Steven Paul Jobs was a famous technologist, designer, businessman, and artist. He acted as if the normal rules did not apply to him, and the intensity, passion, and emotionalism he brought to everyday life were things he also poured into the products he made. He belongs in the aggregation of America’s greatest innovators, along with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, and Walt Disney. The history of technology and business will remember how they applied their imagination, even after their personalities are forgotten. Even though Jobs struggled with his complicated childhood and young adult years, Steve Jobs’ Apple career in the business of inventing electronics and notorious personality led to revolutionizing the major industries of technology and …show more content…
When the couple met the new adoptive parents, they were disappointed that the Jobs couple were not college graduates, but Jobs’ parents promised to give him a good education (Blumenthal 20). As young Jobs grew up, he would spend long hours with his father, rebuilding and dismantling devices in the family garage. Later, Jobs found out he was adopted at six years old after he heard from one his neighbors who had found out. He panicked and rushed to his parents, but they reassured him that they really wanted him (Jobs’ Biography). In time, Jobs grew up in Mountain View, California, but the Jobs family decided to move to Los Altos, California in 1967 to attend a better school (Jobs’ Biography). In 1968, Jobs saw the first personal computer for the first time. It was an HP 9100A, which was actually a large desktop calculator. Growing up even more at Homestead High School, Jobs met and introduced himself to Steve ‘Woz’ Wozniak, an upperclassman who would be the future Apple cofounder. They became closer, and in September of 1972, Woz called Jobs to tell him about blue boxes that could make free long distance phone …show more content…
His idea was aimed toward having the best user experience, so it wasn’t a great business model at first (Jobs’ Biography). Most people who knew him suggested that Jobs was much more of a tweaker and refiner. Some would say his sensibility was more editorial than inventive. In the beginning, Jobs took the characteristic features of the Macintosh, the mouse and the icons on the screen, from Xerox PARC after a famous visit to the company in 1979. After the first portable digital music players came out in 1996, Apple introduced the iPod in 2001 because Jobs looked at the existing music players on the market and concluded that they “truly sucked.” Eventually, smartphones began to start coming out in the nineteen-nineties. Jobs then introduced the iPhone in 2007, which was more than a decade later, because, biographer Isaacson writes from an interview with Jobs, “He had noticed something odd about the cell phones on the market: They all stank, just like portable music players used to.” Additionally, the idea for the iPad came from an engineer at Microsoft, who was married to a friend of the Jobs family, and who invited Jobs to his fiftieth birthday party. Struggling in the beginning, Apple was kicked out of their garage in 1985, but they returned to rescue it from near bankruptcy in 1997. By the time Jobs died in October 2011, he had molded his business into the world’s most valuable company