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  1. #101

    Re: RIP Steve Jobs

    Steve Jobs bio out Monday.

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/stor...-jobs-bio.html

    The book was originally called "iSteve" and scheduled to come out in March 2012. The release date was moved up to November, then, after Jobs' death, to this coming Monday. Isaacson interviewed Jobs more than 40 times, including just a few weeks before his death.

    The book says Jobs put no subject off limits and had no control over its contents.
    There is no planet B.

  2. #102
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    Re: RIP Steve Jobs

    I Will Miss You, Steve




    The death of Steve Jobs has been affecting me much more than I anticipated. Just like every one else, I knew Steve’s days were counted. Yet, I didn’t really prepare myself.
    Instead, I did what I sometimes do to unconsciously protect myself. I put my feelings aside and kept ignoring emotions as though they didn’t exist.
    When the news broke, I was terribly shocked, but not surprised. At the time, I was very sad but I think I didn’t process the information right away. Again, I think my brain blocked my feelings to protect me.
    As I watched Apple’s celebration of Steve Jobs’ in Cupertino yesterday, I couldn’t help but feel immensely sad, my eyes filling with tears, a few of them would eventually fall on my face.
    How did I get there? How can I be so affected by the death of a man whom I had never met? A man that, mind you, I had very much disliked for many years.
    Yes, for the longest time, I wasn’t a big fan of Steve Jobs’. While I respected the work he had been doing, I really disliked the human being. Steve Jobs was a real *******. A dictator. A selfish, and egocentric man, with little regard for the feelings of others.
    I remember reading about Steve Jobs’ return at Apple several years ago. The article told the story of how cutting the company’s philanthropic program was one of the first thing he did upon his return, in 1997. As an avid Windows user at the time, and someone with great respect for Bill Gates’ charity involvement, I thought Steve Jobs was just what I always thought he was: a big *******…
    And an ******* he was. Just like he proved to be when he denied paternity of his first daughter, born out of wedlock. But this is not the point of this post.
    When Steve Jobs first unveiled the iPhone in 2007, I knew this was the device I had been waiting for all my life. I fell in love with it right away, just like I had fallen in love with my first iPod a few years before that.
    Then I created this blog in 2008, a year after the original iPhone launched. iDB was just a hobby, not generating any revenue for a period of time, but it was fine because I wasn’t really trying to make money out of it, I just wanted to share with the world my passion for hacking the iPhone and going around Apple’s insane restrictions.
    If you’re a long time iDB reader, you know that I’ve been a harsh critic of Apple and Steve Jobs for a long time. I simply couldn’t agree to the company’s philosophy that the user should not be in control, and that Apple knows better than me what is best for me. Nonsense! I’m a rebel, I don’t need people to tell me what I can and cannot do with my device!
    Then along the years, I got wiser and I guess I lost some of my rebel temper. I started to see the vision of the man, I started to understand. Most importantly, I started to adhere to it. Oh my god, what have I become?
    To this day, I still don’t agree 100% with Apple but I totally understand and respect their choices. I do not think Apple is evil for creating what might be the biggest digital walled garden. I think they just have a different way of looking at things, and I do believe this is for our best. I also believe this is the best strategy for Apple, and one that has certainly paid off.
    So Apple got me. I’m a believer. Not a fanboy! Unlike others, I just don’t agree with everything they do and I can be very critical of their actions. I’m not just following them blindly.
    This is all Steve’s fault. He made me what I am today.
    I still don’t think the man is a saint, but now I can look passed his *******ness because this is not what matters. What matters to me is how he impacted my life, not how he behaved towards other people. What matters to me and what should matter to you is how he has changed our lives forever, and for the best.
    When I look back at the last three years of my life, I am incredibly grateful to what Steve Jobs has done for me. Besides providing me with the best phone or the best computer, he helped me get to where I am today.
    In 2009, I quit my comfortable and well-paid job as a marketing executive. The blog wasn’t doing great at the time but my wife Tina – girlfriend at the time – told me “go ahead honey, do it, if you can’t make it at least you will have tried, and no matter what, I’ll be supporting you.”
    So I did it. iDB became more and more popular and I was starting to make a decent living out of it. The nature of this business even allowed me and Tina to take 8 months off and go travel the world. Armed with a laptop, we visited 8 countries, while still being able to work to finance this trip.
    That was the life!
    Along our travels we met many people who would inevitably ask us what we do for a living and how we could afford this trip, since we lived large. “I’m a blogger. I blog about the iPhone, and that’s how we can pay for this trip.” While other travelers were saving every dollar they could from their tight budget, we were living like kings and queens – which is really not that hard to do in South East Asia. People remarked how lucky I was to have such a job, and I obviously agreed with them.
    Now iDB is a well-oiled machine. We certainly don’t make millions – we’re very very far from it – but we make enough to support me, 2 full-time writers, and 2-3 other writers.
    Who should I thank for that? Steve Jobs of course.
    I never met the guy, and I probably wouldn’t have liked him anyway, but I feel like I owe him a lot. I owe him because I was able to create a sustainable business solely based on products that he created, but I also owe him for the inspiration he has been providing me.
    By inspiration I mean that he has mentally stimulated me to feel for and love beautifully designed and engineered products. He has influenced forever my relationship with electronics, what I expect from them, how I use them, and how they affect my life.
    This inspiration is what makes me stand behind Apple’s core values. This inspiration is what makes me get up in the morning and walk to my computer with a huge smile on my face, because I love what I do, and I believe in what I do.
    With his passing away, I feel like I lost a family member. I know Steve has been looking out for me. He enabled me. He’s allowed me to be where I am today, and for this, I will be forever grateful to him.
    As I am typing this on my iMac, I can’t help but think how much better my life is today, and that’s all thanks to Steve.
    In the upcoming years, I feel confident that Steve Jobs will remain a great influence and inspiration not only for me, but also for the world, which he helped make a better place in his own ways.
    I will miss you, Steve. I will miss you.

    link.... http://www.idownloadblog.com/2011/10...medium=twitter


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  3. #103

    Re: RIP Steve Jobs

    MAX KEISER ON STEVE JOBS OCT,7 2011
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nBnXWCObiI

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