh (folklore.org)
  • Steve Jobs at Steve Wozniak’s woz.org
  • 2011: «Steve Jobs: From Garage to World’s Most Valuable Company.» Computer History Museum
  • 2005: Steve Jobs commencement speech at Stanford University
  • 1995: Steve Jobs, Founder, NeXT Computer, excerpts from an Oral History Interview at Smithsonian Institution, April 20, 1995
  • 1994: Steve Jobs in 1994: The Rolling Stone Interview in Rolling Stone
  • 1990: Steve Jobs Archived December 16, 2014, at the Wayback Machine – memory and imagination
  • 1983: The «Lost» Steve Jobs Speech from 1983; Foreshadowing Wireless Networking, the iPad, and the App Store (audio clip)
Business positions
Preceded by

Gil Amelio

CEO of Apple
1997–2011
Succeeded by

Tim Cook

Preceded by Apple Chairman
1985
Succeeded by

Mike Markkula

Preceded by Apple Chairman
2011
Succeeded by

Arthur D. Levinson

Quick Facts

Also Known As: Steven Paul Jobs

Died At Age: 56

Born Country: United States


Quotes By Steve Jobs


American Men

Died on: October 5, 2011

place of death: Palo Alto, California, United States

Ancestry: Syrian American, Swiss American, German American

Cause of Death: Respiratory Arrest

U.S. State: California

Personality: ENTJ

City: San Francisco, California

Founder/Co-Founder: Apple Inc, Pixar Animation Studios, Next Computer, Inc

discoveries/inventions: IPod, IPhone, IPad, Macintosh

More Facts

education: Reed College

awards: 1985 — National Medal of Technology
1987 — Jefferson Award for Public Service
2012 — Grammy Trustees Award
2002 — PGA Vanguard Award

Childhood & Early Life

Born on February 24, 1955, Steve Paul Jobs was the adopted son of Paul Reinhold and Clara Jobs. His biological parents were Abdulfattah ‘John’ Jandali and Joanne Carole Schieble, who could not raise Steve, as their parents objected to their relationship.

Ever since a young age, Jobs was exposed to the world of mechanics. He would spent long hours with his father, dismantling and rebuilding electronic devices in the family garage. It was these experiences that gave the little boy tenacity and mechanical prowess

Academically, after passing his high school in 1972, he enrolled at the Reed College but dropped out of the same in a time frame of six months to pursue creative classes, including a course on calligraphy.

steve-jobs-50468.jpg

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Career

His first move professionally was that of a technician at Atari, Inc. in Los Gatos, California, in 1973.

In mid-1974, Jobs went to India to meet Neem Karoli Baba for spiritual enlightenment. Before he could meet Neem Karoli Baba, the Baba died and after a brief hiatus of about seven months, Jobs returned to Atari to create a circuit board for the arcade video game Breakout.

Along with Wozniak, he developed a circuit board eliminating about 50 chips from the machine thereby making the same compact. Next was the development of the digital ‘blue box’, which allowed free-long distance calls. It was the positive response of the blue box that instilled in him the need to make it big in electronics.

In 1976, along with Wozniak, he founded ‘Apple Computer Company’. Initially, the company mainly aimed at selling circuit boards. Same year, Wozniak invented the Apple I computer.

In 1985, difference of opinion between him and the company’s CEO John Sculley led to Jobs resigning from his own founded company. In the same year, he founded NeXT Inc. The company was famous for its technical strengths especially its object-oriented software development system.

In 1986, he bought the Graphics Group (later renamed Pixar) from Lucasfilm’s computer graphics division. ‘Toy Story’ was the first animation film that was released after the acquirement.

Interestingly, in 1996, when Apple acquired NeXT Inc, he returned to his own co-founded company as a de facto chief in the company and was formally named interim chief executive.

Under his guidance, a number of projects were disbanded. He introduced a whole new range of products which steeply increased the sales of the company, making it one of the electronic giants in the world.

In 1998, Apple iMac was introduced to the world. It was the direct result of his return to Apple. iMac went through a changeover in look in the following year and the world was introduced the Graphite grey Apple iMac. Since then, there have been various variations that iMac has gone through.

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In 2000, he became the permanent CEO of Apple, adopting the title, iCEO. History was in the making as the company soon branched out bringing about improved digital appliances.

In 2001, the company sortied into the world of music with the introduction of iPod, iTunes digital music software and iTunes Store. The device was an instant hit and enhanced the sales and reputation of the company by leaps and bounds. The first generation of iPod gave way to revised consumer-friendly devices such as iPod classic, iPod Nano, iPod Touch and iPod shuffle.

In 2005, with Disney’s purchase of Pixar, he became the largest shareholder of Walt Disney Company with approximately 7% of the company’s stock. He served as one of the board members in the company.

In 2007, he forayed into cellular phone business with the launch of iPhone and rest as they say is history. With its multi touch display, own mobile browser, in-built iPod, the iPhone revolutionized the way the world looked towards a cellular device.

In the following years, he worked on the iPhone to come up with improvised versions. In 2008, iPhone 3G was released with three chief features: support for GPS, 3G data and tri-band UMTS/HSDPA; in 2009, iPhone 3GS was launched.

In 2010, he launched iPhone 4, which was a sleeker model than its successors and included enhanced features like five megapixel camera, secondary front facing camera with 4G capability.

In 2011, iPhone 4S was released which included Siri, a virtual assistant that is capable of voice recognition. In the same year, he resigned as the CEO of Apple but continued to serve as the chairman of the company’s board.

steve-jobs-50469.jpg

Quotes: Me

Major Works

He created a sensation in the world of cellular device with the launch of first generation iPhone. The first of its kind, the smartphone included multimedia capabilities and quad-band touchscreen. It was named the ‘Invention of the Year’ in 2007 by Times Magazine.

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Awards & Achievements

During his life, he received several awards including National Medal of Technology and Jefferson Award for Public Service.

He was inducted into California Hall of Fame in 2007. Same year, he was named the most powerful person in business by Fortune magazine.

In 2009, Fortune magazine named him as the CEO of the decade. Following year, he ranked at No 17 in Forbes list of The World’s Most Powerful People.

In 2010, he was named person of the year by Financial Times.

steve-jobs-50470.jpg

Family, Personal Life & Legacy

He was blessed with a daughter Lisa Brennan Jobs from his love partner Chrisann Brennan in 1978. Though he denied being the girl’s father initially, he later acknowledged Lisa as his child.

He tied the knot with Laurene Powell on March 18, 1991. The couple was blessed with three children — a son, Reed, and two daughters, Erin and Eve.

In 2003, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He succumbed to the disease on October 5, 2011. A funeral was held two days later. He was buried in an unmarked grave at Alta Mesa Memorial Park, the only non-denominational cemetery in Palo Alto.

California Governor, Jerry Brown declared October 16 as ‘Steve Jobs Day’. A bronze statue of him was unveiled at the Graphisoft Company in Budapest in December 2011.

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Posthumously, he was awarded with Grammy Trustee Award and inducted as a Disney legend. He was even named as ‘greatest entrepreneur of our time’ by Forune magazine.

Top 10 Facts You Did Not Know About Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs asked William Hewlett, co-founder of Hewlett-Packard for some parts to complete a school project when he was 12. Impressed, Hewlett offered Jobs an internship at his company.

Jobs and his friend Steve Wozniak built and sold digital blue boxes for hacking telephone systems before they started Apple.

He admitted to have used LSD in his younger years and claimed that the drug made him think differently.

Jobs was a pescetarian which meant he ate fish but no other meat.

He named his company “Apple” because it came before Atari in the phone book—Atari was the name of the company Jobs worked for prior to creating Apple.

He was notorious for his lack of hygiene—it is said that he never bathed and walked around the office bare foot while working at Atari.

Steve Jobs always parked in the handicap parking zone.

He denied paternity of his first child who was born to a girlfriend, claiming he was sterile.

He acted as a mentor to Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page when the duo had newly started Google.

Steve Jobs’ last words were «Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow».

steve-jobsSteve Jobs (Feb 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American businessman and inventor who played a key role in the success of Apple computers and the development of revolutionary new technology such as the iPod, iPad and MacBook.

Early Life

Steve Jobs was born in San Francisco, 1955, to two university students Joanne Schieble and Syrian-born John Jandali. They were both unmarried at the time, and Steven was given up for adoption.

Steven was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs, whom he always considered to be his real parents. Steven’s father, Paul, encouraged him to experiment with electronics in their garage. This led to a lifelong interest in electronics and design.

Jobs attended a local school in California and later enrolled at Reed College, Portland, Oregon. His education was characterised by excellent test results and potential. But, he struggled with formal education and his teachers reported he was a handful to teach.

At Reed College, he attended a calligraphy course which fascinated him. He later said this course was instrumental in Apple’s multiple typefaces and proportionally spaced fonts.

Steve Jobs in India

In 1974, Jobs travelled with Daniel Kottke to India in search of spiritual enlightenment. They travelled to the Ashram of Neem Karoli Baba in Kainchi. During his several months in India, he became aware of Buddhist and Eastern spiritual philosophy. At this time, he also experimented with psychedelic drugs; he later commented that these counter-culture experiences were instrumental in giving him a wider perspective on life and business.

“Bill Gates‘d be a broader guy if he had dropped acid once or gone off to an ashram when he was younger.” – Steve Jobs, The New York Times, Creating Jobs, 1997

Job’s first real computer job came working for Atari computers. During his time at Atari, Jobs came to know Steve Wozniak well. Jobs greatly admired this computer technician, whom he had first met in 1971.

Steve Jobs and Apple

In 1976, Wozniak invented the first Apple I computer. Jobs, Wozniak and Ronald Wayne then set up Apple computers. In the very beginning, Apple computers were sold from Jobs parents’ garage.

Over the next few years, Apple computers expanded rapidly as the market for home computers began to become increasingly significant.

In 1984, Jobs designed the first Macintosh. It was the first commercially successful home computer to use a graphical user interface (based on Xerox Parc’s mouse driver interface.) This was an important milestone in home computing and the principle has become key in later home computers.

Despite the many innovative successes of Jobs at Apple, there was increased friction between Jobs and other workers at Apple. In 1985, removed from his managerial duties, Jobs resigned and left Apple. He later looked back on this incident and said that getting fired from Apple was one of the best things that happened to him – it helped him regain a sense of innovation and freedom, he couldn’t find work in a large company.

Life After Apple

Steve_Jobs_and_Bill_Gates_(522695099)

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. Photo Joi Ito

On leaving Apple, Jobs founded NeXT computers. This was never particularly successful, failing to gain mass sales. However, in the 1990s, NeXT software was used as a framework in WebObjects used in Apple Store and iTunes store. In 1996, Apple bought NeXT for $429 million.

Much more successful was Job’s foray into Pixar – a computer graphic film production company. Disney contracted Pixar to create films such as Toy Story, A Bug’s Life and Finding Nemo. These animation movies were highly successful and profitable – giving Jobs respect and success.

In 1996, the purchase of NeXT brought Jobs back to Apple. He was given the post of chief executive. At the time, Apple had fallen way behind rivals such as Microsoft, and Apple was struggling to even make a profit.

Return to Apple

Steve_Jobs_with_the_Apple_iPad_no_logo

Photo: Matt Buchanan

Jobs launched Apple in a new direction. With a certain degree of ruthlessness, some projects were summarily ended. Instead, Jobs promoted the development of a new wave of products which focused on accessibility, appealing design and innovate features.

The iPod was a revolutionary product in that it built on existing portable music devices and set the standard for portable digital music. In 2008, iTunes became the second biggest music retailer in the US, with over six billion song downloads and over 200 million iPods sold.

In 2007, Apple successfully entered the mobile phone market, with the iPhone. This used features of the iPod to offer a multi-functional and touchscreen device to become one of the best-selling electronic products. In 2010, he introduced the iPad – a revolutionary new style of tablet computers.

The design philosophy of Steve Jobs was to start with a fresh slate and imagine a new product that people would want to use. This contrasted with the alternative approach of trying to adapt current models to consumer feedback and focus groups. Job’s explains his philosophy of innovative design.

“But in the end, for something this complicated, it’s really hard to design products by focus groups. A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them.”

– Steve Jobs, BusinessWeek (25 May 1998)

Apple has been rated No.1 in America’s most admired companies. Jobs management has been described as inspirational, although c-workers also state, Jobs could be a hard taskmaster and was temperamental. NeXT Cofounder Dan’l Lewin was quoted in Fortune as saying of that period, “The highs were unbelievable … But the lows were unimaginable.”

“My job is not to be easy on people. My jobs is to take these great people we have and to push them and make them even better.” – All About Steve Jobs [link]

Under Jobs, Apple managed to overtake Microsoft regarding share capitalization. Apple also gained a pre-eminent reputation for the development and introduction of groundbreaking technology. Interview in 2007, Jobs said:

“There’s an old Wayne Gretzky quote that I love. ‘I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.’ And we’ve always tried to do that at Apple. Since the very very beginning. And we always will.”

Despite, growing ill-health, Jobs continued working at Apple until August 2011, when he resigned.

Wealth

“I was worth over $1,000,000 when I was 23, and over $10,000,000 when I was 24, and over $100,000,000 when I was 25, and it wasn’t that important because I never did it for the money.”

– Steve Jobs

Jobs earned only $1million as CEO of Apple. But, share options from Apple and Disney gave him an estimated fortune of $8.3billion.

Personal life

In 1991, he married Laurene Powell, together they had three children and lived in Palo Alto, California.

In 2003, he was diagnosed with Pancreatic Cancer. Over the next few years, Jobs struggled with health issues and was often forced to delegate the running of Apple to Tim Cook. In 2009, he underwent a liver transplant, but two years later serious health problems returned. He worked intermittently at Apple until August 2011, where he finally retired to concentrate on his deteriorating health. He died as a result of complications from his pancreatic cancer, suffering cardiac arrest on 5 October 2011 in Palo Alto, California.

In addition to his earlier interest in Eastern religions, Jobs expressed sentiments of agnosticism.

Sometimes I believe in God, sometimes I don’t. I think it’s 50-50 maybe. But ever since I’ve had cancer, I’ve been thinking about it more. And I find myself believing a bit more. I kind of – maybe it’s ’cause I want to believe in an afterlife. That when you die, it doesn’t just all disappear.”

Quote in Biography by Walter Isaacson.

Steve Jobs is buried in an unmarked grave at Alta Mesa Memorial Park, a nonsectarian cemetery in Palo Alto.

Citation: Pettinger, Tejvan. “Biography of Steve Jobs”, Oxford, UK. www.biographyonline.net. Published 25th Feb. 2012. Last updated 11th March 2019.

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Steve Jobs: The Exclusive Biography at Amazon

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Steven Paul Jobs, the chief founder of Apple Computer, was born in San Francisco, California (February 24, 1955). His parents were Joanne Schieble, who later came to be known as Joanne Simpson and Abdulfattah “John” Jandali. Both of them were students at University of Wisconsin. They gave their son up for adoption. His biological parents married soon after Jobs was adopted by Clara and Paul Jobs. They had another child named Mona Simpson. He came to know about his biological parents at the age of twenty seven. Clara was an accountant by profession. Paul was a United States Coast Guard. The Jobs family resided in Mountain View, California (from 1961 onwards), within the area which later named as Silicon Valley. Steve Jobs suffered from pancreatic cancer and died in 2011.

Early life of Steve Jobs

In his childhood, Steve Jobs worked on electronics with Paul in the family garage. His father showed him how to take apart and reconstruct electronics. This is how his interest in electronics grew up. He was a brilliant student in school. Later, he studied in Homestead High School in Silicon Valley and Reed College in Portland, Oregon. During this time he was introduced to Steve Wozniak, his future partner. He was attending the University of California, Berkeley.

Steve Jobs Career

In the year 1974 Steve Jobs joined as a video game designer in the company named Atari, where he worked for several months. Then he left the company in order to find spiritual enlightenment in India.

How Apple got started?

Steve Jobs traveled and experimented with psychedelic drugs. Later in 1976, Jobs and Wozniak started Apple Computer (in his family garage). Jobs was only 21 years old at that time. Jobs and Wozniak sold Volkswagen bus and scientific calculator respectively to collect fund. It was they, who brought a revolutionary change in the computer world by inventing improved technology and introducing machines much smaller in size, cheaper, intuitive and accessible to daily consumers. Wozniak coined the idea of a series of user-friendly personal computers. Jobs took the charge of marketing. Apple I was sold in 1976.The very next year saw the success of Apple II, which was followed by advent of Macintosh in 1984. Apple Computer became a publicly traded company in 1980. Jobs appointed John Sculley, the marketing expert of Pepsi- Cola as the CEO of Apple. He left Apple in 1985. Then he founded NeXT, a computer platform development company.

Steve Jobs’ Greatest Achievements

  • Steve Jobs was posthumously honored as a Disney Legend in 2013.
  • He received Grammy Trustees Award in 2012.
  • He was named as the most powerful person in business by Fortune magazine in 2007.
  • Steve received Jefferson Award for Public Service in the year 1987.
  • Jobs along with Steve Wozniak received National Medal of Technology in 1985.

8 Inspiring Quotes by Steve Jobs

  1. Being the richest man in the cemetery doesn’t matter to me. Going to bed at night saying we’ve done something wonderful, that’s what matters to me.
  2. “I’m convinced that about half of what separates successful entrepreneurs from the non-successful ones is pure perseverance.”
  3. “My favourite things in life don’t cost any money. It’s really clear that the most precious resource we all have is time.”
  4. “My model for business is The Beatles. They were four guys who kept each other’s kind of negative tendencies in check. They balanced each other, and the total was greater than the sum of the parts. That’s how I see business: Great things in business are never done by one person, they’re done by a team of people.”
  5. “Sometimes when you innovate, you make mistakes. It is best to admit them quickly, and get on with improving your other innovations.”
  6. “Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it.”
  7. “Innovation distinguishes between a leader and a follower.”
  8. “Bottom line is, I didn’t return to Apple to make a fortune. I’ve been very lucky in my life and already have one. When I was 25, my net worth was $100 million or so. I decided then that I wasn’t going to let it ruin my life. There’s no way you could ever spend it all, and I don’t view wealth as something that validates my intelligence.”

Do you know?

  • Steve Jobs is the authorized biography book of Steve Jobs.
  • Stay Hungry Stay Foolish is a book written by Rashmi Bansal on Steve Jobs.


Born: February 24, 1955

San Francisco, California



American business executive, computer programmer, and entrepreneur

Computer designer and corporate executive Steve Jobs is cofounder of Apple
Computers. With his vision of

Steve Jobs. Reproduced by permission of the Corbis Corporation.


Steve Jobs.




Reproduced by permission of the

Corbis Corporation

.

affordable personal computers, he launched one of the largest industries
of the past decades while still in his early twenties. He remains one of
the most inventive and energetic minds in American technology.


Early life

Steven Jobs was born February 24, 1955, in San Francisco, California,
and was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs. He grew up with one sister,
Patty. Paul Jobs was a machinist and fixed cars as a hobby. Jobs
remembers his father as being very skilled at working with his hands.

In 1961 the family moved to Mountain View, California. This area, just
south of Palo Alto, California, was becoming a center for electronics.
Electronics form the basic elements of devices such as radios,
televisions, stereos, and computers. At that time people started to
refer to the area as «Silicon Valley.» This is because a
substance called silicon is used in the manufacturing of electronic
parts.

As a child, Jobs preferred doing things by himself. He swam
competitively, but was not interested in team sports or other group
activities. He showed an early interest in electronics and gadgetry. He
spent a lot of time working in the garage workshop of a neighbor who
worked at Hewlett-Packard, an electronics manufacturer.

Jobs also enrolled in the Hewlett-Packard Explorer Club. There he saw
engineers demonstrate new products, and he saw his first computer at the
age of twelve. He was very impressed, and knew right away that he wanted
to work with computers.

While in high school Jobs attended lectures at the Hewlett-Packard
plant. On one occasion he boldly asked William Hewlett
(1931–2001), the president, for some parts he needed to complete
a class project. Hewlett was so impressed he gave Jobs the parts, and
offered him a summer internship at Hewlett-Packard.


College and travel

After graduating from high school in 1972, Jobs attended Reed College in
Portland, Oregon, for two years. He dropped out after one semester to
visit India and study eastern religions in the summer of 1974. In 1975
Jobs joined a group known as the
Homebrew Computer Club. One member, a technical whiz named Steve
Wozniak (1950–), was trying to build a small computer. Jobs
became fascinated with the marketing potential of such a computer. In
1976 he and Wozniak formed their own company. They called it Apple
Computer Company, in memory of a happy summer Jobs had spent picking
apples. They raised $1,300 in startup money by selling Jobs’s
microbus and Wozniak’s calculator. At first they sold circuit
boards (the boards that hold the internal components of a computer)
while they worked on the computer prototype (sample).


Apple and the personal computer era

Jobs had realized there was a huge gap in the computer market. At that
time almost all computers were mainframes. They were so large that one
could fill a room, and so costly that individuals could not afford to
buy them. Advances in electronics, however, meant that computer
components were getting smaller and the power of the computer was
increasing.

Jobs and Wozniak redesigned their computer, with the idea of selling it
to individual users. The Apple II went to market in 1977, with
impressive first year sales of $2.7 million. The company’s sales
grew to $200 million within three years. This was one of the most
phenomenal cases of corporate growth in U.S. history. Jobs and Wozniak
had opened an entirely new market—personal computers. Personal
computers began an entirely new way of processing information.

By 1980 the personal computer era was well underway. Apple was
continually forced to improve its products to remain ahead, as more
competitors entered the marketplace. Apple introduced the Apple III, but
the new model suffered technical and marketing problems. It was
withdrawn from the market, and was later reworked and reintroduced.

Jobs continued to be the marketing force behind Apple. Early in 1983 he
unveiled the Lisa. It was designed for people possessing minimal
computer experience. It did not sell well, however, because it was more
expensive than personal computers sold by competitors. Apple’s
biggest competitor was International Business Machines (IBM). By 1983 it
was estimated that Apple had lost half of its market share (part of an
industry’s sales that a specific company has) to IBM.


The Macintosh

In 1984 Apple introduced a revolutionary new model, the Macintosh. The
on-screen display had small pictures called icons. To use the computer,
the user pointed at an icon and clicked a button using a new device
called a mouse. This process made the Macintosh very easy to use. The
Macintosh did not sell well to businesses, however. It lacked features
other personal computers had, such as a corresponding high quality
printer. The failure of the Macintosh signaled the beginning of
Jobs’s downfall at Apple. Jobs resigned in 1985 from the company
he had helped found, though he retained his title as chairman of its
board of directors.


NeXT

Jobs soon hired some of his former employees to begin a new computer
company called NeXT. Late in 1988 the NeXT computer was introduced at a
large gala event in San Francisco, aimed at the educational market.
Initial reactions were generally good. The product was very
user-friendly, and had a
fast processing speed, excellent graphics displays, and an outstanding
sound system. Despite the warm reception, however, the NeXT machine
never caught on. It was too costly, had a black-and-white screen, and
could not be linked to other computers or run common software.


Toy Story

NeXT was not, however, the end of Steve Jobs. In 1986 Jobs purchased a
small company called Pixar from filmmaker George Lucas (1944–).
Pixar specialized in computer animation. Nine years later Pixar released


Toy Story,

a huge box office hit. Pixar later went on to make

Toy Story 2

and

A Bug’s Life,

which Disney distributed, and

Monsters, Inc.

All these films have been extremely successful.

Monsters, Inc.

had the largest opening weekend ticket sales of any animated film in
history.


NeXT and Apple

In December of 1996 Apple purchased NeXT Software for over $400 million.
Jobs returned to Apple as a part-time consultant to the chief executive
officer (CEO). The following year, in a surprising event, Apple entered
into a partnership with its competitor Microsoft. The two companies,
according to the

New York Times,

«agreed to cooperate on several sales and technology
fronts.» Over the next six years Apple introduced several new
products and marketing strategies.

In November 1997 Jobs announced Apple would sell computers directly to
users over the Internet and by telephone. The Apple Store became a
runaway success. Within a week it was the third-largest e-commerce site
on the Internet. In September of 1997 Jobs was named interim CEO of
Apple.

In 1998 Jobs announced the release of the iMac, which featured powerful
computing at an affordable price. The iBook was unveiled in July 1999.
This is a clam-shaped laptop that is available in bright colors. It
includes Apple’s AirPort, a computer version of the cordless
phone that would allow the user to surf the Internet wirelessly. In
January 2000 Jobs unveiled Apple’s new Internet strategy. It
included a group of Macintosh-only Internet-based applications. Jobs
also announced that he was becoming the permanent CEO of Apple.

In a February 1996

Time

magazine article, Jobs said, «The thing that drives me and my
colleagues … is that you see something very compelling to you,
and you don’t quite know how to get it, but you know, sometimes
intuitively, it’s within your grasp. And it’s worth
putting in years of your life to make it come into existence.»
Jobs has worked hard to translate his ideas into exciting and innovative
products for businesses and consumers. He was instrumental in launching
the age of the personal computer. Steve Jobs is truly a computer
industry visionary.


For More Information

Brashares, Ann.

Steve Jobs: Think Different.

Brookfield, CT: Twenty-first Century Books, 2001.

Butcher, Lee.

Accidental Millionaire: The Rise and Fall of Steven Jobs at Apple
Computer.

New York: Paragon House, 1987.

Wilson, Suzan.

Steve Jobs: Wizard of Apple Computer.

Berkeley Heights, NJ: Enslow, 2001.

Young, Jeffrey S.

Steve Jobs: The Journey is the Reward.

Glenview, IL: Scott, Foresman, 1988.

Steven Paul Jobs (/ˈdʒɒbz/; February 24, 1955 – October 5, 2011) was an American entrepreneur.[1] He is best known as the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple Inc. Through Apple, he was widely recognized as a charismatic pioneer of the personal computer revolution and for his influential career in the computer and consumer electronics fields.[2][3] Jobs also co-founded and served as chief executive of Pixar Animation Studios; he became a member of the board of directors of The Walt Disney Company in 2006, when Disney acquired Pixar.

In the late 1970s, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak engineered one of the first commercially successful lines of personal computers, the Apple II series. Jobs was among the first to see the commercial potential of Xerox PARC’s mouse-driven graphical user interface, which led to the creation of the Apple Lisa and, one year later, the Macintosh. He also played a role in introducing the LaserWriter, one of the first widely available laser printers, to the market.[4]

After a power struggle with the board of directors in 1985, Jobs left Apple and founded NeXT, a computer platform development company specializing in the higher-education and business markets. In 1986, he acquired the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm, which was spun off as Pixar.[5] He was credited in Toy Story (1995) as an executive producer. He served as CEO and majority shareholder until Disney’s purchase of Pixar in 2006.[6] In 1996, after Apple had failed to deliver its updated operating system, Copland, Gil Amelio turned to NeXT Computer, and the NeXTSTEP platform became the foundation for the Mac OS X.

As the new CEO of the company, Jobs oversaw the development of the iMac , iTunes, iPod, iPhone, and iPad, and on the services side, the company’s Apple Retail Stores, iTunes Store and the App Store.The success of these products and services provided several years of stable financial returns, and propelled Apple to become the world’s most valuable publicly traded company in 2011. The reinvigoration of the company is regarded by many commentators as one of the greatest turnarounds in business history.

In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. Though it was initially treated, he reported a hormone imbalance, underwent a liver transplant in 2009, and appeared progressively thinner as his health declined. On medical leave for most of 2011, Jobs resigned in August that year, and was elected Chairman of the Board. He died of respiratory arrest related to his metastatic tumor on October 5, 2011.

Jobs received a number of honors and public recognition for his influence in the technology and music industries. He has been referred to as «legendary», a «futurist» or simply «visionary», and has been described as the «Father of the Digital Revolution», a «master of innovation», and a «design perfectionist».

Early life and education

History_of_Steve_Jobs_(documentary)

History of Steve Jobs (documentary)

Steven Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco on February 24, 1955 to two university students, Joanne Carole Schieble, of Swiss Catholic descent, and Syrian-born Abdulfattah «John» Jandali (Arabic: عبدالفتاح جندلي‎), who were both unmarried at the time.[7] Jandali, who was teaching in Wisconsin when Steve was born, said he had no choice but to put the baby up for adoption because his girlfriend’s family objected to their relationship.[8]

The baby was adopted at birth by Paul Reinhold Jobs (1922–1993) and Clara Jobs (1924–1986), an Armenian American[9] whose maiden name was Hagopian.[10] According to Steve Jobs’s commencement address at Stanford, Schieble wanted Jobs to be adopted only by a college-graduate couple. Schieble learned that Clara Jobs didn’t graduate from college and Paul Jobs only attended high school, but signed final adoption papers after they promised her that the child would definitely be encouraged and supported to attend college. Later, when asked about his «adoptive parents», Jobs replied emphatically that Paul and Clara Jobs «were my parents.»[11] He stated in his authorized biography that they «were my parents 1,000%.» Unknown to him, his biological parents would subsequently marry (December 1955), have a second child, novelist Mona Simpson, in 1957, and divorce in 1962.[12]

Steve_Jobs_-_Beautiful_Polished_Rocks

Steve Jobs — Beautiful Polished Rocks

The Jobs family moved from San Francisco to Mountain View, California when Steve was five years old. The parents later adopted a daughter, Patty. Paul worked as a mechanic and a carpenter, and taught his son rudimentary electronics and how to work with his hands.[13][14] The father showed Steve how to work on electronics in the family garage, demonstrating to his son how to take apart and rebuild electronics such as radios and televisions. As a result, Steve became interested in and developed a hobby of technical tinkering.[15]

Clara was an accountant who taught him to read before he went to school.[13][11] Clara Jobs had been a payroll clerk for Varian Associates, one of the first high-tech firms in what became known as Silicon Valley.[38]
Jobs’s youth was riddled with frustrations over formal schooling. At Monta Loma Elementary school in Mountain View, he frequently played pranks on others.[39] Though school officials recommended that he skip two grades on account of his test scores, his parents elected for him only to skip one grade.[12][39]

Jobs then attended Cupertino Junior High and Homestead High School in Cupertino, California.[14] At Homestead, Jobs became friends with Bill Fernandez, a neighbor who shared the same interests in electronics. Fernandez introduced Jobs to another, older computer whiz kid, Steve Wozniak (also known as «Woz»). In 1969 Woz started building a little computer board with Fernandez that they named «The Cream Soda Computer», which they showed to Jobs; he seemed really interested.[40]

Following high school graduation in 1972, Jobs enrolled at Reed College in Portland, Oregon. Reed was an expensive college which Paul and Clara could ill afford. They were spending much of their life savings on their son’s higher education.[40] Jobs dropped out of college after six months and spent the next 18 months dropping in on creative classes, including a course on calligraphy.[41] He continued auditing classes at Reed while sleeping on the floor in friends’ dorm rooms, returning Coke bottles for food money, and getting weekly free meals at the local Hare Krishna temple.[42] Jobs later said, «If I had never dropped in on that single calligraphy course in college, the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts.»[42]

Early career

In 1974, Jobs took a job as a technician at Atari, Inc. in Los Gatos, California.[43] He traveled to India in mid-1974[44] to visit Neem Karoli Baba[45] at his Kainchi Ashram with a Reed College friend (and, later, an early Apple employee), Daniel Kottke, in search of spiritual enlightenment. When they got to the Neem Karoli ashram, it was almost deserted as Neem Karoli Baba had died in September 1973.[43] Then they made a long trek up a dry riverbed to an ashram of Hariakhan Baba. In India, they spent a lot of time on bus rides from Delhi to Uttar Pradesh and back, then up to Himachal Pradesh and back.[43]

After staying for seven months, Jobs left India[46] and returned to the US ahead of Daniel Kottke.[43] Jobs had changed his appearance; his head was shaved and he wore traditional Indian clothing.[47][48] During this time, Jobs experimented with psychedelics, later calling his LSD experiences «one of the two or three most important things [he had] done in [his] life».[49][50] He also became a serious practitioner of Zen Buddhism, engaged in lengthy meditation retreats at the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, the oldest Sōtō Zen monastery in the US.[51] He considered taking up monastic residence at Eihei-ji in Japan, and maintained a lifelong appreciation for Zen.[52] Jobs would later say that people around him who did not share his countercultural roots could not fully relate to his thinking.[49]
Jobs then returned to Atari, and was assigned to create a circuit board for the arcade video game Breakout. According to Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell, Atari offered $100 for each chip that was eliminated in the machine. Jobs had little specialized knowledge of circuit board design and made a deal with Wozniak to split the fee evenly between them if Wozniak could minimize the number of chips. Much to the amazement of Atari engineers, Wozniak reduced the number of chips by 50, a design so tight that it was impossible to reproduce on an assembly line.[further explanation needed] According to Wozniak, Jobs told him that Atari gave them only $700 (instead of the offered $5,000), and that Wozniak’s share was thus $350.[53] Wozniak did not learn about the actual bonus until ten years later, but said that if Jobs had told him about it and had said he needed the money, Wozniak would have given it to him.[54]

In the early 1970s, Jobs and Wozniak were drawn to technology like a magnet. Wozniak had designed a low-cost digital «blue box» to generate the necessary tones to manipulate the telephone network, allowing free long-distance calls. Jobs decided that they could make money selling it. The clandestine sales of the illegal «blue boxes» went well, and perhaps planted the seed in Jobs’s mind that electronics could be fun and profitable.[55]

Jobs began attending meetings of the Homebrew Computer Club with Wozniak in 1975.[14] He greatly admired Edwin H. Land, the inventor of instant photography and founder of Polaroid Corporation, and would explicitly model his own career after that of Land’s.[56][57]
In 1976, Jobs and Wozniak formed their own business, which they named «Apple Computer Company» in remembrance of a happy summer Jobs had spent picking apples. At first they started off selling circuit boards.[58]

Career

Apple Computer

Jobs receives Mike Markkula’s symbolic investment check.

Jobs and Steve Wozniak met in 1971, when their mutual friend, Bill Fernandez, introduced 21-year-old Wozniak to 16-year-old Jobs. In 1976, Wozniak single-handedly invented the Apple I computer. Wozniak showed it to Jobs, who suggested that they sell it. Jobs, Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne founded Apple computer in the garage of Jobs’s parents in order to sell it.[59] They received funding from a then-semi-retired Intel product-marketing manager and engineer Mike Markkula.[60] In 1978, Apple recruited Michael Scott from National Semiconductor to serve as CEO for what turned out to be several turbulent years. In 1983, Jobs lured John Sculley away from Pepsi-Cola to serve as Apple’s CEO, asking, «Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world?»[61] In the early 1980s, Jobs was among the first to see the commercial potential of Xerox PARC’s mouse-driven graphical user interface, which led to the creation of the Apple Lisa. One year later, Apple employee Jef Raskin invented the Macintosh.[62][63]

The following year, Apple aired a Super Bowl television commercial titled «1984». At Apple’s annual shareholders meeting on January 24, 1984, an emotional Jobs introduced the Macintosh to a wildly enthusiastic audience; Andy Hertzfeld described the scene as «pandemonium».[64]

Jobs_on_Sculley

Jobs on Sculley

While Jobs was a persuasive and charismatic director for Apple, some of his employees from that time described him as an erratic and temperamental manager. Disappointing sales caused a deterioration in Jobs’s working relationship with Sculley and it eventually became a power struggle between Jobs and Sculley.[65] Jobs kept meetings running past midnight, sent out lengthy faxes, then called new meetings at 7:00 am.[66] Sculley learned that Jobs—who believed Sculley to be «bad for Apple» and the wrong person to lead the company—had been attempting to organize a boardroom coup, and on May 24, 1985, called a board meeting to resolve the matter.[65] Apple’s board of directors sided with Sculley and removed Jobs from his managerial duties as head of the Macintosh division.[67][68] Jobs resigned from Apple five months later[65] and founded NeXT Inc. the same year.[66][69]
In a speech Jobs gave at Stanford University in 2005, he said being fired from Apple was the best thing that could have happened to him; «The heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a beginner again, less sure about everything. It freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life.» And he added, «I’m pretty sure none of this would have happened if I hadn’t been fired from Apple. It was awful-tasting medicine, but I guess the patient needed it.»

NeXT Computer

Steve Jobs at NeXT

After leaving Apple, Jobs founded NeXT Computer in 1985, with $7 million. A year later, Jobs was running out of money, and with no product on the horizon, he appealed for venture capital. Eventually, he attracted the attention of billionaire Ross Perot who invested heavily in the company.[72] NeXT workstations were first released in 1990, priced at $9,999. Like the Apple Lisa, the NeXT workstation was technologically advanced, but was largely dismissed as cost-prohibitive by the educational sector for which it was designed.[73]

NeXTSTEP_Release_3_Demo

NeXTSTEP Release 3 Demo

Demonstration by Steve Jobs

The NeXT workstation was known for its technical strengths, chief among them its object-oriented software development system. Jobs marketed NeXT products to the financial, scientific, and academic community, highlighting its innovative, experimental new technologies, such as the Mach kernel, the digital signal processor chip, and the built-in Ethernet port. Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web on a NeXT computer at CERN.[74]

The revised, second-generation NeXTcube was released in 1990, also. Jobs touted it as the first «interpersonal» computer that would replace the personal computer. With its innovative NeXTMail multimedia email system, NeXTcube could share voice, image, graphics, and video in email for the first time. «Interpersonal computing is going to revolutionize human communications and groupwork», Jobs told reporters.[75] Jobs ran NeXT with an obsession for aesthetic perfection, as evidenced by the development of and attention to NeXTcube’s magnesium case.[76] This put considerable strain on NeXT’s hardware division, and in 1993, after having sold only 50,000 machines, NeXT transitioned fully to software development with the release of NeXTSTEP/Intel.[77] The company reported its first profit of $1.03 million in 1994.[72] In 1996, NeXT Software, Inc. released WebObjects, a framework for Web application development. After NeXT was acquired by Apple Inc. in 1997, WebObjects was used to build and run the Apple Store,[77] MobileMe services, and the iTunes Store.

Pixar and Disney

In 1986, Jobs bought The Graphics Group (later renamed Pixar) from Lucasfilm’s computer graphics division for the price of $10 million, $5 million of which was given to the company as capital.[78]
The first film produced by the partnership, Toy Story (1995), with Jobs credited as executive producer,[79] brought fame and critical acclaim to the studio when it was released. Over the next 15 years, under Pixar’s creative chief John Lasseter, the company produced box-office hits A Bug’s Life (1998); Toy Story 2 (1999); Monsters, Inc. (2001); Finding Nemo (2003); The Incredibles (2004); Cars (2006); Ratatouille (2007); WALL-E (2008); Up (2009); and Toy Story 3 (2010). Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up and Toy Story 3 each received the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature, an award introduced in 2001.[80]

In the years 2003 and 2004, as Pixar’s contract with Disney was running out, Jobs and Disney chief executive Michael Eisner tried but failed to negotiate a new partnership,[82] and in early 2004, Jobs announced that Pixar would seek a new partner to distribute its films after its contract with Disney expired.

In October 2005, Bob Iger replaced Eisner at Disney, and Iger quickly worked to patch up relations with Jobs and Pixar. On January 24, 2006, Jobs and Iger announced that Disney had agreed to purchase Pixar in an all-stock transaction worth $7.4 billion. When the deal closed, Jobs became The Walt Disney Company’s largest single shareholder with approximately seven percent of the company’s stock.[83] Jobs’s holdings in Disney far exceeded those of Eisner, who holds 1.7 percent, and of Disney family member Roy E. Disney, who until his 2009 death held about one percent of the company’s stock and whose criticisms of Eisner – especially that he soured Disney’s relationship with Pixar – accelerated Eisner’s ousting. Upon completion of the merger, Jobs received 7% of Disney shares, and joined the Board of Directors as the largest individual shareholder.[83][84][85] Upon Jobs’s death his shares in Disney were transferred to the Steven P. Jobs Trust led by Laurene Jobs.

Return to Apple

NeXT,_OpenStep_and_the_return_of_Steve_Jobs_to_Apple

NeXT, OpenStep and the return of Steve Jobs to Apple

In 1996, Apple announced that it would buy NeXT for $427 million. The deal was finalized in late 1996,[87] bringing Jobs back to the company he co-founded. Jobs became de facto chief after then-CEO Gil Amelio was ousted in July 1997. He was formally named interim chief executive in September.[88] In March 1998, to concentrate Apple’s efforts on returning to profitability, Jobs terminated a number of projects, such as Newton, Cyberdog, and OpenDoc. In the coming months, many employees developed a fear of encountering Jobs while riding in the elevator, «afraid that they might not have a job when the doors opened. The reality was that Jobs’s summary executions were rare, but a handful of victims was enough to terrorize a whole company.»[89] Jobs also changed the licensing program for Macintosh clones, making it too costly for the manufacturers to continue making machines. With the purchase of NeXT, much of the company’s technology found its way into Apple products, most notably NeXTSTEP, which evolved into Mac OS X. Under Jobs’s guidance, the company increased sales significantly with the introduction of the iMac and other new products; since then, appealing designs and powerful branding have worked well for Apple. At the 2000 Macworld Expo, Jobs officially dropped the «interim» modifier from his title at Apple and became permanent CEO.[90] Jobs quipped at the time that he would be using the title «iCEO».[91]

Steve_Jobs_iPhone_2007_Presentation_(HD)

Steve Jobs iPhone 2007 Presentation (HD)

The company subsequently branched out, introducing and improving upon other digital appliances. With the introduction of the iPod portable music player, iTunes digital music software, and the iTunes Store, the company made forays into consumer electronics and music distribution. On June 29, 2007, Apple entered the cellular phone business with the introduction of the iPhone, a multi-touch display cell phone, which also included the features of an iPod and, with its own mobile browser, revolutionized the mobile browsing scene. While stimulating innovation, Jobs also reminded his employees that «real artists ship».[92]
Jobs was both admired and criticized for his consummate skill at persuasion and salesmanship, which has been dubbed the «reality distortion field» and was particularly evident during his keynote speeches (colloquially known as «Stevenotes») at Macworld Expos and at Apple Worldwide Developers Conferences. In 2005, Jobs responded to criticism of Apple’s poor recycling programs for e-waste in the US by lashing out at environmental and other advocates at Apple’s Annual Meeting in Cupertino in April. A few weeks later, Apple announced it would take back iPods for free at its retail stores. The Computer TakeBack Campaign responded by flying a banner from a plane over the Stanford University graduation at which Jobs was the commencement speaker.[42] The banner read «Steve, don’t be a mini-player—recycle all e-waste».
In 2006, he further expanded Apple’s recycling programs to any US customer who buys a new Mac. This program includes shipping and «environmentally friendly disposal» of their old systems.[93]

Resignation

In August 2011, Jobs resigned as CEO of Apple, but remained with the company as chairman of the company’s board.[94][95] Hours after the announcement, Apple Inc. (AAPL) shares dropped five percent in after-hours trading.[96] This relatively small drop, when considering the importance of Jobs to Apple, was associated with the fact that his health had been in the news for several years, and he had been on medical leave since January 2011.[97] It was believed, according to Forbes, that the impact would be felt in a negative way beyond Apple, including at The Walt Disney Company where Jobs served as director.[98] In after-hours trading on the day of the announcement, Walt Disney Co. (DIS) shares dropped 1.5 percent.

Business life

Wealth

Although Jobs earned only $1 a year as CEO of Apple,[100] Jobs held 5.426 million Apple shares worth $2.1 billion, as well as 138 million shares in Disney (which he received in exchange for Disney’s acquisition of Pixar) worth $4.4 billion.[101][102] Jobs quipped that the $1 per annum he was paid by Apple was based on attending one meeting for 50 cents while the other 50 cents was based on his performance.[103] Forbes estimated his net wealth at $8.3 billion in 2010, making him the 42nd-wealthiest American.

Stock options backdating issue

In 2001, Jobs was granted stock options in the amount of 7.5 million shares of Apple with an exercise price of $18.30. It was alleged that the options had been backdated, and that the exercise price should have been $21.10. It was further alleged that Jobs had thereby incurred taxable income of $20,000,000 that he did not report, and that Apple overstated its earnings by that same amount. As a result, Jobs potentially faced a number of criminal charges and civil penalties. The case was the subject of active criminal and civil government investigations,[105] though an independent internal Apple investigation completed on December 29, 2006, found that Jobs was unaware of these issues and that the options granted to him were returned without being exercised in 2003.[106]
On July 1, 2008, a $7-billion class action suit was filed against several members of the Apple Board of Directors for revenue lost due to the alleged securities fraud.

Managment style

1997_WWDC_Fireside_Chat_with_Steve_Jobs

1997 WWDC Fireside Chat with Steve Jobs

Jobs was a demanding perfectionist[109][110] who always aspired to position his businesses and their products at the forefront of the information technology industry by foreseeing and setting trends, at least in innovation and style. He summed up that self-concept at the end of his keynote speech at the Macworld Conference and Expo in January 2007, by quoting ice hockey player Wayne Gretzky
There’s an old Wayne Gretzky quote that I love. ‘I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.’ And we’ve always tried to do that at Apple. Since the very very beginning. And we always will.[111]
Ever a stickler for quality, Jobs once famously quoted:
Be a yardstick of quality. Some people aren’t used to an environment where excellence is expected.

Apple_WWDC_2005_-_The_Intel_Switch_Revealed

Apple WWDC 2005 — The Intel Switch Revealed

Much was made of Jobs’s aggressive and demanding personality. Fortune wrote that he was «considered one of Silicon Valley’s leading egomaniacs».[112] Commentaries on his temperamental style can be found in Michael Moritz’s The Little Kingdom, The Second Coming of Steve Jobs, by Alan Deutschman; and iCon: Steve Jobs, by Jeffrey S. Young & William L. Simon. In 1993, Jobs made Fortune’s list of America’s Toughest Bosses in regard to his leadership of NeXT.
NeXT Cofounder Dan’l Lewin was quoted in Fortune as saying of that period, «The highs were unbelievable … But the lows were unimaginable», to which Jobs’s office replied that his personality had changed since then.[113] Apple CEO Tim Cook noted, «More so than any person I ever met in my life, [Jobs] had the ability to change his mind, much more so than anyone I’ve ever met… Maybe the most underappreciated thing about Steve was that he had the courage to change his mind.» [114]
In 2005, Jobs banned all books published by John Wiley & Sons from Apple Stores in response to their publishing an unauthorized biography, iCon: Steve Jobs.[115] In its 2010 annual earnings report, Wiley said it had «closed a deal … to make its titles available for the iPad.»[116] Jef Raskin, a former colleague, once said that Jobs «would have made an excellent king of France», alluding to Jobs’s compelling and larger-than-life persona.[117] Floyd Norman said that at Pixar, Jobs was a «mature, mellow individual» and never interfered with the creative process of the filmmakers.[118]
Jobs had a public war of words with Dell Computer CEO Michael Dell, starting in 1987 when Jobs first criticized Dell for making «un-innovative beige boxes».[119] On October 6, 1997, in a Gartner Symposium, when Michael Dell was asked what he would do if he ran then-troubled Apple Computer, he said «I’d shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.»[120] In 2006, Jobs sent an email to all employees when Apple’s market capitalization rose above Dell’s. The email read:
Team, it turned out that Michael Dell wasn’t perfect at predicting the future. Based on today’s stock market close, Apple is worth more than Dell. Stocks go up and down, and things may be different tomorrow, but I thought it was worth a moment of reflection today. Steve.

Reality disortion field

1983_Apple_Keynote_The_1984_Ad_Introduction

1983 Apple Keynote The 1984 Ad Introduction

Apple’s Bud Tribble coined the term «reality distortion field» in 1981, to describe Jobs’s charisma and its effects on the developers working on the Macintosh project.[123] Tribble claimed that the term came from Star Trek.[123] Since then the term has also been used to refer to perceptions of Jobs’s keynote speeches.
The RDF was said by Andy Hertzfeld to be Steve Jobs’s ability to convince himself and others to believe almost anything, using a mix of charm, charisma, bravado, hyperbole, marketing, appeasement, and persistence. Although the subject of criticism, Jobs’s so-called reality distortion field was also recognized as creating a sense that the impossible was possible. Once the term became widely known, it was often used in the technology press to describe Jobs’s sway over the public, particularly regarding new product announcements.

Inventions and designs

The_Lost_1984_Video_young_Steve_Jobs_introduces_the_Macintosh

The Lost 1984 Video young Steve Jobs introduces the Macintosh

Jobs’s design aesthetic was influenced by the modernist architectural style of Joseph Eichler, and the industrial designs of Braun’s Dieter Rams.[12] His design sense was also greatly influenced by the Buddhism which he experienced in India while on a seven-month spiritual journey.[127] His sense of intuition was also influenced by the spiritual people with whom he studied.[127]
According to Apple cofounder, Steve Wozniak, «Steve didn’t ever code. He wasn’t an engineer and he didn’t do any original design…»[128][129] Daniel Kottke, one of Apple’s earliest employees and a college friend of Jobs’, stated that «Between Woz and Jobs, Woz was the innovator, the inventor. Steve Jobs was the marketing person.»[130]
He is listed as either primary inventor or co-inventor in 342 United States patents or patent applications related to a range of technologies from actual computer and portable devices to user interfaces (including touch-based), speakers, keyboards, power adapters, staircases, clasps, sleeves, lanyards and packages. Jobs’s contributions to most of his patents were to «the look and feel of the product».[131] Most of these are design patents (specific product designs; for example, Jobs listed as primary inventor in patents for both original and lamp-style iMacs, as well as PowerBook G4 Titanium) as opposed to utility patents (inventions).[132][133] He has 43 issued US patents on inventions.[134] The patent on the Mac OS X Dock user interface with «magnification» feature was issued the day before he died.[135] However, Jobs had little involvement in the engineering and technical side of the original Apple computers.[129]
Even while terminally ill in the hospital, Jobs sketched new devices that would hold the iPad in a hospital bed.[136] He also despised the oxygen monitor on his finger and suggested ways to revise the design for simplicity.

Macintosh

Jobs with Bill Atkinson from the original Mac development team.

The Macintosh was introduced in January 1984. The computer had no «Mac» name on the front, but rather just the Apple logo.[138] The Macintosh had a friendly appearance since it was meant to be easy to use. The disk drive is below the display, the Macintosh was taller, narrower, more symmetrical, and far more suggestive of a face. The Macintosh was identified as a computer that ordinary people could understand.

The NeXT Computer

After Jobs was forced out of Apple in 1985, he started a company that built workstation computers. The NeXT Computer was introduced in 1989. Sir Tim Berners-Lee created the world’s first web browser on the NeXT Computer. The NeXT Computer was the basis for today’s Macintosh OS X and iPhone operating system (iOS).

iMac

The Apple iMac was introduced in 1998 and its innovative design was directly the result of Jobs’s return to Apple. Apple boasted «the back of our computer looks better than the front of anyone else’s».[141] Described as «cartoonlike» the first iMac, clad in Bondi Blue plastic, was unlike any personal computer that came before. In 1999, Apple introduced Graphite gray Apple iMac and since has switched to all-white. Design ideas were intended to create a connection with the user such as the handle and a breathing light effect when the computer went to sleep.[142] The Apple iMac sold for $1,299 at that time. There were some technical revolutions for iMac too. The USB ports being the only device inputs on the iMac. So the iMac’s success helped popularize the interface among third party peripheral makers, which is evidenced by the fact that many early USB peripherals were made of translucent plastic to match the iMac design.

iPod

The first generation of iPod was released October 23, 2001. The major innovation of the iPod was its small size achieved by using a 1.8″ hard drive compared to the 2.5″ drives common to players at that time. The capacity of the first generation iPod ranged from 5G to 10 Gigabytes.[144] The iPod sold for US$399 and more than 100,000 iPods were sold before the end of 2001. The introduction of the iPod resulted in Apple becoming a major player in the music industry.[145] Also, the iPod’s success prepared the way for the iTunes music store and the iPhone.[146] After the 1st generation of iPod, Apple released the hard drive-based iPod classic, the touchscreen iPod Touch, video-capable iPod Nano, screenless iPod Shuffle in the following years.

iPhone

Apple began work on the iPhone in 2005 and the first iPhone was released on June 29, 2007. The iPhone created such a sensation that a survey indicated six out of ten Americans were aware of its release. Time magazine declared it «Invention of the Year» for 2007.[147] The Apple iPhone is a small device with multimedia capabilities and functions as a quad-band touch screen smartphone.[148] The iPhone 3G was released a year later in July 2008 with support for GPS, 3G data and tri-band UMTS/HSDPA. In June 2009, the iPhone 3GS, added voice control, a better camera, and a faster processor.[16] However, it was introduced by Phil Schiller instead of Jobs, due to health issues.[17] In 2010, Jobs himself became involved in the return of an iPhone 4 prototype that had been found in a bar and sold to Gizmodo.[18] Though Jobs was too ill to personally introduce the iPhone 4S in October 2011, he had personally tested its Siri voice recognition feature. The iPhone 5 was the last model in which Jobs was involved in the design;[19] he had reportedly begun work on the iPhone 5S and 6 before his death.[20]

Philanthropy

Arik Hesseldahl of BusinessWeek magazine stated that «Jobs isn’t widely known for his association with philanthropic causes», compared to Bill Gates’s efforts.[151] In contrast to Gates, Jobs did not sign the Giving Pledge of Warren Buffett which challenged the world’s richest billionaires to give at least half their wealth to charity.[152] In an interview with Playboy in 1985, Jobs said in respect to money that «the challenges are to figure out how to live with it and to reinvest it back into the world which means either giving it away or using it to express your concerns or values.»[153] Jobs also added that when he has some time we would start a public foundation but for now he does charitable acts privately.[154]

After resuming control of Apple in 1997, Jobs eliminated all corporate philanthropy programs initially.[155] Jobs’s friends told The New York Times that he felt that expanding Apple would have done more good than giving money to charity.[156] Later, under Jobs, Apple signed to participate in Product Red program, producing red versions of devices to give profits from sales to charity. Apple has gone on to become the largest contributor to the charity since its initial involvement with it. The chief of the Product Red project, singer Bono cited Jobs saying there was «nothing better than the chance to save lives», when he initially approached Apple with the invitation to participate in the program.[157] Through its sales, Apple has been the largest contributor to Product Red’s gift to the Global Fund, which fights AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, according to Bono.

Personal life

Jobs’s birth parents met at the University of Wisconsin. Abdulfattah «John» Jandali, from Syria,[160] taught there. Joanne Carole Schieble was his student; they were the same age because Jandali had «gotten his PhD really young.» [161][162][163] Schieble had a career as a speech language pathologist. Jandali taught political science at the University of Nevada in the 1960s, and then made his career in the food and beverage industry, and since 2006, has been a vice president at a casino in Reno, Nevada.[164][165] In December 1955, ten months after giving up their baby boy, Schieble and Jandali married. In 1957 they had a daughter, Mona. They divorced in 1962, and Jandali lost touch with his daughter.[166] Her mother remarried and had Mona take the surname of her stepfather, so she became known as Mona Simpson.[162]
In the 1980s, Jobs found his birth mother, Joanne Schieble Simpson, who told him he had a biological sister, Mona Simpson. They met for the first time in 1985[166] and became close friends. The siblings kept their relationship secret until 1986, when Mona introduced him at a party for her first book.[11]

After deciding to search for their father, Simpson found Jandali managing a coffee shop. Without knowing who his son had become, Jandali told Mona that he had previously managed a popular restaurant in the Silicon Valley where «Even Steve Jobs used to eat there. Yeah, he was a great tipper.» In a taped interview with his biographer Walter Isaacson, aired on 60 Minutes,[167] Jobs said: «When I was looking for my biological mother, obviously, you know, I was looking for my biological father at the same time, and I learned a little bit about him and I didn’t like what I learned. I asked her to not tell him that we ever met…not tell him anything about me.»[168] Jobs was in occasional touch with his mother Joanne Simpson,[155][169] who lives in a nursing home in Los Angeles.[162] When speaking about his biological parents, Jobs stated: «They were my sperm and egg bank. That’s not harsh, it’s just the way it was, a sperm bank thing, nothing more.»[12] Jandali stated in an interview with the The Sun in August 2011, that his efforts to contact Jobs were unsuccessful. Jandali mailed in his medical history after Jobs’s pancreatic disorder was made public that year.[170][171][172]

In her eulogy to Jobs at his memorial service, Mona Simpson stated:
I grew up as an only child, with a single mother. Because we were poor and because I knew my father had emigrated from Syria, I imagined he looked like Omar Sharif. I hoped he would be rich and kind and would come into our lives (and our not yet furnished apartment) and help us. Later, after I’d met my father, I tried to believe he’d changed his number and left no forwarding address because he was an idealistic revolutionary, plotting a new world for the Arab people. Even as a feminist, my whole life I’d been waiting for a man to love, who could love me. For decades, I’d thought that man would be my father. When I was 25, I met that man and he was my brother.[166]
Jobs’s first child, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, was born in 1978, the daughter of his longtime partner Chris Ann Brennan, a Bay Area painter.[155] For two years, she raised their daughter on welfare while Jobs denied paternity by claiming he was sterile; he later acknowledged Lisa as his daughter.[155] Jobs later married Laurene Powell on March 18, 1991, in a ceremony at the Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite National Park. Presiding over the wedding was Kobun Chino Otogawa, a Zen Buddhist monk. Their son, Reed, was born September 1991, followed by daughters Erin in August 1995, and Eve in 1998.[173] The family lives in Palo Alto, California.[174]

Jobs once dated Joan Baez for a few years. Elizabeth Holmes, a friend of Jobs from his time at Reed College, believed that Jobs was interested in Baez because she had been the lover of Bob Dylan» (Dylan was the Apple icon’s favorite musician).[175] Jobs confided in Joanna Hoffman his concerns about the relationship. She would later tell his official biographer «She was a strong woman, and he wanted to show he was in control. Plus, he always said he wanted to have a family, and with her he knew that he wouldn’t. [176]
Jobs was also a fan of The Beatles. He referred to them on multiple occasions at Keynotes and also was interviewed on a showing of a Paul McCartney concert. When asked about his business model on 60 Minutes, he replied:
My model for business is The Beatles: They were four guys that kept each other’s negative tendencies in check; they balanced each other. And the total was greater than the sum of the parts. Great things in business are never done by one person, they are done by a team of people.[177]
In 1982, Jobs bought an apartment in The San Remo, an apartment building in New York City with a politically progressive reputation, where Demi Moore, Steven Spielberg, Steve Martin, and Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, daughter of Rita Hayworth, also had apartments. With the help of I. M. Pei, Jobs spent years renovating his apartment in the top two floors of the building’s north tower, only to sell it almost two decades later to U2 singer Bono. Jobs never moved in.[178][179]

In 1984, Jobs purchased the Jackling House, a 17,000-square-foot (1,600 m2), 14-bedroom Spanish Colonial mansion designed by George Washington Smith in Woodside, California. Although it reportedly remained in an almost unfurnished state, Jobs lived in the mansion for almost ten years. According to reports, he kept a 1966 BMW R60/2 motorcycle in the living room, and let Bill Clinton use it in 1998. From the early 1990s, Jobs lived in a house in the Old Palo Alto neighborhood of Palo Alto. President Clinton dined with Jobs and 14 Silicon Valley CEOs there on August 7, 1996, at a meal catered by Greens Restaurant.[180][181] Clinton returned the favor and Jobs, who was a Democratic donor, slept in the Lincoln bedroom of the White House.[182]
Jobs allowed Jackling House to fall into a state of disrepair, planning to demolish the house and build a smaller home on the property; but he met with complaints from local preservationists over his plans. In June 2004, the Woodside Town Council gave Jobs approval to demolish the mansion, on the condition that he advertise the property for a year to see if someone would move it to another location and restore it. A number of people expressed interest, including several with experience in restoring old property, but no agreements to that effect were reached. Later that same year, a local preservationist group began seeking legal action to prevent demolition. In January 2007, Jobs was denied the right to demolish the property, by a court decision.[183] The court decision was overturned on appeal in March 2010, and the mansion was demolished beginning in February 2011.[184]

Jobs usually wore a black long-sleeved mock turtleneck made by Issey Miyake (that was sometimes reported to be made by St. Croix), Levi’s 501 blue jeans, and New Balance 991 sneakers.[185][186] Jobs told Walter Isaacson «…he came to like the idea of having a uniform for himself, both because of its daily convenience (the rationale he claimed) and its ability to convey a signature style.»[185] He was a pescetarian.[187]
Jobs’s car was a silver Mercedes-Benz SL 55 AMG, which did not display its license plates, as he took advantage of a California law which gives a maximum of six months for new vehicles to receive plates; Jobs leased a new SL every six months.[188] Jobs involved himself with the details of designing his 78-metre luxury yacht Venus (named after the deity)[189] to keep thoughts of death at bay. It is also designed by Philippe Starck,[190] who claims insufficient payment.[191]

Jobs at a dinner with President Barack Obama and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in 2011.

In a 2011 interview with biographer Walter Isaacson, Jobs revealed at one point he met with U.S. President Barack Obama, complained of the nation’s shortage of software engineers, and told Obama that he was «headed for a one-term presidency.» Jobs proposed that any foreign student who got an engineering degree at a U.S. university should automatically be offered a green card. After the meeting, Jobs commented, «The president is very smart, but he kept explaining to us reasons why things can’t get done…. It infuriates me.»

Health issues

In October 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with cancer,[194] and in mid-2004, he announced to his employees that he had a cancerous tumor in his pancreas.[195] The prognosis for pancreatic cancer is usually very poor;[196] Jobs stated that he had a rare, far less aggressive type known as islet cell neuroendocrine tumor.[195] Despite his diagnosis, Jobs resisted his doctors’ recommendations for mainstream medical intervention for nine months,[155] instead consuming a special alternative medicine diet in an attempt to thwart the disease. According to Harvard researcher Ramzi Amri, his choice of alternative treatment «led to an unnecessarily early death.»[194] According to Jobs’s biographer, Walter Isaacson, «for nine months he refused to undergo surgery for his pancreatic cancer – a decision he later regretted as his health declined.»[197] «Instead, he tried a vegan diet, acupuncture, herbal remedies and other treatments he found online, and even consulted a psychic. He also was influenced by a doctor who ran a clinic that advised juice fasts, bowel cleansings and other unproven approaches, before finally having surgery in July 2004.»[198] He eventually underwent a pancreaticoduodenectomy (or «Whipple procedure») in July 2004, that appeared to successfully remove the tumor.[199][200][201] Jobs apparently did not receive chemotherapy or radiation therapy.[195][202] During Jobs’s absence, Tim Cook, head of worldwide sales and operations at Apple, ran the company.[195]

In early August 2006, Jobs delivered the keynote for Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference. His «thin, almost gaunt» appearance and unusually «listless» delivery,[203][204] together with his choice to delegate significant portions of his keynote to other presenters, inspired a flurry of media and Internet speculation about his health.[205] In contrast, according to an Ars Technica journal report, Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) attendees who saw Jobs in person said he «looked fine».[206] Following the keynote, an Apple spokesperson said that «Steve’s health is robust.»[207]

Two years later, similar concerns followed Jobs’s 2008 WWDC keynote address.[208] Apple officials stated Jobs was victim to a «common bug» and was taking antibiotics,[209] while others surmised his cachectic appearance was due to the Whipple procedure.[202] During a July conference call discussing Apple earnings, participants responded to repeated questions about Jobs’s health by insisting that it was a «private matter». Others, however, voiced the opinion that shareholders had a right to know more, given Jobs’s hands-on approach to running his company.[210][211] The New York Times published an article based on an off-the-record phone conversation with Jobs, noting that «While his health problems amounted to a good deal more than ‘a common bug’, they weren’t life-threatening and he doesn’t have a recurrence of cancer.»[212]
On August 28, 2008, Bloomberg mistakenly published a 2500-word obituary of Jobs in its corporate news service, containing blank spaces for his age and cause of death. (News carriers customarily stockpile up-to-date obituaries to facilitate news delivery in the event of a well-known figure’s death.) Although the error was promptly rectified, many news carriers and blogs reported on it,[213] intensifying rumors concerning Jobs’s health.[214] Jobs responded at Apple’s September 2008 Let’s Rock keynote by essentially[215] quoting Mark Twain: «Reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.»[216] At a subsequent media event, Jobs concluded his presentation with a slide reading «110/70», referring to his blood pressure, stating he would not address further questions about his health.[217]
On December 16, 2008, Apple announced that marketing vice-president Phil Schiller would deliver the company’s final keynote address at the Macworld Conference and Expo 2009, again reviving questions about Jobs’s health.[218][219] In a statement given on January 5, 2009, on Apple.com,[220] Jobs said that he had been suffering from a «hormone imbalance» for several months.[221]
On January 14, 2009, in an internal Apple memo, Jobs wrote that in the previous week he had «learned that my health-related issues are more complex than I originally thought», and announced a six-month leave of absence until the end of June 2009, to allow him to better focus on his health. Tim Cook, who previously acted as CEO in Jobs’s 2004 absence, became acting CEO of Apple,[222] with Jobs still involved with «major strategic decisions.»[222]

In April 2009, Jobs underwent a liver transplant at Methodist University Hospital Transplant Institute in Memphis, Tennessee.[223][224] Jobs’s prognosis was described as «excellent».[223]
On January 17, 2011, a year and a half after Jobs returned from his liver transplant, Apple announced that he had been granted a medical leave of absence. Jobs announced his leave in a letter to employees, stating his decision was made «so he could focus on his health». As during his 2009 medical leave, Apple announced that Tim Cook would run day-to-day operations and that Jobs would continue to be involved in major strategic decisions at the company.[225][226] Despite the leave, he made appearances at the iPad 2 launch event (March 2), the WWDC keynote introducing iCloud (June 6), and before the Cupertino city council (June 7).[227]
Jobs announced his resignation as Apple’s CEO on August 24, 2011, writing to the board, «I have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple’s CEO, I would be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come.» [228] Jobs became chairman of the board thereafter, naming Tim Cook his successor as CEO, and continued to work for Apple until the day before his death six weeks later.

Death

Obituary image posted on Apple’s website after Jobs’ death.

Jobs, aged 56, died at his California home around 3 pm on October 5, 2011, due to complications from a relapse of his previously treated islet-cell neuroendocrine pancreatic cancer,[14][21][22] resulting in respiratory arrest.[23] He had lost consciousness the day before, and died with his wife, children and sister at his side.[24]

Both Apple and Microsoft flew their flags at half-staff throughout their respective headquarters and campuses.[25][26] Bob Iger ordered all Disney properties, including Walt Disney World and Disneyland, to fly their flags at half-staff, from October 6 to 12, 2011.[27]

His death was announced by Apple in a statement which read:
We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed away today.
Steve’s brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve.
His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched by his extraordinary gifts.[239]

For two weeks following his death, Apple’s corporate Web site displayed a simple page, showing Jobs’s name and lifespan next to his grayscale portrait.[240] Clicking on the image led to an obituary, which read:
Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an amazing human being. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.[240]
An email address was also posted for the public to share their memories, condolences, and thoughts.[241][242] Over a million tributes were sent, which are now displayed on the Steve Jobs memorial page.

Also dedicating its homepage to Jobs was Pixar, with a photo of Jobs, John Lasseter and Edwin Catmull, and the eulogy they wrote:[243]
Steve was an extraordinary visionary, our very dear friend, and our guiding light of the Pixar family. He saw the potential of what Pixar could be before the rest of us, and beyond what anyone ever imagined. Steve took a chance on us and believed in our crazy dream of making computer animated films; the one thing he always said was to ‘make it great.’ He is why Pixar turned out the way we did and his strength, integrity, and love of life has made us all better people. He will forever be part of Pixar’s DNA. Our hearts go out to his wife Laurene and their children during this incredibly difficult time.[243]

A small private funeral was held on October 7, 2011, of which details were not revealed out of respect to Jobs’s family.[244] Apple announced on the same day that they had no plans for a public service, but were encouraging «well-wishers» to send their remembrance messages to an email address created to receive such messages.[245] Sunday, October 16, 2011, was declared «Steve Jobs Day» by Governor Jerry Brown of California.[246] On that day, an invitation-only memorial was held at Stanford University. Those in attendance included Apple and other tech company executives, members of the media, celebrities, close friends of Jobs, and politicians, along with Jobs’s family. Bono, Yo Yo Ma, and Joan Baez performed at the service, which lasted longer than an hour. The service was highly secured, with guards at all of the university’s gates, and a helicopter flying overhead from an area news station.[247][248]
A private memorial service for Apple employees was held on October 19, 2011, on the Apple Campus in Cupertino. Present were Cook, Bill Campbell, Norah Jones, Al Gore, and Coldplay, and Jobs’s widow, Laurene, was in attendance. Some of Apple’s retail stores closed briefly so employees could attend the memorial. A video of the service is available on Apple’s website.[249]
Jobs is buried in an unmarked grave at Alta Mesa Memorial Park, the only non-denominational cemetery in Palo Alto.[250][251] He is survived by Laurene, his wife of 20 years, their three children, and Lisa Brennan-Jobs, his daughter from a previous relationship.[252] His family released a statement saying that he «died peacefully».[253][254] He «looked at his sister Patty, then for a long time at his children, then at his life’s partner, Laurene, and then over their shoulders past them»; his last words, spoken hours before his death, were: «Oh wow. Oh wow. Oh wow.»

Media coverage

Steve Jobs’s death broke news headlines on ABC, CBS, and NBC.[255] Numerous newspapers around the world carried news of his death on their front pages the next day. Several notable people, including US President Barack Obama,[256] British Prime Minister David Cameron,[257] Microsoft founder Bill Gates,[258] and The Walt Disney Company’s Bob Iger commented on the death of Jobs. Wired News collected reactions and posted them in tribute on their homepage.[259] Other statements of condolence were made by many of Jobs’s friends and colleagues, such as Steve Wozniak and George Lucas.[260][261] After Steve Jobs’s death, Adult Swim aired a 15-second segment with the words «hello» in a script font fading in and then changing into «goodbye».

Major media published commemorative works. Time published a commemorative issue for Jobs on October 8, 2011. The issue’s cover featured a portrait of Jobs, taken by Norman Seeff, in which he is sitting in the lotus position holding the original Macintosh computer, first published in Rolling Stone in January 1984. The issue marked the eighth time Jobs was featured on the cover of Time.[262] The issue included a photographic essay by Diana Walker, a retrospective on Apple by Harry McCracken and Lev Grossman, and a six-page essay by Walter Isaacson. Isaacson’s essay served as a preview of his biography, Steve Jobs.[263]

Bloomberg Businessweek also published a commemorative, ad-free issue, featuring extensive essays by Steve Jurvetson, John Sculley, Sean Wisely, William Gibson, and Walter Isaacson. On its cover, Steve Jobs is pictured in gray scale, along with his name and lifespan.
At the time of his resignation, and again after his death, Jobs was widely described as a visionary, pioneer and genius[264][265][266][267]—perhaps one of the foremost—in the field of business,[268][269] innovation,[270] and product design,[271] and a man who had profoundly changed the face of the modern world,[264][266][270] revolutionized at least six different industries,[265] and who was an «exemplar for all chief executives».[265] His death was widely mourned[270] and considered a loss to the world by commentators across the globe.[267]
After his resignation as Apple’s CEO, Jobs was characterized as the Thomas Edison and Henry Ford of his time.[272][273] In his The Daily Show eulogy, Jon Stewart said that unlike others of Jobs’s ilk, such as Thomas Edison or Henry Ford, Jobs died young. He felt that we had, in a sense, «wrung everything out of» these other men, but his feeling on Jobs was that «we’re not done with you yet.»[274] Malcolm Gladwell in The New Yorker asserted that «Jobs’s sensibility was editorial, not inventive. His gift lay in taking what was in front of him … and ruthlessly refining it.»[275]

There was also a dissenting tone in some coverage of Jobs’ life and works in the media, where attention focused on his near-fanatical control mindset and business ruthlessness. A Los Angeles Times media critic reported that the eulogies «came courtesy of reporters who—after deadline and off the record—would tell stories about a company obsessed with secrecy to the point of paranoia. They remind us how Apple shut down a youthful fanboy blogger, punished a publisher that dared to print an unauthorized Jobs biography and repeatedly ran afoul of the most basic tenets of a free press.»[276] Free software pioneer Richard Stallman drew attention to Apple’s strategy of tight corporate control over consumer computers and handheld devices, how Apple restricted news reporters, and persistently violated privacy: «Steve Jobs, the pioneer of the computer as a jail made cool, designed to sever fools from their freedom, has died».[277][278] Silicon Valley reporter Dan Gillmor stated that under Jobs, Apple had taken stances that in his view were «outright hostile to the practice of journalism» [276] — these included suing three «small fry» bloggers who reported tips about the company and its unreleased products including attempts to use the courts to force them to reveal their sources, suing teenager Nicholas Ciarelli, who wrote enthusiastic speculation about Apple products beginning at age 13[276] (Rainey wrote that Apple wanted to kill his ‘ThinkSecret’ blog as «It thought any leaks, even favorable ones, diluted the punch of its highly choreographed product launches with Jobs, in his iconic jeans and mock turtleneck outfit, as the star.»

Honors and public recognition

President Reagan awards Steve Wozniak and Jobs the National Medal of Technology in 1985.

After Apple’s founding, Jobs became a symbol of his company and industry. When Time named the computer as the 1982 «Machine of the Year», the magazine published a long profile of Jobs as «the most famous maestro of the micro».[280][281]
Jobs was awarded the first National Medal of Technology by President Ronald Reagan in 1985, with Steve Wozniak (among the first people to ever receive the honor),[282] and a Jefferson Award for Public Service in the category «Greatest Public Service by an Individual 35 Years or Under» (also known as the Samuel S. Beard Award) in 1987.[283]

On November 27, 2007, Jobs was named the most powerful person in business by Fortune magazine.[284] On December 5, 2007, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and First Lady Maria Shriver inducted Jobs into the California Hall of Fame, located at The California Museum for History, Women and the Arts.[285]

In August 2009, Jobs was selected as the most admired entrepreneur among teenagers in a survey by Junior Achievement,[286] having previously been named Entrepreneur of the Decade 20 years earlier in 1989, by Inc. magazine.[287] On November 5, 2009, Jobs was named the CEO of the decade by Fortune magazine.[268]

In November 2010, Jobs was ranked No.17 on Forbes: The World’s Most Powerful People.[288] In December 2010, the Financial Times named Jobs its person of the year for 2010, ending its essay[289] by stating, «In his autobiography, John Sculley, the former PepsiCo executive who once ran Apple, said this of the ambitions of the man he had pushed out: ‘Apple was supposed to become a wonderful consumer products company. This was a lunatic plan. High-tech could not be designed and sold as a consumer product.'».[290] The Financial Times closed by rhetorically asking of this quote, «How wrong can you be.»[289]

On December 21, 2011, Graphisoft company in Budapest presented the world’s first bronze statue of Steve Jobs, calling him one of the greatest personalities of the modern age.[291]

In January 2012, when young adults (ages 16 – 25) were asked to identify the greatest innovator of all time, Steve Jobs placed second behind Thomas Edison.[292] On the following February 12th, Jobs was posthumously awarded the Grammy Trustees Award, an award for those who have influenced the music industry in areas unrelated to performance.[293] In March 2012, global business magazine Fortune named Steve Jobs the «greatest entrepreneur of our time», describing him as «brilliant, visionary, inspiring», and «the quintessential entrepreneur of our generation».[294]

Two films, Disney’s John Carter[295] and Pixar’s Brave,[296] were dedicated to Jobs.

On October 5, 2012, Apple.com’s homepage was changed to a video tribute to Jobs, because it was the first anniversary of his death, and it showed pictures with audio from some of his greatest keynotes. When the video ended, it showed a note from Tim Cook about the matter.

In September 2017, the Steve Jobs Theater was opened in his honor at Apple Park.[28]

On July 1, 2022, President Joe Biden announced that Jobs would be posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor in the United States.[29][30]

Media portrayals

Jobs was portrayed by Noah Wyle, Ashton Kutcher, and Michael Fassbender in the film dramatizations Pirates of Silicon Valley, Jobs, and Steve Jobs, respectively.[31][32][33]

Video gallery

Apple "Think Different" (Steve Jobs narrated)

Apple «Think Different» (Steve Jobs narrated)

WWDC 2003 - Steve Jobs introduces OS X Panther and the Power Mac G5

WWDC 2003 — Steve Jobs introduces OS X Panther and the Power Mac G5

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  26. «Disney World flags at half-staff in memory of Steve Jobs», Bay News 9, October 6, 2011. Retrieved on 2011-10-29. 
  27. The incredible architectural secrets of Steve Jobs Theater by Lance Ulanoff, Mashable. 2017-09-14.
  28. President Biden Announces Recipients of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, The White House. 2022-07-01.
  29. Steve Jobs will be posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Mike Peterson. Apple Insider. 2022-07-01.
  30. Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999), Internet Movie Database. Accessed 2020-02-09.
  31. Jobs (2013), Internet Movie Database. Accessed 2020-02-09.
  32. Steve Jobs (2015), Internet Movie Database. Accessed 2020-02-09.

External links

  • Remembering Steve at Apple
    • Apple Press Info: Steve Jobs (archived 2011-07-04, 2006-05-11, 1998-12-03, 1998-04-29)
  • Short Biography of Steve Jobs at All about Steve Jobs
  • Steve Jobs: A timeline at CNET (2011-10-05)
  • Steve Jobs at Find-a-Grave
  • Steve Jobs at Forbes
  • Steve Jobs at the Internet Movie Database
  • Steve Jobs at Stanford University Collections
  • Steve Jobs at the Adobe Wiki
  • Steve Jobs at the iPad Wiki
  • Steve Jobs at the Next Wiki
  • Steve Jobs at the Pixar Wiki
  • Steve Jobs at Wikimedia Commons
  • Steve Jobs at Wikipedia

Articles

  • The Perceptionist: How Steve Jobs took back Apple by John Heilemann at The New Yorker (1997-09-08, archived 2014-07-24)
  • The Life Of Steve Jobs, So Far by Brian Lam at Gizmodo (2011-08-25, archived 2011-09-23)
  • Steve Jobs: From Garage to World’s Most Valuable Company by Dag Spicer at the Computer History Museum (2011-12-02)
  • On the trail of Steve Jobs in California by Jonathan Margolis at The Guardian (2012-05-20)

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