Tag Archive | "Steve Jobs"

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Steve Jobs trusted Tim Cook to “know exactly what to do”

Posted on 24 October 2011 by admin

By Mikey Campbell

Published: 10:21 PM EST (07:21 PM PST)

Excerpts from Steve Jobs’ upcoming biography have been leaked online, giving new insight into the relationship between the Apple co-founder his eventual successor.

Jobs’ authorized biography, written by Walter Isaacson, will officially be released on Oct. 24, however various publications have already obtained copies and are posting excerpts from it on their respective websites, the most recent being a Bloomberg report on Tim Cook’s history with Apple and his relationship with Jobs.

Cook joined the company in 1998, after being lured away from Compaq Computer, Bloomberg reports, and quickly earned the trust of Jobs, who had recently taken back control of the company he helped create after being ousted 12 years earlier.

“My intuition told me that joining Apple would be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to work for a creative genius,” Cook said. “Engineers are taught to make a decision analytically, but there are times when relying on gut or intuition is most indispensable.”

When Jobs first returned in 1997, he oversaw Apple’s supply chain, though he handed that facet of the business over to Cook in order to focus on a broader strategy for the company.

“I trusted him to know exactly what to do,” Jobs told Walter Isaacson, author of the biography. He went on to say that the two shared the same vision, allowing them to work together at a “high strategic level.”

Before Cook took over the supply chain, Jobs was attempting to change the way Apple handled manufacturing by building “just-in-time” factories, where products are built as orders come in, limiting overstock of inventory. His goal was to make the company leaner and more agile, and he entrusted Cook to get the job done.

When Cook took over the supply chain, he cut the number of component suppliers from 100 to 24, in a move to force the companies to compete for Apple’s business. Cook then shut down 10 of the 19 company warehouses to limit overstocking, and by September 1998 inventory was down from a month to only six days.

According to Bloomberg, the book paints a picture of Cook as Jobs’ ideal counterpart because he was calm, decisive and didn’t want to be in the public eye. Part of Cook’s success at Apple was his ability to know when to disagree with Jobs, reports Bloomberg.

“I realized very early on that if you didn’t express your opinion, he would mow you down,” Cook said. “He takes contrary positions to create more discussion, because it may lead to a better result.”

Steve Jobs biography

As it became more clear that a successor was needed to head the world’s most valuable tech company, Cook began to take on more responsibility as a leader, and oversaw Apple’s day-to-day business during Jobs’ three medical leaves.

In 2009, with Jobs on leave for a liver transplant, Cook said during a conference call that Apple would thrive no matter who was in charge.

JobsandCook

When Jobs heard Cook’s remarks, Isaacson wrote, he didn’t know whether to be “proud or hurt that it might be true.”

At the time of his resignation in August, the Apple co-founder wrote in a public letter to the board of directors that Cook should be his successor.

“I knew what I wanted and I met Tim, and he wanted the same thing,” Jobs said.

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Apple pays tribute to Steve Jobs as thousands watch [u]

Posted on 20 October 2011 by admin

By AppleInsider Staff

Published: 02:17 PM EST (11:17 AM PST)

Thousands of employees gathered at Apple’s corporate campus in California for a tribute to the late Steve Jobs, while even more retail employees watched a live stream of the event as their stores closed [updated photos].

Stores were covered with white sheets on Wednesday to keep the event secret. Inside, employees watched a live feed of an event at an outdoor amphitheater in Cupertino, Calif., celebrating the life of Jobs.

The event runs from 10 a.m. Pacific to 11:30 a.m. As it got underway, footage from a news helicopter shown on CNBC revealed thousands of people participating in the event.

From above, it could be seen that giant banners showing the face of Jobs were prominently displayed at the event. One AppleInsider reader sent word that Coldplay and Norah Jones also performed.

Only employees were allowed to attend the event live in California at 1 Infinite Loop. Security at the company’s corporate headquarters reportedly asked reporters not to approach Apple employees coming to or leaving the campus.

Memorial 1

Because of the large number of employees attending the event, Apple recruited sheriff’s deputies to help direct traffic.

Memorial 1

Earlier Wednesday, Apple published a new section on its website called “Remembering Steve.” It features some of the more than one million messages sent in by those mourning the loss of the Apple co-founder.

Memorial 1

While Wednesday’s tribute is for employees at Apple, a memorial featuring friends, family and colleagues was held on Sunday, featuring people such as Google CEO Larry Page, former U.S. President Bill Clinton, actor Tim Allen, and a performance by U2 lead singer Bono.

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Apple retail stores to shutter Wednesday for Steve Jobs celebration

Posted on 19 October 2011 by admin

By Chris Smith

Published: 06:00 PM EST (03:00 PM PST)

Apple on Wednesday will pause retail store operations in the U.S. for three hours to pay tribute to Steve Jobs and allow employees to watch a live broadcast of a celebration to take place at the company’s headquarters during the same time.

The celebration of Jobs’s life will be run from 10 AM PT to 11.30 AM PT at the outdoor amphitheater on Apple’s Cupertino, Calif. campus. Retail stores in California are reportedly declining online bookings for Wednesday morning in view of the memorial service.

Meanwhile, Apple employees in Asia and Australia will be able to watch a re-broadcast of the event at a latter date.

Apple’s company-wide celebration follows a memorial for Jobs that took place on Sunday at Stanford Memorial Church and was attended by family, friends, artists, political figures and technology leaders.

Steve Jobs

Jobs passed away at age 56 on Oct. 5 after a long bout with cancer, a day after the company announced the iPhone 4S.

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California governor declares Sunday “Steve Jobs Day,” memorial planned

Posted on 16 October 2011 by admin

By AppleInsider Staff

Published: 08:17 PM EST (05:17 PM PST)

California Gov. Jerry Brown announced Friday that Sunday, Oct. 16 will be “Steve Jobs Day” statewide, and will coincide with a private memorial planned for the Apple co-founder at Stanford University.

Brown tweeted the message late Friday after reports that some of Silicon Valley’s biggest names had been invited to a memorial dedicated to Jobs next week.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Apple is planning a special service for Jobs at Stanford University this Sunday.

The small gathering of friends and tech industry insiders follows the private funeral held last week, and comes before Apple’s local Oct. 19 celebration.

According to the Journal, invitations requested guests respond to Emerson Collective, a philanthropy established by Jobs’ widow, Laurene Powell Jobs.

An Apple spokesman said the service on Sunday is a private invitation-only event.

Jobs died on Oct. 5 after a years-long battle with pancreatic cancer.

JerryBrownTwitter

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Apple vs. Microsoft: Two Opposite Approaches to Building an OS

Posted on 16 October 2011 by admin

Microsoft and Apple are the developers of three of the most popular operating systems in the world (Windows, iOS & Mac OS X), yet their approaches to building the infrastructure that powers laptops, tablets and phones couldn’t be more divergent.

Microsoft recently published a blog post that addressed specific issues that Windows 8 developer preview users had with the start screen.

The Windows 8 team specifically tackles the complaint that the new Windows 8 start screen, which uses the app-style metro interface, isn’t effective at organizing apps (it was originally organized alphabetically) and doesn’t display enough apps on one screen (it originally displayed about 20 apps). Microsoft dives deep into the UX issues of start menus, even calculating how many apps Windows 8 can theoretically fit onto one display at different monitor resolutions.

In the end though, Microsoft concluded that its users were right about the Windows 8 start menu and made two important changes to it as a result. First, it now supports folder-style organization of apps. Secondly, Microsoft is making the start screen denser, meaning that more apps will be visible on a single screen.


The Apple Approach to OS Development


Microsoft’s approach lies in stark contrast to Apple‘s approach to OS development. The notoriously secretive company doesn’t like unveiling products until they are polished. It doesn’t publish detailed stats about how people are using its products. And it rarely makes dramatic changes based on user feedback.

It’s an approach that has worked just fine for Apple (more than fine, in fact). Steve Jobs and his team have been able to develop products and features that users wanted long before users they even knew they wanted them.

“It’s really hard to design products by focus groups,” Steve Jobs told BusinessWeek in 1998. “A lot of times, people don’t know what they want until you show it to them.”

This is why you won’t find an Apple blog that details user behavior in iOS. This is why Apple only gives developers a few months to play with new versions of Mac OS X before they get released to the public, while Microsoft will release a new version of Windows to developers more than a year before its official debut.

Both companies are wildly successful with their operating systems. Windows is still the world’s most popular OS, while Apple keeps selling iPhone and iPads by the millions. But we’re about to see what happens when these two opposing philosophies to development butt heads. Microsoft is preparing for war against the iPad, and Windows 8 is its weapon of choice.

Will Microsoft’s philosophy to development trump Apple’s approach? We don’t know the answer to that question yet, but we do know that the fireworks are just getting started.

Check out the galleries below if you want to do a side-by-side comparison of Apple and Microsoft’s approaches to building an OS. Let us know which philosophy you prefer in the comments.


Gallery: Windows 8


Windows 8 Metro Home Screen

This is the Metro interface in Windows 8

Click here to view this gallery.


Gallery: iOS 5


New Home Screen With Notification

Notifications are a big deal in iOS 5. Taking some cues from Android, iOS has finally unified the notification system and made it less clumsy and intrusive.

Message now appear at the top of the screen (though you can choose to allow them to display in the middle) while you are using the phone and they don’t interrupt what you are already doing.

Click here to view this gallery.

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Steve Jobs Day: This Video Will Make You Cry

Posted on 16 October 2011 by admin

California Gov. Jerry Brown officially declared Sunday (10/16/2011) Steve Jobs Day in California, and Apple is holding an invitation-only memorial event for Steve Jobs at Stanford University. To commemorate Steve Jobs Day, I found a video I think he would have liked.

Of the dozens of memorial videos that honor Jobs, I thought this one was the most appropriate for the occasion, created by a musician who calls himself AzR. Here’s how he describes the production of this profoundly moving work of art:

“I made this song using only sounds from Apple products and Steve’s 2005 Stanford commencement speech. Every instrument, including drums, has been sampled from a Mac product, tuned by ear, and replayed in the context of the song.”

If you take away nothing else from this day, just remember what I think is the most important quote ever said by Steve Jobs: “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life.”

Here’s Steve Jobs delivering his memorable Stanford Commencement Speech in 2005:

Steve Jobs demos Apple Macintosh, 1984

Steve Jobs introduces the Macintosh to the world. Computing would never be the same.

Click here to view this gallery.

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Apple to hold celebration of Steve Jobs for employees Wed., Oct. 19

Posted on 11 October 2011 by admin

By Slash Lane

Published: 03:03 PM EST (12:03 PM PST)

Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook has reportedly sent out an e-mail to his employees informing them of a private celebration of the life of the late Steve Jobs next Wednesday, Oct. 19.

Cook allegedly shared the date in the e-mail, which was obtained by MacGeneration on Monday. The private gathering will take place at 10 a.m. Pacific in the outdoor theater on Apple’s corporate campus in Cupertino, Calif.

Cook said that while the last week has been tough for himself and others, they have found comfort in both telling and listening to stories about the company’s late CEO. He said that he has also been touched by the numerous tributes to Jobs that have appeared since he died last Wednesday.

“Although many of our hearts are still heavy, we are planning a celebration of his life for Apple employees to take time to remember the incredible things Steve achieved in his life and the many ways he made our world a better place,” the purported e-mail from Cook reads.

Jobs was laid to rest in a small, private ceremony held on Friday. While next week’s event is for employees at the company’s headquarters, neither Apple nor the Jobs family plans to hold a public memorial.

However, Apple has asked that customers send their own stories, messages and condolences regarding Jobs to a special e-mail address: rememberingsteve@apple.com.

Fifth Ave

The full note reportedly sent by Cook to Apple employees is included below:

Team,

Like many of you, I have experienced the saddest days of my lifetime and shed many tears during the past week. But I’ve found some comfort in the extraordinary number of tributes and condolences from people all over the world who were touched by Steve and his genius. And I’ve found comfort in both telling and listening to stories about Steve.

Although many of our hearts are still heavy, we are planning a celebration of his life for Apple employees to take time to remember the incredible things Steve achieved in his life and the many ways he made our world a better place. The celebration will be held on Wednesday, October 19, at 10am in the outdoor amphitheater on the Infinite Loop campus. We’ll have more details on AppleWeb closer to the date, including arrangements for employees outside of Cupertino.

I look forward to seeing you there.

Tim

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Steve Jobs’ cause of death officially listed as respiratory arrest

Posted on 11 October 2011 by admin

By AppleInsider Staff

Published: 05:29 PM EST (02:29 PM PST)

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs died of respiratory arrest caused by a pancreatic tumor, according to a copy of his death certificate.

Jobs, 56, passed away at around 3 p.m. on Oct. 5th, according to the certificate.

The document, issued Monday by The Santa Clara County Public Health Department, listed the immediate cause of death as respiratory arrest, with “metastatic pancreas neuroendocrine tumor” as an underlying cause. It said Jobs had the tumor for the past five years.

In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer call islet cell carcinoma. He underwent successful surgery to have it removed, but his death certificate reveals that a secondary metastatic tumor developed, prompting a liver transplant in 2009.

The Apple co-founder took two leaves of absence over the next two years and ultimately resigned as CEO on Aug. 24.

A pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor, also called islet cell carcinoma, is a rare form of cancer that is most likely to be passed on through genetics, as there are few known risk factors that lead to this type of illness.

Neuroendocrine tumors, which grow at a relatively slow rate, can be surgically removed. These tumors can release hormones prior to removal, which can cause recurrence or spreading of the cancer.

Only five percent of pancreatic tumors arise from islet cells, with some being “functional,” meaning that they release an excess of hormones that can lead to hormone-related symptoms. In 2009, Jobs revealed that he was being treated for a hormone imbalance.

The disease is typically treated with surgery, followed by liver-directed therapy if metastases develop there, and while Jobs did undergo a liver transplant,  the cancer returned.   

On his death certificate, Jobs’ occupation is listed as “entrepreneur” in the “high tech” industry. The name of the person who prepared the certificate is reportedly blacked out.

Apple informed the Palo Alto, Calif. police a few days before Jobs’ death that the former CEO was expected to die, after being asked to do so by the department, in case patrols were needed to handle the possibility of large crowds of mourners gathering at his house.

Jobs was buried in a non-denominational cemetery in Santa Clara County on Oct .7.

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Steve Jobs’ private memorial service to be held today 

Posted on 09 October 2011 by admin

By Mikey Campbell

Published: 05:08 PM EST (02:08 PM PST)

Two days after his passing on Wednesday, family and friends of Steve Jobs will gather at an undisclosed location to celebrate the life and grieve the death of the visionary Apple co-founder.

A person familiar with the matter has said that the funeral will be a small, intimate gathering, according to the Wall Street Journal. Neither Apple nor the Jobs family is planning a public memorial for the former Apple chief. 

Apple chief executive Tim Cook, in a note to employees, announced that the company would hold an event for staff to celebrate the life of Jobs in the near future.  

“Steve leaves behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple,” Cook wrote. “We are planning a celebration of Steve’s extraordinary life for Apple employees that will take place soon.” 

In lieu of an official memorial, the public has turned the company’s flagship Fifth Avenue store in New York, into a makeshift site of remembrance. Flowers, apples and hundreds of yellow post-it notes now adorn the protective barriers surrounding the construction area of the iconic glass cube that serves as the store’s entrance. 

The New York site is not the only location to see visitors paying tribute to Jobs, as Apple stores around the world have become impromptu memorials. 

Flowers

Apple memorialized Jobs on the homepage of their website, Wednesday, with a portrait of the former CEO, and the words “Steve Jobs 1955-2011.” 

“We will honor his memory by dedicating ourselves to continuing the work he loved so much,” Cook wrote. 

Apple also provided an email address to which well-wishers can send their messages, stories and condolences.

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Steve Jobs knew his time was short, focused on family first

Posted on 09 October 2011 by admin

By Mikey Campbell

Published: 09:22 PM EST (06:22 PM PST)

After years of battling complications arising from his initial bout with cancer, Steve Jobs learned in February that his time was finally running out. In his final months, he surrounded himself with those most important to him: his wife and his children.

For the past few months, Jobs had been the recipient of numerous calls and attempted visits to his Palo Alto, Calif., home, as whispers spread of his worsening condition, The New York Times reported in an intimate piece on the Apple co-founder.

Jobs had quietly shared with a few of his closest friends that he thought his time was becoming short. In the final days leading up to his death this past Wednesday, there was an incessant stream of phone calls from well-wishers.

Jobs’ wife, Laurene, fielded most of the calls, and in the final weeks had confided in one caller that the former Apple chief was too weak to climb the stairs of his own house. She apologized to friends, saying that Jobs only had so much energy for farewells.

“He was aware that his time on earth was limited,” close friend Dr. Dean Ornish said. “He wanted control of what he did with the choices that were left.”

Most of that time was spent with his family, the report noted. When Jobs was able to make it to Apple, he would finish his work for the day and immediately return home for dinner with his wife and children.

Steve Jobs tribute outside home

Because of his extreme secrecy, there is little known as to how Jobs’ wealth will be distributed. Many wealthy business leaders leave their estates to foundations or charity, but there has been no news on how Jobs planned to mete out his roughly $7 billion fortune.

“Everyone always wanted a piece of Steve,” an acquaintance told the Times. “He created all these layers to protect himself from the fan boys and other peoples’ expectations and the distractions that have destroyed so many other companies.”

Jobs’ home was surrounded by security guards in the months leading to his death, with two black SUV’s blocking his driveway. On Thursday, the two vehicles were removed, to be replaced by flowers, candles and apples from visitors.

In a Time magazine interview, Jobs’ biographer Walter Isaacson asked him why he had consented to a biography, given how private he was. Jobs replied, “I wanted my kids to know me,” adding that he hadn’t always been there for them and he wanted them to “know why and to understand” what he did.

Steve Jobs

Jobs gave some insight into his thoughts on “why” in his 2005 commencement speech at Stanford.

“Death is very likely the single best invention of life,” he said. “It is life’s change agent.”

The benefit of death is that it allows you to not waste life living someone else’s choices, Jobs went on to explain, adding that the most important thing to have is “the courage to follow your heart and intuition.”

Near the end, Jobs turned his words into practice, choosing to concentrate on his family and those that depended on him.

“Steve’s concerns these last few weeks were for people who depended on him: the people who worked for him at Apple and his four children and his wife,” said Mona Simpson, Jobs’ sister. “His tone was tenderly apologetic at the end. He felt terrible that he would have to leave us.”

Little is known of Steve Jobs’ personal life, and he wanted it that way. His obsession with secrecy continued until the day he died, but perhaps, in death, he will be better understood. His biography will be released in two weeks, and Time has released a special issue to commemorate the Apple co-founder.

Jobs’ acquaintance, speaking to the Times in anonymity, may have put it best: “Once you’re gone, you belong to the world.”

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