Apple Founder Steve Jobs Dies.
Steve
Jobs, the mastermind behind Apple's iPhone, iPad, iPod, iMac and iTunes, has
died, Apple said. Jobs was 56.
"We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs
passed away today," read a statement by Apple's board of directors.
"Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless
innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably
better because of Steve. His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his
family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched by his
extraordinary gifts."
[Photos: Steve Jobs through the years]
The homepage of Apple's website this evening switched to
a full-page image of Jobs with the text, "Steve Jobs 1955-2011."
Clicking on the image revealed the additional text:
"Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the world has lost an
amazing human being. Those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and
work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves
behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be
the foundation of Apple."
Jobs co-founded Apple Computer in 1976 and, with his
childhood friend Steve Wozniak, marketed what was considered the world's first
personal computer, the Apple II.
Shortly after learning of Jobs' death, Wozniak told ABC
News, "I'm shocked and disturbed."
Industry watchers called him a master innovator --
perhaps on a par with Thomas Edison -- changing the worlds of computing,
recorded music and communications.
In 2004, he beat back an unusual form of pancreatic
cancer, and in 2009 he was forced to get a liver transplant. After several years
of failing health, Jobs announced on Aug. 24, 2011 that he was stepping down as
Apple's chief executive.
"I have always said if there ever came a day when I
could no longer meet my duties and expectations as Apple's CEO, I would be the
first to let you know," Jobs wrote in his letter of resignation.
"Unfortunately, that day has come."
One of the world's most famous CEOs, Jobs remained
stubbornly private about his personal life, refusing interviews and shielding
his wife and their children from public view.
"He's never been a media person," said
industry analyst Tim Bajarin, president of Creative Strategies, after Jobs
resigned. "He's granted interviews in the context of product launches,
when it benefits Apple, but you never see him talk about himself."
The highlights of Jobs's career trajectory are
well-known: a prodigy who dropped out of Reed College in Oregon and, at 21,
started Apple with Wozniak in his parents' garage. He was a multimillionaire by
25, appeared on the cover of Time magazine at 26, and was ousted at Apple at
age 30, in 1984.
In the years that followed, he went into other
businesses, founding NeXT computers and, in 1986, buying the computer graphics
arm of Lucasfilm, Ltd., which became Pixar Animation Studios.
He was described as an exacting and sometimes fearsome
leader, ordering up and rejecting multiple versions of new products until the
final version was just right. He said the design and aesthetics of a device
were as important as the hardware and software inside.
In 1996, Apple, which had struggled without Jobs,
brought him back by buying NeXT. He became CEO in 1997 and put the company on a
remarkable upward path.
By 2001 the commercial music industry was on its knees
because digital recordings, copied and shared online for free, made it
unnecessary for millions of people to buy compact discs.
Jobs took advantage with the iPod -- essentially a
pocket-sized computer hard drive with elegantly simple controls and a set of
white earbuds so that one could listen to the hours of music one saved on it.
He set up the iTunes online music store, and persuaded major recording labels
to sell songs for 99 cents each. No longer did people have to go out and buy a
CD if they liked one song from it. They bought a digital file and stored it in
their iPod.
In 2007, he transformed the cell phone. Apple's iPhone,
with its iconic touch screen, was a handheld computer, music player, messaging
device, digital wallet and -- almost incidentally -- cell phone. Major
competitors, such as BlackBerry, Nokia and Motorola, struggled after it
appeared.
By 2010, Apple's new iPad began to cannibalize its
original business, the personal computer. The iPad was a sleek tablet computer
with a touch screen and almost no physical buttons. It could be used for almost
anything software designers could conceive, from watching movies to taking
pictures to leafing through a virtual book.
Personal life
Jobs kept a close cadre of friends, Bajarin said,
including John Lasseter of Pixar and Larry Ellison of Oracle, but beyond that,
shared very little of his personal life with anyone.
But that personal life -- he was given up at birth for
adoption, had an illegitimate child, was romantically linked with movie stars
-- was full of intrigue for his fan base and Apple consumers.
Jobs and his wife, Laurene Powell, were married in a
small ceremony in Yosemite National Park in 1991, lived in Woodside, Calif.,
and had three children: Reed Paul, Erin Sienna and Eve.
He admitted that when he was 23, he had a child out of
wedlock with his high school girlfriend, Chris Ann Brennan. Their daughter,
Lisa Brennan Jobs, was born in 1978.
He had a biological sister, Mona Simpson, the author of
such well-known books as "Anywhere But Here." But he did not meet
Simpson until they were adults and he was seeking out his birth parents.
Simpson later wrote a book based on their relationship. She called it "A
Regular Guy."
Fortune magazine reported that Jobs denied paternity of
Lisa for years, at one point swearing in a court document that he was infertile
and could not have children. According to the report, Chris Ann Brennan
collected welfare for a time to support the child until Jobs later acknowledged
Lisa as his daughter.
There were other personal details that emerged over the
years, as well.
At Reed, Jobs became romantically involved with the
singer Joan Baez, according to Elizabeth Holmes, a friend and classmate. In
"The Second Coming of Steve Jobs," Holmes tells biographer Alan
Deutschman that Jobs broke up with his serious girlfriend to "begin an
affair with the charismatic singer-activist." Holmes confirmed the details
to ABC News.
Jobs' health and Apple's health
Enigmatic and charismatic, Jobs said little about
himself. But then his body began to fail him.
In 2004, he was forced to say publicly he had a rare
form of pancreatic cancer. In 2009, it was revealed that he had quietly gone to
a Memphis hospital for a liver transplant.
He took three medical leaves from Apple. He did not
share details.
In 2009, sources said, members of Apple's board of
directors had to persuade him to disclose more about his health as "a
fiduciary issue," interwoven with the health of the company.
He was listed in March as 109th on the Forbes list of
the world's billionaires, with a net worth of about $8.3 billion. After selling
Pixar animation studios to The Walt Disney Company in 2006, he became a Disney
board member and the company's largest shareholder. Disney is the parent
company of ABC News.
Analysts said Apple performed well during Jobs' absence,
partly because he was available for big decisions and partly because his chief
lieutenant, Tim Cook, was the hands-on manager even when Jobs was there.
The company has a history of bouncing back. In January
2009, after he announced his second medical leave, Apple stock dropped to
$78.20 per share. But it quickly recovered and became one of the most
successful stocks on Wall Street. On one day in the summer of 2011, with the
stock hitting the $400 level, Apple briefly passed ExxonMobil as the world's
most valuable company.
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