| |
Final
call for
Apple's
Steve
Jobs,
father
of Mac,
iPhone
By
JORDAN
ROBERTSON
AP
Technology
Writer
SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP) --
Suddenly,
the next
version
of the
iPhone
doesn't
seem so
important.
It's
time to
mourn
Steve
Jobs,
the
Silicon
Valley
maestro
who
always
seemed
to hit
the
right
note as
he
transformed
Apple
Inc.
into
technology's
greatest
hits
factory.
It
didn't
take
long for
the
people
who
loved
their
iPhones,
iPods,
iPads
and Macs
to begin
gathering
to pay
their
respects
to the
man who
made it
all
happen.
Scott
Robbins,
a barber
and
Apple
fan for
nearly
20
years,
came to
Apple's
San
Francisco
store as
soon as
he heard
about
Jobs'
death
Wednesday.
"To some
people,
this is
like
Elvis
Presley
or John
Lennon
-it's a
change
in our
times,"
Robbins,
34,
said.
"It's
the end
of an
era, of
what
we've
known
Apple to
be. It's
like the
end of
the
innovators."
The
world
also
lost a
showman,
whose
flair
for the
dramatic
- there
was
always
"one
more
thing"
-he was
as keen
as his
knack
for
divining
what
people
wanted
before
they
even
seemed
to
realize
it
themselves.
Apple
announced
his
death
without
giving a
specific
cause.
He died
peacefully,
according
to a
statement
from
family
members
who said
they
were
present.
He was
56.
"Steve's
brilliance,
passion
and
energy
were the
source
of
countless
innovations
that
enrich
and
improve
all of
our
lives,"
Apple's
board
said in
a
statement.
"The
world is
immeasurably
better
because
of
Steve."
Jobs had
battled
cancer
in 2004
and
underwent
a liver
transplant
in 2009
after
taking a
leave of
absence
for
unspecified
health
problems.
He took
another
leave of
absence
in
January
- his
third
since
his
health
problems
began -
and
resigned
in
August.
Jobs
became
Apple's
chairman
and
handed
the CEO
job over
to his
hand-picked
successor,
Tim
Cook.
Outside
Apple's
Cupertino
headquarters,
three
flags -
an
American
flag, a
California
state
flag and
an Apple
flag -
were
flying
at
half-staff
late
Wednesday.
"Those
of us
who have
been
fortunate
enough
to know
and work
with
Steve
have
lost a
dear
friend
and an
inspiring
mentor."
Cook
wrote in
an email
to
Apple's
employees.
"Steve
leaves
behind a
company
that
only he
could
have
built,
and his
spirit
will
forever
be the
foundation
of
Apple."
The news
Apple
fans and
shareholders
had been
dreading
came the
day
after
Apple
unveiled
its
latest
iPhone,
a device
that got
a
lukewarm
reception.
Perhaps,
there
would
have
been
more
excitement
had Jobs
been
well
enough
to show
it off
with his
trademark
theatrics.
Jobs
started
Apple
with a
high
school
friend
in a
Silicon
Valley
garage
in 1976,
was
forced
out a
decade
later
and
returned
in 1997
to
rescue
the
company.
During
his
second
stint,
it grew
into the
most
valuable
technology
company
in the
world
with a
market
value of
$351
billion.
Almost
all that
wealth
has been
created
since
Jobs'
return.
Cultivating
Apple's
countercultural
sensibility
and a
minimalist
design
ethic,
Jobs
rolled
out one
sensational
product
after
another,
even in
the face
of the
late-2000s
recession
and his
own
failing
health.
He
helped
change
computers
from a
geeky
hobbyist's
obsession
to a
necessity
of
modern
life at
work and
home,
and in
the
process
he
upended
not just
personal
technology
but the
cellphone
and
music
industries.
For
transformation
of
American
industry,
he has
few
rivals
He has
long
been
linked
to his
personal
computer-age
contemporary,
Bill
Gates,
and has
drawn
comparisons
to other
creative
geniuses
such as
Walt
Disney.
Jobs
died as
Walt
Disney
Co.'s
largest
shareholder,
a
by-product
of his
decision
to sell
computer
animation
studio
Pixar in
2006.
Perhaps
most
influentially,
Jobs in
2001
launched
the
iPod,
which
offered
"1,000
songs in
your
pocket."
Over the
next 10
years,
its
white
earphones
and
thumb-dial
control
seemed
to
become
more
ubiquitous
than the
wristwatch.
In 2007
came the
touch-screen
iPhone,
joined a
year
later by
Apple's
App
Store,
where
developers
could
sell
iPhone
"apps"
which
made the
phone a
device
not just
for
making
calls
but also
for
managing
money,
editing
photos,
playing
games
and
social
networking.
And in
2010,
Jobs
introduced
the iPad,
a
tablet-sized,
all-touch
computer
that
took off
even
though
market
analysts
said no
one
really
needed
one.
By 2011,
Apple
had
become
the
second-largest
company
of any
kind in
the
United
States
by
market
value.
In
August,
it
briefly
surpassed
Exxon
Mobil as
the most
valuable
company.
Under
Jobs,
the
company
cloaked
itself
in
secrecy
to build
frenzied
anticipation
for each
of its
new
products.
Jobs
himself
had a
wizardly
sense of
what his
customers
wanted,
and
where
demand
didn't
exist,
he
leveraged
a
cult-like
following
to
create
it.
When he
spoke at
Apple
presentations,
almost
always
in faded
blue
jeans,
sneakers
and a
black
mock
turtleneck,
legions
of Apple
acolytes
listened
to every
word. He
often
boasted
about
Apple
successes,
then
coyly
added a
coda -
"One
more
thing" -
before
introducing
its
latest
ambitious
idea.
In later
years,
Apple
investors
also
watched
these
appearances
for
clues
about
his
health.
Jobs
revealed
in 2004
that he
had been
diagnosed
with a
very
rare
form of
pancreatic
cancer -
an islet
cell
neuroendocrine
tumor.
He
underwent
surgery
and said
he had
been
cured.
In 2009,
following
weight
loss he
initially
attributed
to a
hormonal
imbalance,
he
abruptly
took a
six-month
leave.
During
that
time, he
received
a liver
transplant
that
became
public
two
months
after it
was
performed.
He went
on
another
medical
leave in
January
2011,
this
time for
an
unspecified
duration.
He never
went
back and
resigned
as CEO
in
August,
though
he
stayed
on as
chairman.
Consistent
with his
penchant
for
secrecy,
he
didn't
reference
his
illness
in his
resignation
letter.
Steven
Paul
Jobs was
born
Feb. 24,
1955, in
San
Francisco
to
Joanne
Simpson,
then an
unmarried
graduate
student,
and
Abdulfattah
Jandali,
a
student
from
Syria.
Simpson
gave
Jobs up
for
adoption,
though
she
married
Jandali
and a
few
years
later
had a
second
child
with
him,
Mona
Simpson,
who
became a
novelist.
Steven
was
adopted
by Clara
and Paul
Jobs of
Los
Altos,
Calif.,
a
working-class
couple
who
nurtured
his
early
interest
in
electronics.
He saw
his
first
computer
terminal
at
NASA's
Ames
Research
Center
when he
was
around
11 and
landed a
summer
job at
Hewlett-Packard
before
he had
finished
high
school.
Jobs
enrolled
in Reed
College
in
Portland,
Ore., in
1972 but
dropped
out
after
six
months.
"All of
my
working-class
parents'
savings
were
being
spent on
my
college
tuition.
After
six
months,
I
couldn't
see the
value in
it," he
said at
a
Stanford
University
commencement
address
in 2005.
"I had
no idea
what I
wanted
to do
with my
life and
no idea
how
college
was
going to
help me
figure
it out."
When he
returned
to
California
in 1974,
Jobs
worked
for
video
game
maker
Atari
and
attended
meetings
of the
Homebrew
Computer
Club - a
group of
computer
hobbyists
- with
Steve
Wozniak,
a high
school
friend
who was
a few
years
older.
Wozniak's
homemade
computer
drew
attention
from
other
enthusiasts,
but Jobs
saw its
potential
far
beyond
the
geeky
hobbyists
of the
time.
The pair
started
Apple
Computer
Inc. in
Jobs'
parents'
garage
in 1976.
According
to
Wozniak,
Jobs
suggested
the name
after
visiting
an
"apple
orchard"
that
Wozniak
said was
actually
a
commune.
Their
first
creation
was the
Apple I
-
essentially,
the guts
of a
computer
without
a case,
keyboard
or
monitor.
The
Apple
II,
which
hit the
market
in 1977,
was
their
first
machine
for the
masses.
It
became
so
popular
that
Jobs was
worth
$100
million
by age
25.
During a
1979
visit to
the
Xerox
Palo
Alto
Research
Center,
Jobs
again
spotted
mass
potential
in a
niche
invention:
a
computer
that
allowed
people
to
control
computers
with the
click of
a mouse,
not
typed
commands.
He
returned
to Apple
and
ordered
his
engineering
team to
copy
what he
had
seen.
It
foreshadowed
a
propensity
to take
other
people's
concepts,
improve
on them
and spin
them
into
wildly
successful
products.
Under
Jobs,
Apple
didn't
invent
computers,
digital
music
players
or
smartphones
- it
reinvented
them for
people
who
didn't
want to
learn
computer
programming
or
negotiate
the
technical
hassles
of
keeping
their
gadgets
working.
"We have
always
been
shameless
about
stealing
great
ideas,"
Jobs
said in
an
interview
for the
1996 PBS
series
"Triumph
of the
Nerds."
The
engineers
responded
with two
computers.
The
pricier
Lisa -
the same
name as
his
daughter
-
launched
to a
cool
reception
in 1983.
The
less-expensive
Macintosh,
named
for an
employee's
favorite
apple,
exploded
onto the
scene in
1984.
The Mac
was
heralded
by an
epic
Super
Bowl
commercial
that
referenced
George
Orwell's
"1984"
and
captured
Apple's
iconoclastic
style.
In the
ad,
expressionless
drones
marched
through
dark
halls to
an
auditorium
where a
Big
Brother-like
figure
lectures
on a big
screen.
A woman
in a
bright
track
uniform
burst
into the
hall and
launched
a hammer
into the
screen,
which
exploded,
stunning
the
drones,
as a
narrator
announced
the
arrival
of the
Mac.
There
were
early
stumbles
at
Apple.
Jobs
clashed
with
colleagues
and even
the CEO
he had
hired
away
from
Pepsi,
John
Sculley.
And
after an
initial
spike,
Mac
sales
slowed,
in part
because
few
programs
had been
written
for it.
With
Apple's
stock
price
sinking,
conflicts
between
Jobs and
Sculley
mounted.
Sculley
won over
the
board in
1985 and
pushed
Jobs out
of his
day-to-day
role
leading
the
Macintosh
team.
Jobs
resigned
his post
as
chairman
of the
board
and left
Apple
within
months.
"What
had been
the
focus of
my
entire
adult
life was
gone,
and it
was
devastating,"
Jobs
said in
his
Stanford
speech.
"I
didn't
see it
then,
but it
turned
out that
getting
fired
from
Apple
was the
best
thing
that
could
have
ever
happened
to me.
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."
He got
into two
other
companies:
Next, a
computer
maker,
and
Pixar, a
computer-animation
studio
that he
bought
from
George
Lucas
for $10
million.
Pixar,
ultimately
the more
successful
venture,
seemed
at first
a
bottomless
money
pit.
Then in
1995
came
"Toy
Story,"
the
first
computer-animated
full-length
feature.
Jobs
used its
success
to
negotiate
a
sweeter
deal
with
Disney
for
Pixar's
next two
films,
"A Bug's
Life"
and "Toy
Story
2." Jobs
sold
Pixar to
The Walt
Disney
Co. for
$7.4
billion
in stock
in a
deal
that got
him a
seat on
Disney's
board
and 138
million
shares
of stock
that
accounted
for most
of his
fortune.
Forbes
magazine
estimated
Jobs was
worth $7
billion
in a
survey
last
month.
With
Next,
Jobs
came up
with a
cube-shaped
computer.
He was
said to
be
obsessive
about
the
tiniest
details,
insisting
on
design
perfection
even for
the
machine's
guts.
The
machine
cost a
pricey
$6,500
to
$10,000,
and he
never
managed
to spark
much
demand
for it.
Ultimately,
he
shifted
the
focus to
software
- a move
that
paid off
later
when
Apple
bought
Next for
its
operating
system
technology,
the
basis
for the
software
still
used in
Mac
computers.
By 1996,
when
Apple
bought
Next,
Apple
was in
dire
financial
straits.
It had
lost
more
than
$800
million
in a
year,
dragged
its
heels in
licensing
Mac
software
for
other
computers
and
surrendered
most of
its
market
share to
PCs that
ran
Windows.
Larry
Ellison,
Jobs'
close
friend
and
fellow
Silicon
Valley
billionaire
and the
CEO of
Oracle
Corp.,
publicly
contemplated
buying
Apple in
early
1997 and
ousting
its
leadership.
The idea
fizzled,
but Jobs
stepped
in as
interim
chief
later
that
year.
He
slashed
unprofitable
projects,
narrowed
the
company's
focus
and
presided
over a
new
marketing
push to
set the
Mac
apart
from
Windows,
starting
with a
campaign
encouraging
computer
users to
"Think
different."
Apple's
first
new
product
under
his
direction,
the
brightly
colored,
plastic
iMac,
launched
in 1998
and sold
about 2
million
in its
first
year.
Apple
returned
to
profitability
that
year.
Jobs
dropped
the
"interim"
from his
title in
2000.
He
changed
his
style,
too,
said Tim
Bajarin,
who met
Jobs
several
times
while
covering
the
company
for
Creative
Strategies.
"In the
early
days, he
was in
charge
of every
detail.
The only
way you
could
say it
is, he
was kind
of a
control
freak,"
he said.
In his
second
stint,
"he
clearly
was much
more
mellow
and more
mature."
In the
decade
that
followed,
Jobs
kept
Apple
profitable
while
pushing
out an
impressive
roster
of new
products.
Apple's
popularity
exploded
in the
2000s.
The
iPod,
smaller
and
sleeker
with
each
generation,
introduced
many
lifelong
Windows
users to
their
first
Apple
gadget.
The
arrival
of the
iTunes
music
store in
2003
gave
people a
convenient
way to
buy
music
legally
online,
song by
song.
For the
music
industry,
it was a
mixed
blessing.
The
industry
got a
way to
reach
Internet-savvy
people
who, in
the age
of
Napster,
were
growing
accustomed
to
downloading
music
free.
But
online
sales
also
hastened
the
demise
of CDs
and
established
Apple as
a
gatekeeper,
resulting
in
battles
between
Jobs and
music
executives
over
pricing
and
other
issues.
Jobs'
command
over
gadget
lovers
and pop
culture
swelled
to the
point
that, on
the eve
of the
iPhone's
launch
in 2007,
faithful
followers
slept on
sidewalks
outside
posh
Apple
stores
for the
chance
to buy
one.
Three
years
later,
at the
iPad's
debut,
the
lines
snaked
around
blocks
and out
through
parking
lots,
even
though
people
had the
option
to order
one in
advance.
The
decade
was not
without
its
glitches.
In the
mid-2000s,
Apple
was
swept up
in a
Securities
and
Exchange
Commission
inquiry
into
stock
options
backdating,
a
practice
that
artificially
raised
the
value of
options
grants.
But Jobs
and
Apple
emerged
unscathed
after
two
former
executives
took the
fall and
eventually
settled
with the
SEC.
Jobs'
personal
ethos -
a
natural
food
lover
who
embraced
Buddhism
and New
Age
philosophy
- was
closely
linked
to the
public
persona
he
shaped
for
Apple.
Apple
itself
became a
statement
against
the
commoditization
of
technology
- a
cynical
view, to
be sure,
from a
company
whose
computers
can cost
three or
more
times as
much as
those of
its
rivals.
For
technology
lovers,
buying
Apple
products
has
meant
gaining
entrance
to an
exclusive
club. At
the top
was a
complicated
and
contradictory
figure
who was
endlessly
fascinating
- even
to his
detractors,
of which
Jobs had
many.
Jobs was
a hero
to
techno-geeks
and a
villain
to
partners
he
bullied
and to
workers
whose
projects
he
unceremoniously
killed
or
claimed
as his
own.
Unauthorized
biographer
Alan
Deutschman
described
him as
"deeply
moody
and
maddeningly
erratic."
In his
personal
life,
Jobs
denied
for two
years
that he
was the
father
of Lisa,
the baby
born to
his
longtime
girlfriend
Chrisann
Brennan
in 1978.
Few
seemed
immune
to Jobs'
charisma
and
will. He
could
adeptly
convince
those in
his
presence
of just
about
anything
- even
if they
disagreed
again
when he
left the
room and
his
magic
wore
off.
"He
always
has an
aura
around
his
persona,"
said
Bajarin,
who met
Jobs
several
times
while
covering
the
company
for more
than 20
years as
a
Creative
Strategies
analyst.
"When
you talk
to him,
you know
you're
really
talking
to a
brilliant
mind."
But
Bajarin
also
remembers
Jobs
lashing
out with
profanity
at an
employee
who
interrupted
their
meeting.
Jobs,
the
perfectionist,
demanded
greatness
from
everyone
at
Apple.
Jobs
valued
his
privacy,
but some
details
of his
romantic
and
family
life
have
been
uncovered.
In the
early
1980s,
Jobs
dated
the folk
singer
Joan
Baez,
according
to
Deutschman.
In 1989,
Jobs
spoke at
Stanford's
graduate
business
school
and met
his
wife,
Laurene
Powell,
who was
then a
student.
When she
became
pregnant,
Jobs at
first
refused
to marry
her. It
was a
near-repeat
of what
had
happened
more
than a
decade
earlier
with
then-girlfriend
Brennan,
Deutschman
said,
but
eventually
Jobs
relented.
Jobs
started
looking
for his
biological
family
in his
teens,
according
to an
interview
he gave
to The
New York
Times in
1997. He
found
his
biological
sister
when he
was 27.
They
became
friends,
and
through
her Jobs
met his
biological
mother.
Few
details
of those
relationships
have
been
made
public.
But the
extent
of Apple
secrecy
didn't
become
clear
until
Jobs
revealed
in 2004
that he
had been
diagonosed
with -
and
"cured"
of - a
rare
form of
operable
pancreatic
cancer
called
an islet
cell
neuroendocrine
tumor.
The
company
had sat
on the
news of
his
diagnosis
for nine
months
while
Jobs
tried
trumping
the
disease
with a
special
diet,
Fortune
magazine
reported
in 2008.
In the
years
after
his
cancer
was
revealed,
rumors
about
Jobs'
health
would
spark
runs on
Apple
stock as
investors
worried
the
company,
with no
clear
succession
plan,
would
fall
apart
without
him.
Apple
did
little
to ease
those
concerns.
It kept
the
state of
Jobs'
health a
secret
for as
long as
it
could,
then
disclosed
vague
details
when, in
early
2009, it
became
clear he
was
again
ill.
Jobs
took a
half-year
medical
leave of
absence
starting
in
January
2009,
during
which he
had a
liver
transplant.
Apple
did not
disclose
the
procedure
at the
time;
two
months
later,
The Wall
Street
Journal
reported
the fact
and a
doctor
at the
transplant
hospital
confirmed
it.
In
January
2011,
Jobs
announced
another
medical
leave,
his
third,
with no
set
duration.
He
returned
to the
spotlight
briefly
in March
to
personally
unveil a
second-generation
iPad and
again in
June,
when he
showed
off
Apple's
iCloud
music
synching
service.
At both
events,
he
looked
frail in
his
signature
jeans
and mock
turtleneck.
Less
than
three
months
later,
Jobs
resigned
as CEO.
In a
letter
addressed
to
Apple's
board
and the
"Apple
community"
Jobs
said he
"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."
In 2005,
following
the bout
with
cancer,
Jobs
delivered
Stanford
University's
commencement
speech.
"Remembering
that
I'll be
dead
soon is
the most
important
tool
I've
ever
encountered
to help
me make
the big
choices
in
life,"
he said.
"Because
almost
everything
- all
external
expectations,
all
pride,
all fear
of
embarrassment
or
failure
- these
things
just
fall
away in
the face
of
death,
leaving
only
what is
truly
important."
Jobs is
survived
by his
biological
mother;
his
sister
Mona
Simpson;
Lisa
Brennan-Jobs,
his
daughter
with
Brennan;
wife
Laurene,
and
their
three
children,
Erin,
Reed and
Eve. |