Who is the founder of Apple. History of success

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Jobs Steve
Steven Paul Jobs
Other names: Stephen Paul Jobs
In English: Steven Paul Jobs
Date of Birth: 24.02.1955
Place of Birth: USA
Date of death: 05.10.2011
Place of death: USA
Brief information:
American entrepreneur, designer and inventor, pioneer of the personal computer revolution. One of the founders, chairman of the board of directors and CEO of Apple Corporation. One of the founders and CEO of Pixar

Biography

His parents were unmarried students: Syrian-born Abdulfatta (John) Jandali and Joan Schible from a Catholic family of German immigrants.

The boy was adopted by Paul Jobs and an American of Armenian origin, Clara Jobs, née Hagopian. The Jobs could not have their own children. They named their adopted son Stephen Paul. Jobs always considered Paul and Clara to be father and mother, he was very annoyed if someone called them foster parents: "They are 100% my real parents."

In the late 1970s, Jobs' friend Steve Wozniak developed one of the first personal computers with great commercial potential. The Apple II computer was the first mass-produced Apple product created at the initiative of Steve Jobs. Jobs later saw the commercial potential of a mouse-driven GUI, leading to the Apple Lisa and, a year later, the Macintosh (Mac).

After losing a power struggle with the board of directors in 1985, Jobs left Apple and founded NeXT, a company that developed a computer platform for universities and businesses. In 1986, he acquired the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm, turning it into Pixar. He remained Pixar's CEO and majority shareholder until the studio was acquired by The Walt Disney Company in 2006, making Jobs the largest private shareholder and member of Disney's board of directors.

Difficulties developing a new operating system for the Mac led to Apple's purchase of NeXT in 1996 to use NeXTSTEP as the basis for Mac OS X. As part of the deal, Jobs was given a position as an advisor to Apple. The deal was orchestrated by Jobs. By 1997, Jobs had regained control of Apple, heading the corporation. Under his leadership, the company was saved from bankruptcy and a year later began to make a profit.

Over the next decade, Jobs led the development of the iMac, iTunes, iPod, iPhone, and iPad, as well as the development of the Apple Store, iTunes Store, App Store, and iBookstore. The success of these products and services, which provided several years of stable financial profit, allowed Apple to become the most valuable public company in the world in 2011. Many commentators call Apple's revival one of the greatest accomplishments in business history. At the same time, Jobs was criticized for his authoritarian management style, aggressive actions towards competitors, the desire for total control over products even after they were sold to the buyer.

Jobs has received public recognition and a number of awards for his impact on the technology and music industries. He is often called a "visionary" and even "the father of the digital revolution". Jobs was a brilliant public speaker and led presentations of innovative products on new level turning them into exciting shows. His instantly recognizable figure in a black turtleneck, faded jeans and sneakers is surrounded by a cult following.

After eight years of fighting the disease, Steve Jobs died of pancreatic cancer in 2011.

Steve Jobs: "1.5 million Armenians were subjected to the Genocide. Tell us how it happened?"

The book Steve Jobs: A Biography by Walter Isaacson says that Steve's adoptive mother, Clara Jobs (nee Hagopian), is a descendant of Armenians who escaped the genocide at the beginning of the twentieth century. Her father Luis Hakobyan was born in Malatya in 1894 and her mother Victoria Artinyan was born in Izmir in 1894.

The story of Steve Jobs' visit to Turkey, which took place in 2006, is curious. Jobs' Turkish guide Asil Tuncer told about this difficult visit. According to him, the last visit of the late Steve Jobs to Turkey caused great outrage in the country. Tuncer claims that Jobs considered the Turks an enemy and even refused to shake hands with the tour guide before he left the ship.

“We started our journey. Jobs most wanted to see the Hagia Sophia. Approaching her, he asked a question about the minarets. In turn, I replied that after the capture, the former church was turned into a mosque, and a minaret was added in the southeastern part. After that, a flurry of questions rained down on me, ”writes Tuncer.

“What happened to so many Christians? You millions of Muslims in a non-Muslim environment, what have you done?” Jobs lamented. Before the guide could even open his mouth, he heard another question: “1.5 million Armenians were subjected to the Genocide. Tell us how it happened?"

After these questions, the Turkish guide began to prove to Jobs that there was no genocide at all. The guide's denials, his tales of civil war and the betrayal of the Armenians during World War I further angered Steve Jobs.

After all, Steve and his wife Marina met with the owner of the travel agency and expressed their dissatisfaction with the cruise. They expressed a desire to leave the ship ahead of schedule. In the end, without saying a word to the Turkish guide, and leaving his hand hanging in the air, Jobs left the ship. The promised iPhone guide also did not receive.

Achievements

  • National Medal of Technology (1985, President Ronald Reagan awarded Jobs and Steve Wozniak, and they were among the first to receive this award)
  • Jefferson Award (1987, for public service in the category "best public service by a person 35 years of age or younger")
  • In 1988, the magazine "Inventor and Innovator" recognized Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak as winners of the "Technology Chariot of Progress" competition.
  • In December 2007, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and his wife Maria Shriver inducted Jobs into the California Hall of Fame.
  • In 1989, Inc. named Jobs Entrepreneur of the Decade
  • In November 2007, Jobs was named the most powerful person in business by Fortune magazine.
  • In August 2009, Jobs was named the most admired entrepreneur by teenagers in a Junior Achievement poll.
  • In November 2009, Fortune named Jobs "CEO of the Decade"
  • In March 2012, Fortune named Steve Jobs "the greatest entrepreneur of our time"
  • In November 2010, Jobs was ranked 17th on the Forbes list of the most influential people in the world.
  • In December 2010, the Financial Times named Jobs Person of the Year.
  • In December 2011, Graphisoft unveiled the world's first bronze statue of Steve Jobs in Budapest, calling him one of the greatest figures of our time.
  • In February 2012, Jobs was posthumously awarded the Grammy Trustees Award (given to those who have influenced the music industry in areas other than performing)

Memory

Books

  • "Little Kingdom" (1984) by Michael Moritz on the founding of Apple Computer
  • "The Second Coming of Steve Jobs" (2001) by Alan Deutschman
  • «iKona. Steve Jobs (2005) by Jeffrey Young and William Simon
  • iWoz (2006) by Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple. This is Wozniak's autobiography, but it covers much of Jobs' life and work at Apple.
  • "iPresentation. Persuasion Lessons from Apple Leader Steve Jobs (2010) Carmina Gallo
  • "Steve Jobs" (2011), authorized biography written by Walter Isaacson
  • "Steve Jobs. Leadership Lessons (2011), Jay Elliot, William Simon. A book about the unique management style of Steve Jobs
  • Jobs Rules (2011) Carmina Gallo
  • "Inside Apple" (2012) Adam Lashinsky. Talks about the secret systems, tactics, and leadership strategies that made it possible for Steve Jobs and his company to work.
  • "Steve Jobs. The Man Who Thought Different (2012) Karen Blumenthal. Detailed biography of Steve Jobs

Documentaries

  • "The Machine That Changed the World" (1992) - the third series of this five-part film, "Paperback Computer", chronicles Jobs and his role in the early days of Apple
  • Triumph of the Nerds (1996) - three-part documentary for PBS about the rise of the personal computer
  • "Nerds 2.0.1" (1998) - a three-part documentary for PBS (sequel to "Triumph of the Nerds") about the development of the Internet
  • iGenius: How Steve Jobs Changed the World (2011) - documentary on Discovery with Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman
  • Steve Jobs: And One More (2011) - PBS documentary produced by Pioneer Productions
  • "Unknown Jobs" (2012) - AppleInsider.ru documentary about the founder of Apple, covering the unknown side of the life of Steve Jobs

Art films

  • Steve Jobs is a planned adaptation by Sony Pictures of Walter Isaacson's biography of Jobs with writer and director Aaron Sorkin.
  • Jobs is a planned independent film by Joshua Michael Stern. Jobs will be portrayed by Ashton Kutcher
  • Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999) - A TNT film that chronicles the rise of Apple and Microsoft from the early 1970s to 1997. Jobs played by Noah Wyle

Theatre

  • The Agony and Ecstasy of Steve Jobs (2012) - New York Public Theater production with Mike Daisy

Miscellaneous

  • Jobs was dedicated to the Disney film "John Carter" and the Pixar cartoon "Brave"
  • On the first anniversary of the death of Jobs in Odessa, a sculptural composition "Thank you, Steve!" Was opened. The 330-kilogram composition is an almost two-meter palm (Steve Jobs) made from scrap metal

Bibliography

Books about Steve Jobs in Russian

  • Steve Jobs Steve Jobs on Business: 250 Sayings from a Man Who Changed the World = The Business Wisdom of Steve Jobs. - M.: "Alpina Publisher", 2012. - 256 p. - ISBN 978-5-9614-1808-8
  • Isaacson W. Steve Jobs = Steve Jobs: A Biography. - M.: Astrel, 2012. - 688 p. - ISBN 978-5-271-39378-5
  • Young J.S., Simon W.L. iKona. Steve Jobs = iCon. Steve Jobs. - M.: Eksmo, 2007. - 448 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-21035-0
  • Keni L. What Steve is thinking. - M.: AST, 2012. - 284 p. - ISBN 978-5-017-06251-3
  • Gallo K. Jobs rules. Universal principles of success from the founder of Apple. - M.: Mann, Ivanov and Ferber, 2011. - 240 p. - ISBN 978-5-91657-301-5
  • Wozniak C., Smith D. Steve Jobs and I. True story Apple = iWoz. - M.: Eksmo, 2011. - 288 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-53452-4
  • Beam J. Steve Jobs: First Person. - M.: Olimp-Business, 2012. - 176 p. - ISBN 978-5-9693-0208-2
  • Eliot D., Simon W. Steve Jobs: Lessons in Leadership. - M.: Eksmo, 2012. - 336 p. - ISBN 978-5-699-50848-8


Name: Steve Jobs

Age: 56 years old

Place of Birth: San Francisco, USA

Place of death: Palo Alto, USA

Activity: entrepreneur, founder of Apple

Family status: was married

Steve Jobs - Biography

It is easy to talk about a person gifted from childhood, such is the entrepreneur and founder of the era of continuous computerization, Steve Jobs.

Childhood, inventor's family

A Native American from San Francisco was born into a family associated with science. Her father is a teaching assistant at the university, and her mother was educated at the same institution. There was no official marriage in the couple, since the girl's parents were categorically against their acquaintance and living together. Little Steve was born almost secretly, and then he was raised by foster parents.


The Jobs spouses were happy to pay attention to the baby, since they could not have their own children. The real mother wanted her son to get a good higher education. From the very beginning, it seemed that the biography of an unwanted child could not be happy.

Stephen Jobs - businessman

Soon the couple adopted the girl so that the boy would have a sister. The whole family chose Mountain View as their permanent residence and left San Francisco. Adoptive father was an auto mechanic, he found high paying job to pay for the education of the children. Steve was not interested in mechanics, he preferred electronics. Although the town was small, it was believed that all high technologies were located in it. The biography of the boy was a foregone conclusion. Stephen was not stupid, but he was not interested in studying.


Once a miracle happened: one of the teachers managed to instill diligence, and the boy finished two classes at once as an external student. With radio electronics, the student was on “you”, he himself managed to assemble a frequency meter using electronics, he worked in one of the famous companies. Like many teenagers, from the age of 16, a passion for the hippie culture and the Beatles begins. He began to try drugs, gets acquainted with a guy much older than himself. Stephen Wozniak became a friend of Jobs for many years.


The guys were brought together by a passion for computers and electronic technology. They knew how to invent, and the first device invented was a tool for hacking the telephone network. The guys learned how to select tone mode signals. Then the device began to be in demand, and friends helped out a lot of money. Steve Jobs easily entered the college, which taught the liberal arts. But after 6 months he drops out of school, as at that time he is fond of the practices of the East and vegetarian food.

Apple

Steve gets a job at a company that produces games for the computer. And an old friend creates boards and improves them. The two Stephens set up their own firm. In this duo, it was necessary to take the lead, and Jobs did it perfectly. Thus began the biography of the first computers.


The first copies were primitive, but the companions continued to work on the perfection of their offspring. As a result, the improved Apple II became with a plastic case and a beautiful appearance. Financially, the company prospered, but due to the difficult nature of Jobs, scandals often arose between friends. Jobs quit, but immediately organized a new firm.

Jobs retrained

Stephen bought George Lucas' animation studio to create commercials, but his cartoons receive prestigious awards. Jobs is engaged in the creation of animation, and after a while he manages to profitably sell his studio to the famous Disney company. Returns again to his beloved company, the founder of which he was. Managed to find a new market and always strived to act in the spirit of the times. He owns the production of a media player, a touch mobile phone iPhone, a tablet with Internet iPad.

Steve Jobs - biography of personal life

Steve had many beloved and loving women. The first was Chris Ann Brennan. Relations with her were always complex and confusing. When their daughter Lisa was born, her father Steve only recognized her by doing a DNA test. Then an advertising agent Barbara Jasinski, singer Joan Baez, Tina Redse, who works with computers, appeared in the life of a young man. None of these women became Steve's official wife. Lauren Powell became the official wife, she worked in a bank.


A year after the marriage proposal, they got married. The couple had a son, Reed, and daughters, Erin and Eve. The father understood that electronic technology was harmful to the health of young children, and computers and telephones were banned for Jobs' children for a long time. In the future, Steve decided to find his real mother and sister, began to communicate with them, which he had been deprived of since childhood.

Steve Jobs - Sickness and Death

The businessman was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, all the treatment undertaken by his relatives did not work. The businessman died, the whole family was with him. Cause of death apple genius was an oncological disease. A film was made about Steve Jobs, books and memoirs were written. His biography is interesting to many screenwriters and directors. But do not forget that this man had a talent not for entrepreneurship itself, but for invention and for the latest computer developments.

Steve Jobs - Documentary

Steven Paul Jobs (Steven Paul Jobs, 1955-2011) - American engineer and entrepreneur, co-founder and CEO of Apple Inc. He is considered one of the key figures in the computer industry, a man who largely determined its development.

Steve Jobs was born in San Francisco on February 24, 1955. It cannot be said that he was a desired child. Just a week after his birth, his unmarried mother, graduate student Joanna Shible, gave up the baby for adoption. The adoptive parents of the child were Paul and Clara Jobs (Paul Jobs, Clara Jobs) from Mountain View, California. They named him Steven Paul Jobs. Clara worked for an accounting firm, and Paul Jobs was a mechanic for a company that made laser machines.

Childhood

When Steve Jobs was 12 years old, on a whim of a child and not without an early display of teenage impudence, he called William Hewlett, then president of Hewlett-Packard, on his home phone number. Then Jobs was assembling some kind of electrical appliance, and he needed some parts. Hewlett chatted with Jobs for 20 minutes, agreed to send the necessary parts, and offered him a summer job at Hewlett-Packard, the company within whose walls the entire Silicon Valley industry was born. It was at work at Hewlett-Packard that Steve Jobs met a man whose acquaintance largely determined his future fate - Stephen Wozniak. He got a job at Hewlett-Packard, leaving the boring classes at the University of California, Berkeley. Work in the company was much more interesting to him due to his passion for radio engineering.

Studies

In 1972, Steve Jobs graduated from high school and entered Reed College in Portland, Oregon, but dropped out after his first semester. Steve Jobs explains his decision to drop out this way: “I naively chose a college that was almost as expensive as Stanford, and all of my parents' savings went to college tuition. Six months later, I didn't see the point. I didn't know at all what I was going to do with my life, and I didn't understand how college would help me figure it out. I was pretty scared at the time, but looking back, it was one of the best decisions I ever made in my life.”

Dropping out of school, Jobs focused on what was really interesting to him. However, it was not easy to remain a free student at the university now. “It wasn't all romantic,” Jobs recalls. – I didn’t have a dorm room, so I had to sleep on the floor in my friends’ rooms. I used Coke bottles for five cents each to buy myself food and walked seven miles across town every Sunday night to have a proper meal once a week at a Hare Krishna temple.”

The adventures of Steve Jobs on the college campus after the expulsion continued for another 18 months, after which in the fall of 1974 he returned to California. There he met up with an old friend and technical genius, Stephen Wozniak. On the advice of a friend, Jobs got a job as a technician at Atari, a popular video game company. Steve Jobs did not have any ambitious plans then. He just wanted to earn money for a trip to India.

But in addition to the then fashionable interest in India and the hippie subculture, Steve Jobs had an interest in electronics, which grew stronger every day. Together with Wozniak, Jobs came to the Homebrew computer club in Palo Alto, which at that time united many young people who were keenly interested in computers and electronics. The club gave a lot to the future founders of Apple. In particular, thanks to the club, they began their "collaboration" with the telephone giant AT & T (T), however, not in the way that this company would like. Steve Jobs read about an interesting discovery by American radio amateurs, which made it possible to illegally connect to the AT&T telephone network and make free calls over long distances, and caught fire with a new and promising business. Meeting with John Draper, who was then actively popularizing this discovery, Jobs and Wozniak decided to start making the so-called “blue boxes”, special devices that made it possible to make free calls over long distances. So Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak started tinkering with electronics together in Jobs' parent garage.

First business

However, they did not deal with the “blue boxes” for long. Jobs was already packing for a philosophy tour of India, as planned. From India, Jobs returned with rich impressions, a shaved head and in traditional Indian clothes. At this time, an interesting incident occurred with the founders of Apple, which especially vividly describes the technical talent of Steven Wozniak and the business acumen of Steve Jobs. At Atari, Jobs was given the task of designing the circuitry for the Breakout video game. According to Atari founder Nolan Bushnell, the company asked Jobs to minimize the number of chips on the board and pay $100 for each chip he could remove from the circuit. Steve Jobs was not very well versed in the construction of electronic circuits, so he offered Wozniak to split the bonus in half if he took up this business. Atari was quite surprised when Jobs presented them with a board that had 50 chips removed. Wozniak created a scheme so dense that it was impossible to recreate it in mass production. Jobs then told Wozniak that Atari had only paid $700 (not $5,000 as it actually was), and Wozniak got his cut, $350.

However, from the very first meeting, Jobs admired Steven Wozniak. “He was the only person who understood computers better than me,” Steve Jobs admits a few years later. Undoubtedly, Wozniak played important role in the life of his friend, without his engineering genius, there would be neither Apple nor the triumph of Steve Jobs, solemnly presenting the company's new product.

Apple

Steve Jobs was only 20 years old when he saw the computer that Wozniak had built for his own use. The idea of ​​having a personal—personal—computer struck Jobs, and he persuaded Wozniak to start building computers to sell. Initially, both planned to deal only with the manufacture of printed circuits - the basis of a computer, but in the end they came to assembling finished computers.
In early 1976, Jobs asked draftsman Ronald Wayne, with whom he had once worked at Atari, to join their business. Jobs, Wozniak and Wayne founded Apple Computer Co. April 1, 1976 in the form of a partnership. It must be said that only young people who had not yet left their rebellious age could come up with the idea to call computer company"Apple" (Apple - in English means "apple").

The start-up company needed start-up capital, and Steve Jobs sold his van and Wozniak sold his beloved Hewlett Packard programmable calculator. As a result, they helped out about $1300. Jobs convinced Wozniak to leave Hewlett Packard to become vice president and head of product development at the new company.

Soon they also received the first large order from a local electronics store - 50 pieces. However, the young company did not then have the money to purchase parts to assemble such a large number computers. Then Steve Jobs convinced component suppliers to provide materials on credit for 30 days. After receiving the parts, Jobs, Wozniak and Wayne assembled the cars in the evenings, and within 10 days they delivered the entire batch to the store. The company's first computer was called the Apple I. The store that ordered the machines sold it for $666.66 because Wozniak liked numbers with the same digits. But despite this large order, Wayne lost faith in the success of the undertaking and left the company, taking $800.

Already in the fall of the same year, Wozniak completed work on the Apple II prototype, which became the first mass-produced personal computer in the world. It had a plastic case, a floppy disk reader, and support for color graphics. To ensure successful sales of the computer, Jobs ordered the launch of an advertising campaign and the development of a beautiful and standard packaging for the computer, on which the company's new logo, a rainbow bitten apple, was clearly visible. According to Jobs, the colors of the rainbow should emphasize the fact that the Apple II is capable of supporting color graphics. Since the release model range Apple II, more than 5 million computers were sold, for which programmers created about 16,000 applications. At the end of 1980, Apple held a successful initial public offering that resulted in Steve Jobs becoming a millionaire at 25.

In December 1979, Steve Jobs and several other Apple employees gained access to the Xerox Research Center (XRX) in Palo Alto. There, Jobs first saw the company's prototype, the Alto computer, which used a graphical interface that allowed the user to issue commands by hovering over a graphic object on the monitor. As colleagues recall, this invention struck Jobs, and he immediately began to confidently say that all future computers would use this innovation. And no wonder, because it contained three things through which the path to the heart of the consumer lies. Steve Jobs already then understood that it was simplicity, ease of use and aesthetics. He immediately got excited about the idea of ​​creating such a computer.

Then the company spent several months developing a new Lisa computer, named after Jobs' daughter. In 1980, Steve tried to lead this project, in which he hoped to embody the revolutionary innovation that he saw in Xerox Laboratories. However, Apple President Michael Scott (Michael Scott) refused Jobs. The project was led by another person. A few months later, Jobs begged Scott to put him in charge of another project on a less powerful mainstream computer, the Macintosh. Largely at the instigation of Jobs, a competition unleashed between the Lisa and Macintosh development teams.

In the end, Jobs lost the race when the Lisa came out in 1983, becoming the first mainstream computer with a graphical interface. However, the commercial failure of this project followed, mainly due to the high price ($9995) and the limited set of software applications for this computer. Therefore, the second round was for Jobs and his Macintosh. Like the Lisa, the Macintosh used an innovation peeped from the Xerox labs - a graphical interface and a mouse. But unlike the Lisa, the Macintosh was a commercially successful computer that revolutionized the industry. The Macintosh operating system interface became the standard, and its principle was used in all operating systems that were created from that moment on.

When Jobs urged John Scully to leave Pepsi-Cola to become Apple's CEO in 1983, he pointed out that Apple employees were writing new pages of history: "Do you really want to sell soft drinks for the rest of your life or you want to try to change the world?” This time, Jobs' ability to convince him did not fail, and Sculley became the director of Apple. However, over time it turned out that his vision of the computer business is very different from the vision of Jobs, who was then too impatient for a different point of view. The conflict between Sculley and Jobs grew, and eventually led to the fact that Jobs was forced to leave Apple, being removed from project management.

In 1985, against the backdrop of the release of a number of unsuccessful computer models (the commercial failure of the Apple III), the loss of a significant market share and ongoing conflicts in the leadership, Wozniak left Apple, and some time later Steve Jobs also left the company. Also in 1985, Jobs founded NeXT, a hardware and workstation company.

In 1986, Steve Jobs co-founded the Pixar animation studio. Under Jobs, Pixar produced films such as Toy Story and Monsters, Inc. In 2006, Jobs sold Pixar to Walt Disney Studios for $7.4 million in company stock. Jobs remained on the board of directors of Pixar and at the same time became the largest individual shareholder of Disney, having received at his disposal 7 percent of the shares of the studio.

The return of Steve Jobs to Apple took place in 1996, when the company founded by Jobs decided to acquire NeXT. Jobs joined the board of directors of the company and became the interim manager of Apple, which was going through a serious crisis at that moment.

In 2000, the word “temporary” disappeared from the title of Jobs’s position, and the founder of Apple himself entered the Guinness Book of Records as the CEO with the most modest salary in the world (according to official documents, Jobs’s salary at that time was $ 1 a year; subsequently, a similar the salary scheme used by other corporate executives).

In 2001, Steve Jobs introduced the first iPod player. Within a few years, iPod sales became the company's main source of income.
In 2006, the company introduced the Apple TV network media player.
In 2007, sales of the iPhone mobile phone began.
In 2008, Steve showed off the thinnest laptop in the world, called the MacBook Air.

Being engaged in a business that completely captured his life, he barely noticed that his daughter was born. As Jobs himself admits, since 1977, when Lisa was born (that was the name of his daughter), he gave work “150%” of his time and effort. Lisa lived with her mother, who never married Steve Jobs. He began to recognize his daughter, communicate with her only years later.

Steve Jobs and Bill Gates

Jobs's relationship with competitors in his market has always been ambiguous. He stole ideas from someone without a twinge of conscience, maliciously mocked someone. One of them is .

These two legendary people have a lot in common, but they are completely different. Born in the same year, with similar life histories, they worked hard to succeed and break through to the top of the computer industry. But, if Jobs was not afraid to take risks and relied on innovation, then Gates moved to the top according to the standard business multiplication scheme. Having taken a monopoly in software, licensing Microsoft, he almost simply began to receive money from sales, developing very slowly and not making any revolutionary innovations.

But, despite their different attitudes to doing business, Steve Jobs and Bill Gates will forever go down in the history of the modern development of personal computers and software.

Lost interview:

Ever since the birth of Apple, Steven Jobs knew for sure that he had a special mission on Earth, and he could change the world. “He always believed,” recalls Stephen Wozniak, “that he would lead all of humanity.” The attitude towards the “messiah in jeans” is by no means unambiguous and, as a rule, is very far from colorless indifference. In addition to friends and fans who call him the best manager, there are those who openly dislike him, finding him overly self-confident and self-centered. The sharp nature of Jobs is legendary. Entering into a business or personal relationship with Jobs, intelligent and well-mannered businessmen, accustomed to conduct polite business dialogue, find themselves in an extremely uncomfortable environment. I must say, the public loves scandals, and people like Jobs have the unique ability to generate them around them with regular frequency, bringing sharpness and novelty to life.

Death of Steve Jobs

Undoubtedly, he was a man of genius in his field. His death was a great loss not only for his family, friends and employees. The world has lost this enterprising man who changed society's perceptions of the personal computer. The cause of Steve Jobs' death was pancreatic cancer. He struggled with the disease for eight long years, remaining active to the last. Steve Jobs' date of death is October 5, 2011.

Steven Paul Jobs is a man who is one of the universally recognized authorities of the global computer industry, who largely determined the direction of its development. Steve Jobs, as he is known all over the world, became one of the founders of Apple, Next, Pixar corporations and created one of the most odious smartphones in history - the iPhone, which has been the leader in popularity among mobile gadgets for 6 generations.

Founder of Apple

The future star of the computer world was born in the small town of Mountain View on February 24, 1955.

Fate sometimes throws out very funny things. Coincidence or not, but in a few years this city will become the heart of Silicon Valley. The biological parents of the newborn, an immigrant from Syria Steve Abdulfattah and an American graduate student Joan Carol Schible, were not officially married and decided to give the boy up for adoption, setting future parents only one condition - to give the child a higher education. So Steve got into the family of Paul and Clara Jobs, nee Hakobyan.

Passion for electronics captured Steve in his school years. It was then that he met Steve Wozniak, who was also a little "obsessed" with the world of technology.

This meeting became a kind of fateful one, because it was after it that Steve began to think about own business in the field of computer technology. Friends implemented their first project when Jobs was only 13 years old. It was a $150 BlueBox device that allows you to make long distance calls absolutely free. Wozniak was responsible for the technical side, and Jobs was engaged in the marketing of finished products. This distribution of duties will continue for many years, only without the risk of thundering into the police for illegal actions.

Jobs graduated from high school in 1972 and went to Reed College in Portland, Oregon. Studying bored him very quickly, and he dropped out of college immediately after the first semester, but he was in no hurry to leave the walls of the educational institution.

For another year and a half, Steve wandered around the rooms of friends, slept on the floor, handed over bottles of Coca-Cola and had free lunch once a week at the Hare Krishna temple, which was located nearby.

Still, fate decided to turn to Jobs and pushed him to enroll in calligraphy courses, attending which made him think about how to equip the Mac OS system with scalable fonts.

A little later, Steve got a job at Atari, where his duties included the development of computer games.

Four years later, Wozniak will create his first computer, and Jobs, according to old habit, will be engaged in its sales.

Apple

The creative union of talented computer scientists very soon grew into a business strategy. April 1, 1976, the well-known April Fool's Day, they founded Apple, whose office is located in the garage of Jobs' parents. The history of choosing the name of the company is interesting. It seems to many that behind him lies some very deep meaning. But, unfortunately, such people will be bitterly disappointed.

Jobs suggested the name Apple because it would appear right before Atari in the telephone directory.

Apple was officially registered in early 1977.

The technical side of the work, as before, remained with Wozniak, Jobs was responsible for marketing. Although, in fairness, it must be said that it was Jobs who convinced his partner to refine the microcomputer circuit, which later served as the beginning of the creation of a new market for personal computers.

The first model of the computer received a quite logical name - Apple I, the sales of which in the first year amounted to 200 units at $666.66 each (witty, isn't it?).

Quite a good result, but the Apple II, released in 1977, was a real breakthrough.

The stunning success of two models of Apple computers attracted serious investors to the young company, which helped it to take a leading position in the computer market, and made its founders real millionaires. Interesting fact: Microsoft company was formed six months later, and it was she who developed software for Apple. This was the first, but not the last, meeting between Jobs and Gates.

Macintosh

After some time, Apple and Xerox entered into a contract between themselves, which largely determined the future of computer technology. Xerox's developments could already be called revolutionary then, but the company's management could not find practical application for them. The alliance with Apple helped solve this problem. It resulted in the launch of the Macintosh project, under which a line of personal computers was developed. The entire technological process, from design to sale to the end consumer, was handled by Apple Inc. This project can be safely called the period of the birth of the modern computer interface with its windows and virtual buttons.

The first Macintosh computer, or simply Mac, was released on January 24, 1984. In fact, it was the first personal computer, the main working tool of which was the mouse, which makes machine control extremely simple and convenient.

Before that, only "initiates" who knew the intricate "machine" language could cope with this task.

The Macintosh simply did not have competitors that could even remotely come close in terms of their technological potential and sales volume. For Apple, the release of these computers was a huge success, as a result of which it completely stopped the development and production of the Apple II family.

Jobs leaving

In the early 80s, Apple became a huge corporation, releasing successful new products to the market over and over again. But it was at this time that Jobs began to lose his position in the company's management. Not everyone liked his authoritarian management style, or rather, no one liked it.

An open conflict with the board of directors led to the fact that in 1985, when Jobs was only 30 years old, he was simply fired.

Having lost his high post, Jobs did not give up, but, on the contrary, plunged headlong into the development of new projects. The first of these was the NeXT company, which was engaged in the production of complex computers for higher education and business structures. The low capacity of this market segment did not allow for significant sales. So this project cannot be called super successful.

With the graphics studio The Graphics Group (later renamed Pixar), which Jobs bought from LucasFilm for just $5 million (when its real value was estimated at $10 million), things were very different.

During Jobs' tenure, the company produced several feature-length animated films that were a huge hit at the box office. Among them are Monsters, Inc. and Toy Story. In 2006, Jobs sold Pixar to Walt Disney for $7.5 million and a 7% stake in the Walt Disney Company, while Disney's heirs own only 1%.

Return to Apple

In 1997, 12 years after his exile, Steve Jobs returned to Apple as an interim director. Three years later he became a full manager. Jobs was able to take the company to the next level by closing several unprofitable lines and completing the development of the new iMac computer with great success.

In the coming years, Apple will become a true trendsetter in the high-tech market.

Her developments have consistently become bestsellers: the iPhone phone, the iPod player, the iPad tablet. As a result, the company reached the third place in terms of capitalization in the world, surpassing even Microsoft.

Steve Jobs Speech to Stanford Graduates

Disease

In October 2003, during a medical examination, doctors diagnosed Jobs with a disappointing diagnosis - pancreatic cancer.

The disease, which in the vast majority of cases is fatal, the head of Apple developed in a very rare form that can be treated through surgery. But Jobs had his own personal convictions against interfering with the human body, so at first he refused the operation.

The treatment lasted 9 months, during which none of Apple's investors even suspected that the founder of the company had a fatal illness. But it did not give any positive results. Therefore, Jobs nevertheless decided on a surgical intervention, having previously publicly announced his state of health. The operation took place on July 31, 2004 at the Stanford Medical Center, and was very successful.

But the health problems of Steve Jobs did not end there. In December 2008, he was diagnosed with a hormonal imbalance. In the summer of 2009, he underwent a liver transplant, according to representatives of the Methodist Hospital at the University of Tennessee.

Steve Jobs quotes

Steve Jobs

Stephen Paul Jobs, better known as Steve Jobs American entrepreneur, co-founder and CEO of the American corporation Apple. Passed away October 5, 2011

Biography

  • Steven Jobs was born in the town of Mountain View, California on February 24, 1955. His childhood and youth were spent there, in the foster family of Paul and Clara Jobs, to whom he was given to be raised by his own mother.
  • When Steve Jobs was 12, on a childish whim and not without an early display of teenage cheekiness, he called William Hewlett, then president of Hewlett-Packard, on his home number. Then Jobs wanted to assemble an indicator of the frequency of electric current for the school physics classroom, and he needed some details. Hewlett chatted with Jobs for 20 minutes, agreed to send the necessary parts, and offered him a summer job at Hewlett-Packard, the company within whose walls the entire Silicon Valley industry was born.
  • At school, carried away by electronics and gravitating towards communicating with older children, Jobs meets Steve Wozniak, his future colleague at Apple. Together with his good friend Steve Wozniak, he improved John Draper's phreak technique and designed the "Blue Box" - a device capable of reproducing signals at the frequencies needed to "trick" the telephone system and make free calls. According to some reports, colleagues not only sold "blue boxes", but also had fun through international calls - in particular, they called the Pope on behalf of Henry Kissinger.

Steve Jobs (left) and Steve Wozniak

  • Subsequently, according to legend, on the basis of the same scheme, they built the first joint business. Wozniak made these devices during his studies at Berkeley, and Jobs, as a high school student, sold them.
  • After graduating from high school in 1972, Steve Jobs entered Reed College in Portland, Oregon. After the first semester, he was expelled of his own free will, but remained to live in the rooms of friends for about a year and a half. Then he got into calligraphy courses, which later prompted him to think about equipping the Mac OS system with scalable fonts. Steve then took a job at Atari.

1976: Beginning of Apple

Stephen Jobs and Stephen Wozniak became the founders of Apple. Engaged in the production of computers of its own design, it was founded on April 1, 1976, and officially registered in early 1977. The author of most of the developments was Stephen Wozniak, while Jobs acted as a marketer. It is believed that it was Jobs who convinced Wozniak to refine the microcomputer circuit he had invented, and thereby gave impetus to the creation of a new market for personal computers.

The first personal computer that Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak introduced was the Apple I, priced at $666.66. Subsequently, a new computer, the Apple II, was created. The success of the Apple I and Apple II made Apple a key player in the personal computer market.

In December 1980, the first public sale of the company's shares (IPO) took place, which made Steve Jobs a multimillionaire.

In 1985, Steve Jobs was fired from Apple.

1986: Purchase of Pixar company

In 1986, Steve buys The Graphics Group (later renamed Pixar) from Lucasfilm for $5 million. Although the estimated value of the company was $10 million, George Lucas needed the money at the time to finance the filming of Star Wars.

Under Jobs, Pixar produced films such as Toy Story and Monsters, Inc. In 2006, Jobs sold Pixar to Walt Disney Studios for $7.4 billion in exchange for Disney stock. Jobs remained on the board of directors of Disney and at the same time became the largest individual shareholder of Disney, receiving at his disposal 7 percent of the shares of the studio.

1991: FBI investigates Jobs

In an interview with the FBI, Jobs admitted to using marijuana, hashish, and the psychedelic drug LSD between 1970 and 1974. Also, a source in the department reports that in his youth, Jobs was actively fond of mystical and oriental philosophy, which seriously influenced his worldview in the future. In the course of collecting the dossier on Jobs, the FBI engaged an agent network throughout the country, and interviews were held with dozens of people who knew him then. Moreover, the bureau collected data both on the business qualities and intentions of Jobs, his relations with investors, and the personal life of a businessman, for example, his first illegitimate daughter. The full FBI report on page 191 can be downloaded.

Page from the FBI dossier on Steve Jobs

1997: Return to Apple

  • 1997 - Steve Jobs becomes interim CEO of Apple, replacing former CEO Gil Amelio.
  • 1998 - While serving as interim CEO of Apple, closes several unprofitable projects such as Apple Newton, Cyberdog and OpenDoc. The new iMac was introduced. With the advent of the iMac, sales of Apple computers began to increase.
  • 2000 - the word "temporary" disappeared from the title of Jobs' position, and the founder of Apple himself entered the Guinness Book of Records as the CEO with the most modest salary in the world (according to official documents, Jobs's salary at that time was $ 1 a year; subsequently, a similar salary scheme used by other corporate executives). Steve Jobs received an award from Apple in the form of a $43.5 million Gulfstream jet with an agreement under which the company assumed all costs of maintaining the aircraft.
  • 2001 - Steve Jobs introduced the first iPod player. Within a few years, iPod sales became the company's main source of income. Under the direction of Jobs Apple significantly strengthened its position in the personal computer market.
  • 2003 - iTunes Store created. Steve Jobs was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. S. Jobs is diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic tumor known as neuroendocrine tumor of the islet cell.
  • August 2004 Jobs underwent surgery, the tumor was successfully removed. During the absence of S. Jobs, Apple was managed by Tim Cook, then head of international sales.
  • October 2004 S. Jobs first appears in public after the operation: he attends a press conference dedicated to the opening of a new Apple store in California. After some time, S. Jobs said that "the disease made him understand: you need to live a full life."
  • 2005 - At the WWDC 2005 Developers Conference, Steve Jobs announced a move to Intel.
  • 2006 - Apple introduced the first laptop based on Intel processors.
  • 2007 - Apple introduced the network multimedia player Apple TV, on June 29, sales of the IPhone mobile phone began.
  • 2008 - Apple introduced a thin laptop dubbed the MacBook Air.
  • July 2008 There are comments in the press that the head of Apple has lost a lot of weight and this causes rumors of a relapse of the disease. During a conference on Apple's financial results, company representatives answer repeated questions about the health of S. Jobs, that this is a "private matter."
  • September 2008 In response to his obituary, erroneously published by Bloomberg, S. Jobs quotes Mark Twain at one of the events organized by Apple: "The rumors about my death are greatly exaggerated."
  • December 2008 The head of Apple does not give the traditional speech at the Macworld trade conference, which causes new rumors about his illness.
  • January 2009 S. Jobs declares his intention to continue to manage the company, explaining the strong weight loss by hormonal imbalance. However, two weeks later S. Jobs announces his six-month leave for health reasons. Jobs needed this time for a liver transplant and for the postoperative recovery course. The need for a liver transplant in Steve Jobs arose due to the side effects of drugs in the treatment of pancreatic cancer.

During the vacation, Jobs handed over control of Apple to Tim Cook. Subsequently, T. Cook will receive a bonus of $ 5 million for excellent leadership of the company during the absence of S. Jobs and other services to Apple.

  • June 2009 S. Jobs returns after a liver transplant and reports from doctors that the prognosis for his state of health is excellent.
  • On January 17, 2011, Steve Jobs went on vacation for health reasons. Several blogs citing Apple employees reported that Jobs was hospitalized. According to a Businesswire entry, Jobs himself notified company employees of his vacation by sending them an email. In it, Jobs writes that he made the decision himself.

The full text of the letter, quoted by Businesswire, reads: “Team! At my request, the board of directors granted me a medical leave so that I can now focus on my health. I remain president and will continue to be involved in the company's major strategic decisions.

I asked Tim Cook to be in charge of all of Apple's day-to-day operations. I'm confident that Tim and the rest of the senior management team will do an amazing job making the plans we have for 2011 a reality.

I love Apple so much and hope to be back as soon as I can. My family and I would deeply appreciate respect for our privacy. Steve".

  • On August 24, 2011, Apple officially announced that its founder and CEO Steve Jobs has stepped down as CEO. On this day, Steve Jobs released an open letter addressed to "Apple leadership and the community."

The letter said: “I have always said that if the day ever comes when I can no longer fulfill my duties and meet expectations as the CEO of Apple, I will be the first to let you know. Unfortunately, that day has come.

I'm retiring as an Apple CEO. I would like to serve as chairman of the board of directors and serve Apple if the board deems it possible.

In order to maintain continuity (company development - approx. CNews), I strongly recommend appointing my successor, Tim Cook (Tim Cook) ". Jobs thanked all employees of the company for their work.

The resignation was made by Steve Jobs on August 24, 2011 at the company's board of directors. After the announcement of Jobs' departure, the value of Apple's shares in the OTC market fell by 7% to $357.4.

At the council, Jobs was elected to the position he was applying for: chairman of Apple's board of directors. Jobs's place in the company was taken by Tim Cook, who previously worked as the chief operating officer.

Death and after death

  • On Wednesday, October 5, 2011, Steve Jobs passed away at the age of 56. The cause of his death was pancreatic cancer. S. Jobs struggled with the most dangerous disease for seven years.
The house where Steve Jobs lived. City of Palo Alto, California

We have suffered an irreparable loss. It seems to me that when so many people love the products he created, he did a lot for this world.

Howard Stringer, President of Sony

Steve Jobs was a spotlight in the digital world. Jobs was heavily influenced by Japanese industry and Sony, he called the founder of the company Akito Morita his teacher, he was greatly influenced by the Walkman. The digital world has lost its main leader, but Stephen's innovation and creativity will inspire generations to come.

Steve is one of America's greatest innovators - brave enough to think differently, determined enough to believe in his ability to change the world, and gifted enough to do so.

Bill Gates, founder and CEO of Microsoft

You rarely see a person who left such an indelible mark on the world, the consequences of which will be felt for many generations to come.

Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Facebook

Steve, thank you for your mentorship and friendship. Thank you for showing that your products can change the world. I will miss you.

Arnold Schwarzenegger, former Governor of California

Steve lived the California Dream every day of his life, he changed the world and inspired us all.

Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft

We have lost a unique technology pioneer, a creator who knew how to make great and great products.

Michael Dell, CEO of Dell

Today we have lost a visionary leader, the technology industry has lost a legendary figure, and I have lost a friend and business associate. The legacy of Steve Jobs will be remembered for many generations.

Larry Page, CEO of Google

He was a great man with incredible accomplishments and a brilliant mind. He seemed to always be able to say in a few words what you wanted to think about before you thought about it. His focus on putting the user first has always been an inspiration to me.

Steve Case, founder of AOL

I consider it an honor to have personally known Steve Jobs. He was one of the most resourceful entrepreneurs of our generation. His legacy will live on for centuries.

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google

Steve, your passion for excellence is felt by everyone who has ever touched an Apple product.

Until now, neither the Steve Jobs family nor Apple Corporation have disclosed the place of burial and the cause of death of the creator of iconic gadgets, whose death is mourned by millions of fans around the world. According to some media reports, the funeral of Steve Jobs will be held at the weekend in the city of Sacramento. The city administration says that only the closest people will be allowed to attend the funeral.

Meanwhile, religious fanatics from the Westboro Baptist community said they were picketing the funeral of Steve Jobs. According to the leader of the organization, Margie Phelps, the founder of Apple Corporation has sinned a lot in his life. “He did not praise the Lord and taught sin,” she added.

Jobs to be commemorated

A Hungarian computer software company showed how much Jobs meant to them by deciding to embody their affection in the form of a bronze statue of Jobs's likeness, tall and powerful, over 2m high.

Chairman of Graphisoft Gabor Bohar(Gabor Bojar) is the person through whom the sculptor-artist Erno Toth will do this work. He creates a statue of Jobs using a photo of the Apple founder from an old issue of The Economist. Bohar claims that his sympathy for Jobs was born during their meeting at a technology exhibition almost thirty years ago.


Monument to Steve Jobs will be installed near the office of Graphisoft

The statue will depict Jobs in the style they used to see him at presentations: in a turtleneck, jeans and an iPhone in his hand. The monument is planned to be erected at the end of December near the company's office in Budapest.

puppet image

Inicons created a 12-inch doll in the image of Apple CEO Steve Jobs during the presentation of the company's product. She looks pretty realistic. The prototype is shown on the firm's website. According to the company's note, "final product appearance and color may vary."

Screenshot of Inicons website page

According to Forbes employee Brian Caulfield, Apple may not like this realistic copy.

For $99, the list includes: realistic head replica, two pairs of goggles, "well-articulated body", three pairs of hands, a black tiny turtleneck, a pair of blue petite jeans, one black leather belt, one chair, a back that says "One More Thing" (Jobs has been using this expression regularly since 1999 when introducing new products from the company), tiny sneakers, two apples (“one bitten”), and tiny black socks.

According to the information on the company's website, worldwide shipments will begin in February 2012, and the release will be limited.

In January 2012, Apple lawyers and the Steve Jobs family forced the creator of the software company's founder's puppet to stop releasing and reselling the product. In a statement on the website, InIcons apologized for stopping the project because, according to the statement, there was no alternative but to receive blessings from the Steve Jobs family.

The agreement to create Apple went under the hammer for $1.6 million

The auction house Sotheby 's auctioned off the contract to create Apple . Its cost amounted to $1.6 million, while the originally set price was $100-150 thousand for this 35-year-old document.

The contract was sold among other rare documents and publications, the exact amount of the transaction was $ 1.594 million, of which 12% is the commission of the auction house. Bidding was terminated at $1.350 million. The buyer called this figure over the phone.

According to Sotheby's, the buyer was a certain Eduardo Cisneros (Eduardo Cisneros), head of Cisneros Corp. The headquarters of this company is located in Miami,. He is also Chairman of the Board of Directors of Gibraltar Private Bank & Trust.

The three-page contract is dated April 1, 1976. It bears the signatures of Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and the lesser-known Ron Vine. At the time of the founding of the company, Vine was 41 years old (now 77), and for his participation in the creation of a new company, he received a 10% stake in Apple.

Interestingly, Vine sold his stake just a few days later and made $800 from the deal. He attributed this move to his previous failures in the venture capital business, as well as the fact that all the founders were personally responsible for the debts of the new company, which he feared. At Apple's current capitalization, Vine's stake would be worth $3.6 billion.

2014: In St. Petersburg the monument to Jobs was removed

In early November 2014, a monument to Steve Jobs, made in the form of a huge iPhone, was dismantled in St. Petersburg after Apple CEO Tim Cook confessed to his non-traditional sexual orientation. However, the real reason for the disappearance of the memorial was named by its installer - the holding "Western European Financial Union" (ZEFS).

According to the corporation, the touch screen of this giant smartphone failed, so the device was sent for repair. This information was confirmed by the press service of the Research University of Information Technologies, Mechanics and Optics (ITMO), on the territory of which there was a monument to the legendary founder of Apple.

In St. Petersburg, a monument to Steve Jobs in the form of a giant iPhone was dismantled

It is alleged that the decision to remove the monument was made before October 30, 2014, when Tim Cook officially announced that he was gay. It was this statement, according to the Russian media, that was one of the reasons for the elimination of the monument. Another reason was that Apple products transfer users' personal data to US intelligence agencies.

According to the head of the ZEFS corporation, Maxim Dolgopolov, the monument to Jobs may be returned, but only after it will be possible to send messages from this two-meter iPhone to refuse Apple devices. On December 1, 2014, a public opinion poll will be held, following which a final decision will be made regarding the future fate of the monument.

The Jobs Memorial, erected in early 2013, had an interactive screen that displayed information about the founder of Apple. On this device was a QR code leading to a website dedicated to Steve Jobs.

Rules for manipulating people from Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs was an excellent entrepreneur and manager with an innate gift for persuasion. Jobs could create the so-called reality distortion field, with the help of which the founder of Apple made his point of view an irrefutable fact in the eyes of the interlocutor, which often ensured the company a successful result.

  • Steve Jobs, a good friend of Larry Ellison, was invited to Larry's fourth marriage as the official wedding photographer.

2000: How Steve Jobs received a patent from Amazon for one-click online shopping for a penny

In September 2018, Infinite Loop, a magazine covering events at Apple's corporate offices, described how Steve Jobs received a patent from Amazon twenty years ago for one-click online shopping for a penny.

In 1999, Amazon, considered "Earth's largest bookstore" with few visions of the future giant corporation, patented and implemented one-click online payments on its website. Those were the early days of e-commerce, and people were still afraid to trust their data. credit card the Internet. One-click shopping technology automatically saved customers' payment details so they could make instant purchases.

Steve Jobs received a patent from Amazon for one-click online shopping. Apple paid $1 million

This feature quickly appeared at Apple - as early as 2000, the company used it in one of the earliest versions of its online store. At that time, according to the study, 27% of users did not buy online goods that were put in the basket, only because the purchase process required too much effort. By 2018, most online stores in the world offer fast clearance orders on the site, at the touch of a button.


Infinite Loop magazine recounted the behind-the-scenes story of this decision, made by Jobs after his triumphant return to Apple three years after being kicked out of his own company. Mike Slade, Jobs' special assistant from 1999-2004, told the magazine that they were just sitting in the office talking about a gadget, and Steve decided to buy it from Amazon. Jobs was thrilled with the convenience of the new one-click shopping technology, so he just called Amazon, said, "Hey, it's Steve Jobs," and licensed the million-dollar one-click online shopping patent.

This was Jobs' classic decision-making technique. A couple of years later, he will again unexpectedly make one purchase over the phone that will change the future of Apple - it is mentioned in the biography "Steve Jobs" written by Walter Isaacson (Walter Isaacson). Apple CEO Jon Rubinstein visited Toshiba's factory in February 2001, where he was shown several new 1.8-inch hard drives that the Japanese company couldn't find a use for. Rubinstein dialed Jobs, who was also in Tokyo, and said that these discs would be perfect for the MP3 player they were then considering. Isaacson wrote that Rubinstein met Jobs at the hotel that evening, asked for a $10 million check, and received it immediately.

In September 2000, when Amazon's one-click online shopping patent was licensed, Apple had a market capitalization of $8.4 billion versus $13.7 billion for Amazon. In 2018, Apple and Amazon were worth more than $1 trillion, and Apple conquered this milestone faster than the Internet giant.

As for the one-click payment system that helped develop both online stores, the US patent for this technology expired in September 2017. With the expiration of the patent, the field of use of technology has leveled off, because large companies have long developed their own technologies for one-click purchases. Giants such as Google, Microsoft and Facebook have prepared almost all of their pages on the Internet for one-click online shopping technology, and social networks are not far behind them.

Own

Jobs car

Steve Jobs drove only Mercedes-Benz SL 55 AMG cars, and without license plates. The fact is that according to Californian laws, the installation of numbers is given for half a year. Jobs entered into an agreement with a car dealership, according to which every six months he took a new SL 55, and returned the old one back. The benefit of the car dealership was that a car that had been driven by Jobs could be sold for more than a new one.

Steve Jobs house

The residence on Waverly Street in Palo Alto, California, was purchased by Jobs in the mid-1990s after he married Lauryn Powell. The house is made in british style. Jobs lived there for 20 years and died here.

On July 17, 2012, the house of Steve Jobs on Waverly Street was robbed. It is not known if anyone currently lives in the house.

On August 2, 2012, police arrested 35-year-old Kariem McFarlin, a resident of the Californian city of Alameda, who was suspected of committing it. As of mid-August, he is in custody with a $500,000 bail requirement. The maximum sentence for the crime he committed is 7 years and 8 months in prison. Hearings in the case are scheduled for August 20.

According to the publication, McFarlin stole over $60,000 worth of computer equipment and personal items from Jobs' home.

Authorities in San Francisco Bay, where the city of Palo Alto is located, are reporting a double-digit increase in burglaries in the first half of 2012. According to statistics from the Palo Alto Police Department, 63% of crimes of this nature are the fault of the tenants: out of carelessness, they often leave the doors and windows of houses unlocked.

Steve Jobs' yacht

Venus was completed a year after the death of Steve Jobs

In December 2012, it was announced that Steve Jobs' high-tech yacht called Venus could not leave the port of Amsterdam by court order. Such a ban was imposed on the vessel due to a financial dispute with the designer of the yacht Philippe Stack (Phillipe Stack).

The 78m aluminum vessel, built by Dutch manufacturer Feadship to designs by Stak and blueprints by naval architect De Voogt, was launched in October 2012. But until now, the family of the late founder of Apple cannot get Venus at their disposal, as Stack is trying to prove in court that Jobs underpaid him part of the amount for the work.

According to Stack, the Jobs family owes him 3 million euros. He also said that he expects a fee of 6% of the cost of the vessel, which he estimates at 150 million euros. The Jobs family estimates that Venus is worth no more than 105 million euros. Until the dispute is resolved, Venus will remain in the Amsterdam port.

Recall that, as it became known a year after the death of Steve Jobs, in October 2012, shipbuilders from the Dutch Aalsmeer completed work on the yacht, which the founder and ex-head of Apple had been designing for many years.

Constructed entirely from aluminium, the yacht was designed from start to finish by Jobs himself, although he had the help of French designer Philippe Stack. The length of the yacht is almost 80 meters, but due to the lightness of the structures, the vessel has fairly high speed characteristics.

Venus is not designed without luxury. In particular, the ship is equipped with a unique huge solarium with a built-in large jacuzzi, which is located on the bow of the ship. The captain's bridge is crowned by a cabin equipped with seven 27-inch iMacs, through which the ship is controlled and navigated. From a certain angle, the design of the yacht strongly resembles the appearance of one of Apple's popular smartphones, the iPhone 4.


The existence and the design of the yacht itself is knocked out of the image of Steve Jobs, which was replicated during his lifetime in the media. In particular, Jobs has always been known as an opponent of excessive luxury and, on the contrary, a supporter of minimalism in design and almost an ascetic in everyday life. The billionaire lived in the most ordinary cottage in the California city of Palo Alto, always wore modest jeans and a black sweater, and also preferred to drive a solid Mercedes car, while many of his “colleagues” according to the Forbes rating traditionally preferred and prefer Bentley or Maybach.

There are a few words about the project to create a yacht in the famous biography of Steve Jobs, written by Walter Isaacson. Here is what the biographer recalls: “After having an omelet breakfast in a cafe, we returned to his [Jobs] house, and he showed me all his models and architectural sketches. As expected, the layout of the yacht was minimalistic. Her teak decks were perfectly level, the saloon windows were glazed with huge floor-to-ceiling glass, and the main living room had walls of glass. At that time, the Dutch company Feadship was already building the boat, but Jobs was still fiddling with the design. "I know I could die and Lauren would be left with a half built boat," he said. "But I have to continue, otherwise it will be an admission that I am ready to die."

Unfortunately, that's how it turned out.

Family

  • Joan Carol Schible/Simpson - biological mother
  • Abdulfattah John Jandali - biological father
  • Clara Jobs - foster mother
  • Paul Jobs - Adoptive Father
  • Patty Jobs - Adoptive Sister
  • Mona Simpson - sister

Steve's first daughter is Lisa Brennan-Jobs (born May 17, 1978) from Chris-Anne Brennan, whom he never married.

On March 18, 1991, Steve Jobs married Lawrence Powell, who is nine years his junior. She bore Steve three children:

  1. Reed Jobs (born September 22, 1991) - son
  2. Erin Siena Jobs (born 08/19/1995) - daughter
  3. Evie Jobs (b. 05.1998) - daughter

Jobs' daughter about her father: he was rude and did not pay child support

On August 3, 2018, the new issue of Vanity Fair published an excerpt from a book by the 40-year-old daughter of Apple founder Steve Jobs, in which she talks about a difficult relationship with her father. According to Lisa, Jobs was rude to her and did not want to pay child support. The full book, titled Small Fry, will be released in September 2018.

Lisa Brennan-Jobs was born in Oregon in 1978 when Steve Jobs was 23 years old. Jobs denied paternity, although her mother, Chrisan Brennan, told Lisa that her parents chose her name together. However, after that, Jobs completely stopped helping the family: for the first two years, Chrisan worked as a waitress and cleaner, while Lisa visited Kindergarten at the church, and in 1980 sued the County of San Mateo to force her father to pay child support. Steve Jobs refused to acknowledge paternity, swore that he was infertile, and even pointed to another person who, according to him, was Lisa's real father. However, a DNA test denied his words, and the court ruled that Jobs must pay child support in the amount of $ 385 per month, as well as cover his daughter's health insurance until she comes of age. At the urging of Jobs' lawyers, the case was closed on December 8, 1980, and just four days later, Apple shares entered the market, and Jobs became rich - his fortune increased by $ 200 million overnight.

Steve Jobs

After that, Jobs visited Lisa every month. The girl hardly spoke to her father, but she was very proud of him and believed that he named his first computer - Apple Lisa - in her honor. However, when she asked Jobs about this directly, he rather sharply dispelled her illusions. Once, a father and daughter were driving together in his car, a Porsche convertible, which Jobs was rumored to change very often - "as soon as one scratch appeared." Lisa asked if her father would give her the car when he got tired of it, but Jobs replied that this was out of the question. “You won't get anything. Understood? Nothing, ”Lisa quotes her father’s words in her memoirs. The girl did not understand what these words referred to - just a car or something more - but, as she admits, they wounded her in the very heart.

Lisa later visited her father, who lived with his wife Lauren Powell-Jobs and their three children. She recalls that when visiting her father's house, she often stole small things, like toothpaste and powder, and could not explain these bouts of kleptomania, which occurred only in the Jobs mansion. When Lisa turned 27, Jobs, his wife, children from his second marriage, and Lisa herself went on a cruise, during which they stayed at the villa of U2 leader Bono. Over dinner, Bono asked if it was true that Jobs had named his first computer after his daughter. Jobs hesitated, but answered in the affirmative. Lisa writes that by that time she had long ago come to terms with the impossibility of the great reconciliation that is shown in Hollywood films. According to her, her father never wasted "neither money, nor food, nor a word."


Lisa notes that she visited her father regularly in the last years of her life - Jobs died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 56, when Lisa herself was 33 years old. She became a journalist - her father paid for her studies at Harvard - and by the beginning of August 2018 she is working in her profession. Lisa does not maintain accounts on social networks and tries to avoid excessive media attention.

Films about Steve Jobs

  • Pirates of Silicon Valley, (Pirates of Silicon Valley)
  • The first full-length feature film about the biography of Steve Jobs "Jobs" was released worldwide on August 16, 2013. Earlier in the summer of 2013, Open Roads Studio released a 15-second trailer for the film on the Instagram platform, which shortly before opened the function of posting not only images, but also videos.

"Jobs" tells the story of Apple's early rise, which was associated with the release of the iPod music player in 2001. The main role in the film is played by a Hollywood star. Ashton Kutcher(Ashton Kutcher), partner and co-founder of the company Steve Wozniak (Steve Wozniak) plays Josh Gad(Josh Gad).

Actor Ashton Kutcher on one of the Internet sites admitted why he agreed to star in this role. According to him, the choice was "difficult" for him, because he has great respect for his work, and also has many friends and colleagues who happened to work with Stephen during his lifetime.

Kutcher also noted that the greatest success in life comes through overcoming difficulties, so he took such a difficult role as a challenge. He also assured that he tried to convey the portrait of Steve very carefully.

In its opening weekend, Jobs grossed only $6.7 million, falling short of its makers' expectations. The film "Kick-Ass 2", which premiered on the same day, grossed $13.6 million over the first weekend, the film "The Butler" - $25 million. In the overall standings, the picture took seventh place, which is lower than the films "We are the Millers" and "Elysium" , which have been at the box office for two weeks.

Books about Steve Jobs

The Rise of Steve Jobs. The path from a reckless upstart to a visionary leader

2015

The authors of the biography are two journalists - Brent Schlender and Rick Tetseli, who have worked side by side for several years. The release of the book was preceded by three years of painstaking work, during which they conducted research, interviews, studied reports and engaged in joint creation and editing of texts.

One of the remarkable moments of the book is the fact that one of its authors - Brent Shlender - personally knew Steve Jobs for 25 years. The journalist and the founder of Apple met at an interview, and in subsequent years their communication was informal, Schlender often visited Jobs at home. Brent Schlender expresses his observations and impressions about Steve Jobs in the book in the first person.

In the biography, the authors show the professional and personal transformation of Steve Jobs throughout his life. Main question related to his career, the book describes how "an exile from his own company, ostracized for his inconsistency, harshness, bad business decisions" was able to revive Apple, create an entirely new set of products that marked an entire era, and become revered by all leaders?

Journalists also aim to break the clichés often found in posthumous articles, books and films about Steve Jobs. They include the notion that Jobs was “a guru with a design flair; shaman who had power over human souls, thanks to which he could inspire his interlocutors with anything (“field of distortion of reality”); a pompous jerk who ignored other people's opinions in a manic pursuit of perfection."

According to Brent Schlender, none of this matches his experience with Steve Jobs, which he always found to be "more complex, more human, more sensitive, and even more intelligent than the image created by the press." Schlender wanted to offer society a more complete picture of life and a deeper understanding of the person about whom he had a chance to write a lot.

The biography is written in simple and easy language. To some, it may seem superfluous to have a lot of minor details and the presence of the author's emotionality, but the reason for this can be seen in the authors' enthusiasm for working on the book and their deep interest in the personality of Steve Jobs. Thanks to this involvement of the authors, the biography is very lively.

Excerpt from the book

Throughout the last decade of Steve's life, stories related to his "unbearable" character will continually excite the sensational public. Jobs' stubborn bucks seemed inconsistent with the sustained success that had finally accompanied the long-suffering Apple since the dawn of the new century. This sudden irascibility did not fit in with the company's image as an exceptionally creative organization with powerful potential and the great benefits that its talented employees brought to humanity.

Of course, despite the “coolness” of the revived Apple, its engineers, programmers, designers, marketers and representatives of other professions continued to work hard on its image. Lee Clow's brilliant advertising campaigns, Jony Quince's minimalist, clean design, Jobs' meticulously choreographed product presentations, which associated players and smartphones with the words magical and phenomenal, were real masterpieces in this field. This image was built with hard work, especially after the iPhone was the best-selling portable computing device in history.

Now Apple has become bigger and more powerful than Sony. But Jobs' actions sometimes violated the overall integrity of the picture. How could this clean and austere façade relate, for example, to the 2008 incident when Steve called Joe Nocer, the New York Times columnist who once opened an issue of Esquire magazine with a cover story about the Apple founder, “a bucket of shit that misrepresents facts all the time?” "? How could a company known for the brilliance of its marketing programs allow its products to be manufactured in the Chinese factories of the Taiwanese company Foxconn, where appalling working conditions and poor safety practices have led to dozens of worker suicides? How is it that Apple almost colluded with publishers when they consistently raised the prices of e-books in an attempt to force Amazon to also raise the prices of the products they sell? How do you justify the company's behind-the-scenes agreement with the other big players in Silicon Valley not to hire engineers from other manufacturing companies? And how "clean" can Foxconn or its CEO be when an FSC investigation forced former executives to resign after being found guilty of forgery, backdating the board's authorization to reward employees with hundreds of millions of dollars of stock options. ?

In some of these cases, Apple's moral transgressions were overblown or its "judges" did not take into account all the circumstances. But Jobs managed to exacerbate even obviously far-fetched situations with his inept antics, demonstrating either rudeness, or indifference, or arrogance. Even those of us who could witness a significant softening of Steve's violent nature could not deny that his propensity for outrageous antisocial behavior, alas, continued to assert itself. No one I spoke to could explain the reason for Steve's persistence in these childish ways. Nobody, not even Lauren.

I am convinced of only one thing: it is useless to try to characterize this multifaceted personality with rough strokes - both good and bad or dual. So when Steve "rudely" talked about Neil Young, I was not at all surprised. He could harbor his grievances for decades. Even after he got everything he wanted from Disney, the name Eisner continued to infuriate him. Gasse's "sin" of telling Scully that Jobs wanted to fire him as CEO dates back to 1985. But even a quarter of a century later, Steve literally growled when he heard the name of this Frenchman.

Jobs' grievances extended to companies he felt had done wrong to Apple. Steve's passionate antipathy towards Adobe, for example, was fueled by the fact that its founder John Warnock supported Windows with his software just at a time when Apple was in trouble. Steve could not help but understand that at the time when Macintosh occupied only 5 percent of the personal computer market, this was a completely rational decision - but stubbornly viewed it as a betrayal.

Years later, at the pinnacle of success and fame, he returned the favor to Adobe by refusing to support the Flash program on the iPhone. But, objectively speaking, this also had a rational grain. While this program was easy to use and allowed you to view video content online, it had security issues and sometimes crashed unexpectedly. Adobe showed no apparent willingness to address these shortcomings, and the iPhone was a new networked computing platform that Jobs could not afford to suffer from network attacks. He did not install the program on the iPhone, and then on the iPad.

Flash was so popular that a wave of discontent hit Apple. But Steve was firm. In 2010, he released a lengthy statement stating six reasons why he didn't support the Flash program. These reasons sounded very convincing, but there was still a taste of revenge in the words of the statement. Apple was now so powerful that Adobe had to pay a heavy price for the betrayal that Steve suspected of it. Flash will survive, but Adobe will have to divert its energy and resources to developing other streaming media technologies.

Steve's biggest resentment in the last years of his life was related to Google. Jobs had plenty of reasons to consider himself personally committed when, in 2008, Google created and launched the Android mobile operating system, largely a rip-off of Apple's iOS system. What resented Steve the most was that Eric Schmidt, president and CEO of Google, had been a member of Apple's board of directors for many years and a personal friend of his. In addition, Google has given Android away to a number of mobile phone manufacturers virtually free of charge, thus creating the possibility that devices made by Samsung, HTC, and others will hinder Apple's position in their respective markets with their cheaper products.