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In high-tech tributes, Apple fans mourn Steve Jobs

Thu Oct 6, 2011 12:30 PM EDT
entertainment, technology, business, us, jobs, us-news, steve-jobs
Jordan Robertson, AP Technology Writer
< PreviousNext >
showing 1 of 13 photos
<p>An Apple computer fan raises his iPad displaying candle graphics during a candle light vigil to pay tribute to Steve Jobs, the Apple founder and former CEO, at an Apple Store in the Ginza shopping district in Tokyo Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011. Jobs died on Wednesday at the age of 56. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)</p>

An Apple computer fan raises his iPad displaying candle graphics during a candle light vigil to pay tribute to Steve Jobs, the Apple founder and former CEO, at an Apple Store in the Ginza shopping district in Tokyo Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011. Jobs died on Wednesday at the age of 56. (AP Photo/Hiro Komae)

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— Steve Jobs was mourned around the world Thursday through the very devices he conceived: People held up pictures of candles on their iPads, reviewed his life on Macintosh computers and tapped out tributes on iPhones.

One day after his death, two days after Apple introduced the latest incarnation of a touch-screen phone that touched pop culture, sadness and admiration poured out — not for a rock star, not for a religious figure, but for an American corporate executive.

"He was a genius," Rosario Hidalgo said outside an Apple Store on the Upper West Side of Manhattan while her daughter, 21-month-old Carlotta, used an iPhone to play an app that teaches children to match animal sounds to animal pictures.

By people who have grown up in a world where iPod headphones are as ubiquitous as wristwatches were to a previous generation, Jobs was remembered as their Elvis Presley or John Lennon. Perhaps even their Thomas Edison.

"It's like the end of the innovators," said Scott Robbins, 34, who described himself as an Apple fan of 20 years and who rushed to an Apple Store in San Francisco when he heard the news.

Apple announced Jobs' death Wednesday night and remembered him as a "visionary and creative genius." The company announced no cause of death, but Jobs had been diagnosed with a rare pancreatic cancer seven years ago and had a liver transplant in 2009. He was 56.

On Thursday, the Apple website, which usually features slick presentations of multicolored iPods and ever-thinner MacBook laptop computers, simply displayed a black-and-white photo of Jobs, thumb and finger to his beard as if in contemplation.

Around the world, tributes sprang up of the highest and lowest technology.

In the Ginza shopping district of Tokyo, people held up iPhones and iPads, their screens facing outward and displaying sharply defined, touchable graphics of flickering candles.

At an Apple Store in Hong Kong, old and new means of grief came together: People scribbled "RIP" and "We miss Steve" and longer notes of condolence on Post-It notes, and stuck them to an iPad display.

And at the 24-hour Apple Store in midtown Manhattan, the remembrances were more traditional. Passersby left flowers and candles, actual ones. Even there, people snapped pictures of the memorial with their iPhones.

"I was so saddened. For me it was like Michael Jackson or Princess Diana — that magnitude," Stephen Jarjoura said at the Apple Store in Sydney. His said Jobs left a legacy to rival Edison and Albert Einstein.

Philippe Meunier, a senior partner of a Canadian ad agency who was visiting New York from Montreal, reflected on how weird it was to receive the news of Jobs' death on the phone he invented.

Even in Syria, seven months into an uprising, people paused to take pride in Jobs, whose father was born in Homs, the third-largest city.

"This shows that this country can produce geniuses, if only we had freedoms instead of a suffocating dictatorship," said Sara, a 23-year-old Syrian student who refused to give her full name for fear of Syrian government reprisal.

Apple has sold 129 million iPhones and 29 million iPads. And in the decade since it revolutionized the music industry by offering "1,000 songs in your pocket," it has sold 300 million iPods, or roughly enough to outfit every person in the United States.

Jobs' death came two days after Tim Cook, who took over as Apple CEO when Jobs stepped down in August, presided over the launch of the iPhone 4S. It was the first time in years Apple had launched a major product without Jobs to advertise it in his trademark jeans and black mock turtleneck.

Apple stock, which traded at about $5 a share when Jobs assumed the CEO job for the second time in 1997, passed $400 earlier this year. Investors have worried for years about what would happen to the company without him.

Because so many products that were graced by the Jobs touch are still in the sales pipeline, it will take years to measure the impact of his death. On Thursday, the stock fluctuated, but only by a couple of percentage points. It closed down 88 cents at $377.37.

In a measure of his impact on personal technology, Jobs was venerated by his fiercest competitors in the hours after his death.

Bill Gates, the co-founder of Microsoft, a company that Apple once treated as Goliath to its David, then blew past in market value, said it was "an insanely great honor" to have known Jobs. A statement of grief came from Sony, whose Walkman and Discman were buried by the iPod.

Google added a link to the Apple site on its famously minimalist search page. Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, thanked him for changing the world.

To the extent that there is an online version of the old-time public square, it was overrun Thursday by remembrances of Jobs.

On Twitter, where the most popular "trending" topics change by the hour, "ThankYouSteve" and "iSad" were still high on the list a day after his death.

On Facebook, people posted revisions of the Apple logo, a stylized apple with a detached leaf and a half-moon bite taken out. One added a frown and tears to the apple. Another replaced the bite with a silhouette of Jobs himself.

Heads of state around the world added their thoughts. President Barack Obama said Jobs exemplified American ingenuity. Mexico's President Felipe Calderon bemoaned the loss of "one of the most visionary minds of our times." India's Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, said he was "deeply saddened."

___

Associated Press writers Karen Matthews and Jocelyn Noveck in New York and Zeina Karam in Beirut contributed to this report.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Jordan Robertson's Column, All of Newsvine
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  • Public Discussion (68)
Arlene Tognetti

May he rest in peace, knowing that he fulfilled his mission to help us

get into the 21st Century...Great innovator, great visionary and great humanitarian

May we all follow in his footsteps to do our best and highest good for the world.

  • 6 votes
#1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 1:16 PM EDT
infrared

He didn't really innovate anything. He didn't produce the first mp3 player the first touchscreen. He knew how to market.

  • 3 votes
#1.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 1:29 PM EDT
Daniel A. Hallo

Infrared. The first hater.

  • 6 votes
#1.2 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:11 PM EDT
Roy-933464

He didn't really innovate anything.

That, infrared, is what is known as "denial". In this context, exhibiting it to such a degree suggests quite a few things about the speaker. Lol. I'm just sayin'...what was there to gain? I mean there's the whole "fanboy" view widely touted by Apple's detractors that's just all in geeky good competitive fun, but this is just on an entirely different level. You don't really become a revolutionary in Tech without being an innovator at the same time.

  • 5 votes
#1.3 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:25 PM EDT
Alan Curtis Montgomery

Thank You Steve Jobs for your commitment to bringing technology into the hands of the masses, thank you for innovation, thank you for all that you have done for technology and making the computer personal, thank you for offering a corporate competitor to Microsoft, thank you for all that you have done. Rest in Peace Steve Jobs. @>-->--

  • 4 votes
#1.4 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:34 PM EDT
Indepvoter

Rest in Peace Steve.

  • 4 votes
#1.5 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:21 PM EDT
infrared

Roy you didn't really argue. You're the one in denial. He didnt introduce anything new. It's like saying I'm an innovator cause I brought glue and glitter together.

  • 1 vote
#1.6 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:35 PM EDT
Ms CYPRAH

He didnt introduce anything new. It's like saying I'm an innovator cause I brought glue and glitter together.

Wow. Even I didn't know that. So, it must be great news for you then, infrared, because you now get the opportunity to show what you can do, with him out of the way. The stage is all yours, O great genius. Let's see your fantastic innovations.

Some people are truly pathetic excuses for humanity! :o(

  • 7 votes
#1.7 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:50 PM EDT
PeckDollyDeleted
CliffDogg

It may not seem like the time, but it's getting a bit thick with the techno-urban-upper-middle-class rush to show their affinity with the Apple hip-ness by offering so many public condolences (facebook is filled) as if this guy actually did something to help people that needed help. It is always sad to see anyone pass away, we are all someone's father, brother, son, uncle. But the outpouring by individuals as if they knew him, and he actually changed their lives for the better, I mean, really?

He was a marketing and design genius, but without him...what? our pc's would be boxier, our music players mp3s and our phones Android? The horrible fate he saved us from.

He was an inspiration for those who worked under him. And he talked great about following one's passion. But then again, he did nothing with his power and billions of dollars to help those truly suffering in the world (not to mention the slave-like conditions in the Chinese factories that produced his products).

I'm sorry this sounds so harsh, but my "pushback" is at the people all throwing out memorials on their facebook pages and saying how wonderful he was and how great he was...and in the balance, it's all so they could have cheaper, cooler iPhones.

  • 2 votes
#1.9 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:42 PM EDT
Jonathan-2055273

The one thing that Jobs did have was an eye for what was really important. No, nothing he produced was original in the smaller details, the technology, but the technology isn't really what matters. Jobs was about the total experience, and quite frankly, he is as far as I can tell, one of the VERY few that were truly innovative in this respect.

I honestly don't care about an MP3 player, but my iPod isn't just an mp3 player, it is the experience of using it. Having everything CONVENIENTLY there at my finger tips, not just at my finger tips, but CONVENIENTLY at my finger tips. There is a HUGE difference.

That is something that was truly special. Even if he was a total A$$HOLE, but part of that was him defining his company's products, him defining the company.

He will be missed.

  • 3 votes
#1.10 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:07 PM EDT
FactOfTheMatter

He didn't really innovate anything.

I think it would be considered an innovation to make high end design available to everyone. Sure, the products are expensive, but they're so well designed that people are willing to pay. You could compare that to the boutique shops that were capable of designing the same, but they would have charged two or three times as much.

  • 1 vote
#1.11 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:29 PM EDT
Daniel A. Hallo

Don't forget that the First PC was from Apple. 

  • 3 votes
#1.12 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:52 PM EDT
CliffDogg

jon @ 1.10

but my iPod isn't just an mp3 player, it is the experience of using it. Having everything CONVENIENTLY there at my finger tips, not just at my finger tips, but CONVENIENTLY at my finger tips. There is a HUGE difference.

That is something that was truly special. Even if he was a total A$$HOLE

What have we become? Our entire existence revolves around being consumers, not citizens, not fellow human beings, not members of a community (besides virtual communities).

  • 1 vote
#1.13 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:54 PM EDT
Jonathan-2055273

Cliff

What does that have to do with the decision to purchase a cheesy mp3 player or an iPod?

WOW!!!

    #1.14 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:56 PM EDT
    Daniel A. Hallo

    One of my favorite movies is still "Pirates of Silicon Valley"

    • 1 vote
    #1.15 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:59 PM EDT
    Daniel A. Hallo

    Chisel and stone, pen and papyrus, movable type… progress, something you can't stop…

    Printing brought on the age of enlightenment and there where plenty of conservative naysayers then as well… damn those pesky books spreading ideas to the masses! Damn the inter-webs and mass media! Damn free thought!

    (sark)

    That's really whats at the root of all this animosity being displayed here is about.

    "Only the educated are free." Epictetus

    What they hate about Steve Jobs is that he was a Progresive.

    • 1 vote
    #1.16 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 6:13 PM EDT
    infrared

    Wow. Even I didn't know that. So, it must be great news for you then, infrared, because you now get the opportunity to show what you can do, with him out of the way. The stage is all yours, O great genius. Let's see your fantastic innovations.

    hey its ms. white paper is racism lol.

    im interested as to how you haven't found racism here.

    last time i checked i didn't claim to be an innovator or marketer, i am simply stating facts, he did nothing "revolutionary" he just marketed things very well. he didn't create the pc he didn't create the mouse, he didn't create the mp3 player.

    the pathetic argument is quite sad, oh how about you go and invent something if you don't agree with the false labels. lol you probably should stick to finding racism where there is none.

    I think it would be considered an innovation to make high end design available to everyone

    you contradict yourself, you say bring it to "everyone" but then you admit they were expensive and overpriced. a single cable costs $30 that's nuts.

    What they hate about Steve Jobs is that he was a Progresive.

    not really, he is behind encrypting his entire firmware that goes on iPods. His business plan included taking a lot of ideas that came from others and copyrighting them and suing anyone else that copied those ideas.

    • 1 vote
    #1.17 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 6:54 PM EDT
    Daniel A. Hallo

    Progressives are not good Businessmen? infrared go troll somewhere else.

    • 2 votes
    #1.18 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 7:02 PM EDT
    infrared

    Progressives are not good Businessmen? infrared go troll somewhere else.

    add to the discussion or get lost.

    • 2 votes
    #1.19 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 8:44 PM EDT
    Daniel A. Hallo

    Realy, so you dictate what the discussion is now?

    • 1 vote
    #1.20 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 10:10 PM EDT
    infrared

    you're going to act like a child now?

    • 1 vote
    #1.21 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:53 AM EDT
    Jonathan-2055273

    Apple sold products at prices the market would bear, that is CAPITALISM.

    Nobody is forced to buy an apple product.

    Quite frankly I have no problems paying for the Apple premium, because I recoup those costs in other ways. (the premium isn't that much now anyways, and OS upgrades are much cheaper).

    So feel free to buy the cheap crap.

    • 1 vote
    #1.22 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:57 AM EDT
    infrared

    So feel free to buy the cheap crap.

    im not sure what you are arguing here, my argument is that jobs wasn't an innovator he simply knew how to market well.

      #1.23 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 3:02 AM EDT
      Jonathan-2055273

      infrared:

      yeah he was an innovator, he knew that it was the TOTAL PACKAGE that was important. That it doesn't matter what features you can check off, but that the way a product is used is far more important.

      When looking at phones, my experience:

      1) RIM (not even close though the back end technology is excellent, their phones are inconsistent and difficult to develop for all of their products, namely because their screens are different sizes).
      2) Android - feels clunky and toyish, while the features are there, it just doesn't have consistency.
      3) iPhone - While it may not have all the gadgety features that the above 2 have, it feels much better put together from a software standpoint. Everything is consistent allowing me as a user to not have to deal with differences between applications.

      So what do I choose as the best of the bunch? the iPhone. That is my choice.

      Steve Jobs WAS an innovator, he was an innovator in understanding what is needed from a package in order to define markets.

      • 1 vote
      #1.24 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 3:08 AM EDT
      infrared

      innovator is someone who creates and brings forth something new, unless you can interact with the phone by jamming it in your ass and not using your fingers there is nothing "innovative" about it. It isn't the first phone to play music, it isn't the first touch screen phone, if it was the first butt phone then yeah innovative but it isn't.

      better software design, well it feels more put together, but that's not innovative.

      • 2 votes
      #1.25 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 3:20 AM EDT
      octavious-8

      Apple sells one @!$%#ty boost mobile advancement at a time. Where will your financial standings be after the IPhone 42? Add it up. Like legal Drugs. Instead of dumping human advancement on us all at once. We get to buy it one @!$%#ty boost mobile app at a time. If there could just be a rewind button.

      • 1 vote
      #1.26 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 8:51 AM EDT
      Jonathan-2055273

      I think you have lost what the concept of innovator is, but that is fine, no point trying to educate the clueless.

        #1.27 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 12:35 PM EDT
        octavious-8

        Suit yourself. The IPhone Technology is outdated by far more than its lifespan. Innovation is nothing when the Technology was here in the 80's. Do you think the IPhone technology was new when it was released to mainstream society? If so....you have got a real curve to get past in your growth cycle.

        • 1 vote
        #1.28 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:34 PM EDT
        Jonathan-2055273

        octavious.

        And right there you are completely missing the point. It isn't the technology itself that matters. It is the entire package. When I looked at phones, I looked at android, didn't like it, cheesy, and it felt like someone just slapped a UI on a phone. It just didn't feel like a unified package.

        The innovation that jobs created was THAT. It wasn't the technology. When I am using a phone, I, and most others, don't CARE about the technology, we care about the usability of the entire system. That isn't marketing, that isn't technical innovation (though multitouch is a really big advance), it is for lack of a better term 'systems innovation'.

          #1.29 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:40 PM EDT
          octavious-8

          Suit yourself.

            #1.30 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 1:45 PM EDT
            Daniel A. Hallo

            Rocks have been around since the beginning of the universe, so using your "Reasoning", the first man who used them to build a house was no smatter then anyone else, just a user taking advantage .

            Sorry but that's how all progress is made, taking what is and making better use of it. We all are standing on the shoulders of those in the past, and hopefully making things better.

            The ones who think of it first, and put it to use, are the innovators.

            Benjamin Franklin didn’t invent wind, he didn’t invent the Kite and he didn’t invent lighting.

              #1.31 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:07 PM EDT
              octavious-8

              Sure. Gotcha conservative. I see where you stand. You stand in a minority of humans facing the edge of a cliff. Open source is happening everywhere. Human technology is for everyone. Not just the "innovative!" You can stand around damning poor people all you want. When you finally fall over that edge. You can take your IcrapPhone with ya"!

              Like I stated above.

              SUIT YOURSELF

                #1.32 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:10 PM EDT
                Daniel A. Hallo

                How innovative are you? You can bitch all day long about the innovations of anyone, what does that do for you? Feel better?

                • 1 vote
                #1.33 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:17 PM EDT
                Jonathan-2055273

                ahhh all he had to say was open source, that just puts him in the zealot side of the linux community.

                Oh and by the way, Linux isn't innovative. There is NOTHING in linux that has never been done before. Even the open source concept isn't new.

                  #1.34 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:26 PM EDT
                  octavious-8

                  I'm so innovative....I bought the the first competition to the IPhone. The Samsung Instinct. I still have it to this day. Its just as good as the IPhone. I even hacked it to make it better. And The phone I had before was a nokia cheapy I used it for 7 yrs. While everyone was buying Iphones....I never needed anything until I wanted a smart phone.

                    #1.35 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:34 PM EDT
                    Jonathan-2055273

                    which means that all you need is a regular phone.

                    again, nobody is forcing you to buy anything. Buy what you need. In your case, you value hacking more than anything else, and quite frankly, that is such a small segment of the market that Apple really doesn't care about it.

                    Why should any company try to focus on a market that is maybe 5% of the overall market.

                    As for me, I will keep using my iPhone now that I am no longer required to use a blackberry (for the back end security). And if another RIM executive asks me (I have met Lazaridis at a few conventions) about my feelings about their devices, I will tell them exactly this, Blackberry back end technology, second to none, but I don't see that. I see the phone. It doesn't matter how good the back end is, if the front end sucks, it won't sell. Blackberry phones in my opinion are too difficult to develop for, and do not provide a common platform to develop for (each blackberry has a different sized screen making it hard to develop interfaces for). When I looked at the playbook, same problem. It just felt clunky and really didn't meet my requirements as a tablet user.

                    Now my only problem with the iPad is that I can't get a 'tough iPad', one for extreme environments.

                    As for any technical limitations that people may perceive the iPhone as having, well did ya ever think that they aren't technical limitations, but design choices.

                      #1.36 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 2:45 PM EDT
                      infrared

                      that just puts him in the zealot side of the linux community.

                      you mean open source community not linux also the issue comes with that apple did not innovate anything because everything they did was use others ideas but they would sue. for example in iOS 5 they have an update everything over air option, the app that does that has its own logo/icon too. that logo/icon and entire idea was taken from another developer that was rejected by apple and now apple is suing him for infringement.

                      i also don't see anyone calling linux innovating?

                        #1.37 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 3:10 PM EDT
                        Jonathan-2055273

                        infrared

                        I haven't seen that lawsuit, so I won't comment on it.

                        As for anyone calling linux innovating? talk to just about anyone in the community and you will get that. Sorry, the linux community has it stuck in their head that reverse engineering and rewriting UNIX is an innovation. It is the most offensive aspect about the community. (Personally I really have no feelings about the OS itself, I don't use it, but that is because I have no applications that need it)

                          #1.38 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 3:22 PM EDT
                          Indepvoter

                          iMac

                          iPod

                          iTunes

                          iPhone

                          iPad

                          iSad

                          • 3 votes
                          #1.39 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 6:22 PM EDT
                          Halifax Oliver

                          Agreed.

                          • 3 votes
                          #1.40 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 7:56 PM EDT
                          Reply
                          Halifax Oliver

                          I guess that is touching, and it is sad that he left us. But I have to say, good glavin, nerd alert.

                            Reply#2 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 1:27 PM EDT
                            Halifax Oliver

                            I am not trying to annoy or bother anyone, especially so soon after his death, but is it true that Jobs was extremely uncharitable, especially compared with Bill Gates? I have heard that he was not a humanitarian at all, in monetary terms I mean.

                              #2.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 1:35 PM EDT
                              Tyler Durden-330839

                              Ladies and Gentlemen,

                              Bart Simpson

                              http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZGIn9bpALo

                              Dorme bene.

                              • 1 vote
                              #2.2 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 1:50 PM EDT
                              spiffie

                              but is it true that Jobs was extremely uncharitable, especially compared with Bill Gates?

                              Compared to Bill Gates? It's hard to say; probably in absolute terms since Bill Gates had many billions of dollars more than Steve Jobs to donate. However, it's possible that Steve Jobs' reputation as uncharitable is unfounded. There is some evidence that he donated substantial sums of money anonymously.

                              • 4 votes
                              #2.3 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:38 PM EDT
                              Halifax Oliver

                              Yeah, good points.

                                #2.4 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:19 PM EDT
                                Jonathan-2055273

                                spiffie.

                                well Steve Jobs was very much a private person, so it would be expected that he would leave his charity in private. His public persona was very much that of Apple.

                                What will be really interesting is what will happen to his estate.

                                • 1 vote
                                #2.5 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:09 PM EDT
                                Reply
                                USlifeLine

                                I always wondered what the missing piece of the Apple logo represented. The irony, that the missing piece of the apple is Steve Jobs.

                                Steve will be missed.

                                • 2 votes
                                Reply#3 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:26 PM EDT
                                weRdoomed

                                It's a bite. It was Apple taking a bite out of technology. :)

                                • 3 votes
                                #3.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:16 PM EDT
                                USlifeLine

                                Thanks weR, I didn't know that!

                                  #3.2 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 6:36 PM EDT
                                  Reply
                                  Peoria Girl

                                  My condolences to the Jobs family,may he rest in peace,knowing he did good for the world,sincerely

                                  • 2 votes
                                  Reply#4 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:29 PM EDT
                                  CliffDogg

                                  how? would be that much worse off with PCs? really, the guy had slave factories in china producing his product, where people regularly commit suicide conditions are so bad. and with all his billions and power he did nothing to help those truly suffering across the globe. he even stopped apple's charitable giving when he returned as ceo the 2nd time. he did have the ability to affect lives for the better, instead he simply created more consumer need for cooler products and gadgets for the middle and upper class.

                                  • 1 vote
                                  #4.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:04 PM EDT
                                  Reply
                                  wcalvin

                                  Jobs was an emergent visionary and true member of the "creative class" and his innovations will continue to bring all people together improving everyday life, work, leisure and organizing communities. He wasn't fictional or the Jetsons and now we all need to be more visionary and akin to Jobs.

                                  • 2 votes
                                  Reply#5 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 2:58 PM EDT
                                  More Than Happy

                                  I think Steve Jobs' talent was recognizing that computers are just components of the products people really want, not the products themselves.

                                  Take the iPod; it wasn't made up of very sophisticated computer parts, but put it all together, and you've got a personal jukebox. One of music's greatest inventions!

                                  • 2 votes
                                  Reply#6 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:03 PM EDT
                                  patricia.w.hobbs

                                  Great innovator, great visionary and great humanitarian. However, it's possible that Steve Jobs' reputation as uncharitable is unfounded. I mean there's the whole "fanboy" view widely touted by Apple's detractors that's just all in geeky good competitive fun.

                                  • 1 vote
                                  Reply#7 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:06 PM EDT
                                  Susan Williams-4251628

                                  He wasn't fictional or the Jetsons and now we all need to be more visionary and akin to Jobs. thank you for offering a corporate competitor to Microsoft. Rest in Peace Steve Jobs.

                                  • 1 vote
                                  Reply#8 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:19 PM EDT
                                  Chris-735081

                                  I've given it a day out of respect for the dead, but I have to be perfectly frank here because where Steve Jobs is concerned its perfectly fitting to do so.

                                  Steve Jobs was an infamous @!$%#. I've seen major case studies on the subject of management citing the behavior of Steve Jobs as being exactly what not to do if you want to avoid creating a hostile working environment.

                                  He died horribly and I wouldn't wish Pancreatic cancer on anyone, but the man was one of silicon valley's worst jackasses to work for, with or even anywhere near his immediate chain of command.

                                  I'm not hating on Steve Jobs, so much as I'm kind of weirded out by people turning out to mourn someone who was known specifically for his hostile, abusive and just plain nasty demeanor towards nearly everyone around him.

                                  Google the words "Steve Jobs" and @!$%# or Jerk or bully or "Are you a virgin" (something steve jobs really did). I'm not drinking the haterade, but the truth of the matter is that Steve Jobs was a lifelong jerk who was totally unashamed of being a jerk.

                                  By the 1990's Steve Jobs was known across silicon valley for his hostile work environment, arbitrary firings, incendiary and crude behavior. After viewing the seemingly horrific @!$%# that portrayed him in the movie "Pirates of Silicon Valley" he is said to have remarked that he was impressed at how well the actor had portrayed him.

                                  He did make and market quality goods and services. His products are some of the best on the market and arguably the best at what they are designed to do; as they should be for the hefty price tag attached to them.

                                  Good businessman? Absolutely. Nice guy that you would want to spend any protracted period of time around? Absolutely not.

                                  • 3 votes
                                  Reply#9 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:29 PM EDT
                                  weRdoomed

                                  Guy Kawasaki summed it up: "Steve proves that it is OK to be an @!$%#. I can it relate to the way he does things, but it is not his problem. It is mine. He just has a different OS."

                                  • 1 vote
                                  #9.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:21 PM EDT
                                  ScreamingForVengeance

                                  From the few articles I just quickly read, it seems your opinion of him is dead on. An innovative and marketing genius, but a total @!$%# as a person.....

                                  • 2 votes
                                  #9.2 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:42 PM EDT
                                  Reply
                                  Charles McKenzie

                                  Plenty of people have changed the world, Apple changed it for the better. RIP.

                                  • 2 votes
                                  Reply#10 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:41 PM EDT
                                  ThankYouSJ!

                                  Thank you Mr Steve Jobs for making my life a bit simpler! Your inventions and attention to aesthetics will inspire me forever. Every so often the Lord brings people like you to benefit from and we did. To me you stand in the ranks of Leonardo Da Vinci, Mahatma Gandhi, Shakespeare, Edison....and others. However you are unique because you have and had idea, taste, skill, and a matching personality. Thank you.

                                  On another note...

                                  On the Today Show, this morning around 7;20 am, there was a statement read and part of it was something like this..." one does not have to be on LSD, go to India and become a Buddhist". I know I may have taken this out of context. I think this was in reference to how Mr Steve Jobs was a college drop out and had a vibrant and a victorious come back. Perhaps this was meant to be funny. I do not find it funny. India has give the best scientists, artists, technology experts, and more....Was this necessary ? Those jokes are outdated and are not tasteful at a time when we are celebrating SJ's impeccable taste!

                                    Reply#11 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 3:59 PM EDT
                                    MicrosoftBill

                                    What an overwhelming response to his great life! People are offering tremendous outreach and support to each other and the family.

                                    I am being told there is great, historic interest in owning momento's of his legacy on eStores, like eBay, etc... of his classic books, machines and signatures. Even domain names focusing on Apple's new, spirited direction of services within the cloud... APPLECLOUDAPP.COM & APPLECLOUDAPPS.COM. We love you, Steve. Bill

                                      Reply#12 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:28 PM EDT
                                      ScreamingForVengeance

                                      I don't know the first thing about this dude, but RIP none-the-less. I know I love my I-Phone and my I-pad and I know I'd murder anybody who touched any of my three I-Pods. (One for home, one for car, and one for work.) Did he have anything to do with these things? Forgive me for my ignorance. I'm one of those dudes who doesn't give a @!$%# where it comes from or how it works. I just care that it does. RIP dude.....

                                      • 1 vote
                                      Reply#13 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 4:31 PM EDT
                                      Jonathan-2055273

                                      screaming,

                                      he was directly involved in the concepts and development of all of those devices.

                                      Apparently he also one day before a presentation called up the CEO of google to tell him that the logo on the google home page was off by one pixel (I believe this came from Woz so the source seems credible), and what makes it so interesting is not that google's home page image was off by one pixel, but that Jobs had the fortitude to notice that (I mean, I couldn't notice that) but also the level of perfection that he demanded.

                                      One of the reasons why I hate Linux (and to a lesser extent the modern windows interfaces) is that the lack of attention to that detail makes the 'experience' feel sloppy.

                                        #13.1 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 5:14 PM EDT
                                        Reply
                                        octavious-8

                                        My friends bank account can't wait for the 23rd version of the iPod. You know the one that scans your breath for odor.

                                          Reply#14 - Thu Oct 6, 2011 8:18 PM EDT
                                          yes I CAN

                                          He just made the world more complicated and keyed up staring into screens constantly and increased the already frenetic pace of society and created a generation oif technology junkies who probably couldnt spend ah hour in a pensive restful state unless they were holding some electronic device next to their bosom for comfort...But RIP anyway Mr.Jobs..

                                          • 1 vote
                                          Reply#15 - Fri Oct 7, 2011 2:02 AM EDT
                                          cuqui-4255752

                                          he was a true genuis he will be missed

                                          • 1 vote
                                          Reply#16 - Fri Oct 7, 2011 3:06 AM EDT
                                          greatkrisDeleted
                                          greatkrisDeleted
                                          daswyDeleted
                                          daswyDeleted
                                          JD Miller

                                          He Left Something After Him. Something People Will Not Forget. He Will Be Missed

                                          • 1 vote
                                          Reply#21 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 8:24 AM EDT
                                          Halifax Oliver

                                          Tons and tons and tons of money?

                                            #21.1 - Sat Oct 8, 2011 9:05 AM EDT
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