Saturday, October 8, 2011

Tim Cook’s Company-Wide Email Regarding Jobs’ Death

Steve Jobs BW Portrait Steve Jobs, Co Founder and Former Apple CEO has Passed Away


Apple CEO Tim Cook sent out a company-wide email shortly after Steve Jobs’ death. In it he addressed the news, celebrates his life, and promises to continue his work and push Apple to create great things.
 Here is the content of that email in full:
Team,
I have some very sad news to share with all of you. Steve passed away earlier today.
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.
We are planning a celebration of Steve’s extraordinary life for Apple employees that will take place soon. If you would like to share your thoughts, memories and condolences in the interim, you can simply email rememberingsteve@apple.com.
No words can adequately express our sadness at Steve’s death or our gratitude for the opportunity to work with him. We will honor his memory by dedicating ourselves to continuing the work he loved so much.
Tim
A sad day at Apple, and around the world.
 Tim Cook’s Company Wide Email Regarding Jobs’ Death


Steve Jobs Authorized Bio Out in Just a Couple Weeks, and Available to Pre-order Now



steve jobs authorized bio out in just a couple weeks and available to pre order now Steve Jobs Authorized Bio Out in Just a Couple Weeks, and Available to Pre order Now










The first authorized biography of Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson, has had its publish date moved forward again this week – and will now be on sale on October 24th.
The bio is titled simply Steve Jobs and is available for pre-order in both hard cover and digital versions at Amazon and Barnes and Noble
It will also be featured in the iBook store on its launch day.
Isaacson, a former managing editor of Time magazine and 
author of biographies of Henry Kissinger and Benjamin Franklin, 
had unprecedented access to Steve Jobs.
 He conducted over 40 interviews of Jobs and also spoke at length to friends and business colleagues and rivals. 
This should be a fascinating look at Jobs.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Steve Jobs Narrates ‘Here’s to the Crazy Ones’

This version of the ad with Jobs’ voiceover never aired apparently. but he does it perfectly.




Full text of Apple CEO Steve Jobs’s resignation letter


The Steve Jobs Resignation Letter

the steve jobs resignation letter The Steve Jobs Resignation Letter
Here’s the full text of Steve Jobs’ resignation letter today, via Apple’s press release:
To the Apple Board of Directors and the Apple Community:
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. Unfortunately, that day has come.
I hereby resign as CEO of Apple. I would like to serve, if the Board sees fit, as Chairman of the Board, director and Apple employee.
As far as my successor goes, I strongly recommend that we execute our succession plan and name Tim Cook as CEO of Apple.
I believe Apple’s brightest and most innovative days are ahead of it. And I look forward to watching and contributing to its success in a new role.
I have made some of the best friends of my life at Apple, and I thank you all for the many years of being able to work alongside you.
Steve

 The Steve Jobs Resignation Letter

10 products that defined Steve Jobs' career

Steve Jobs resigns as CEO of Apple, Chinese netizen reactions to recent photos of him looking deathly frail.


A recent photo of Steve Jobs after having just resigned as Apple CEO was exposed.
As can be seen from the photo, Jobs state of health is worrisome.
 This photograph was taken on the 26th United States local time,
 which happens to be the day after Jobs resigned.


 August 27th, United States California, Steve Jobs makes an appearance escorted
 by family after having just publicly announced his resignation,
 the state of his pancreatic cancer afflicted body dismal.

Steve Jobs sick, in wheelchair.Steve Jobs, sick, riding wheelchair.


No one can predict the future, 
but some people can decide the direction of the future.
 Steve Jobs is one of them.


Source :AP:The Hindu:New York:oct 6,2011


Steve Jobs had no formal schooling in engineering, yet he’s listed as the inventor or co-inventor on more than 300 U.S. patents. These are some of the significant products that were created under his direction.

1. Apple I (1976) Apple’s first product was a computer for hobbyists and engineers, made in small numbers. Steve Wozniak designed it, while Jobs orchestrated the funding and handled the marketing.

2. Apple II (1977) One of the first successful personal computers, the Apple II was designed as a mass-market product rather than something for engineers or enthusiasts. It was still largely Wozniak’s design. Several upgrades for the model followed, and the product line continued until 1993.

3. Lisa (1983) Jobs’ visit to Xerox Corp.’s research centre in Palo Alto inspired him to start work on the first commercial computer with a graphical user interface, with icons, windows and a cursor controlled by a mouse. It was the foundation for today’s computer interfaces, but the Lisa was too expensive to be a commercial success.

4. Macintosh (1984) Like the Lisa, the Macintosh had a graphical user interface. It was also cheaper and faster and had the backing of a large advertising campaign behind it. People soon realized how useful the graphical interface was for design. That led “desktop publishing,” accomplished with a Mac coupled to a laser printer, to soon become a sales driver.

5. NeXT computer (1989) After being forced out of Apple, Jobs started a company that built a powerful workstation computer. The company was never able to sell large numbers, but the computer was influential- The world’s first Web browser was created on one. Its software also lives on as the basis for today’s Macintosh and iPhone operating system.

6. iMac (1998) When Jobs returned to Apple in 1996, the company was foundering, with an ever shrinking share of the PC market. The radical iMac was the first step in reversing the slide. It was strikingly designed as a bubble of blue plastic that enclosed both the monitor and the computer. Easy to set up, it captured the imagination just as people across the world were having their eyes opened to the benefits of the Internet and considering getting their first home computer.

7. iPod (2001) It wasn’t the first digital music player with a hard drive, but it was the first successful one. Apple’s expansion into portable electronics has had vast ramifications. The iPod’s success prepared the way for the iTunes music store and the iPhone.

8. iTunes store (2003) Before the iTunes store, buying digital music was a hassle, making piracy the more popular option. The store simplified the process and brought together tracks from all the major labels. The store became the largest music retailer in the U.S. in 2008.

9. iPhone (2007) The iPhone did for the phone experience what the Macintosh did for personal computing it made the power of a smartphone easy to harness. Apple is now the world’s most profitable maker of phones, and the influence of the iPhone is evident in all smartphones.

10. iPad (2010) Dozens of companies, including Apple, had created tablet computers before the iPad, but none caught on. The iPad finally cracked the code, creating a whole new category of computer practically by itself.

“Steve had a love-hate relationship with his own fame”




The world of man has lost a god, heaven has gained a golden apple.


Source :AP:NEW YORK, October 6, 2011




It was the 1980s, relatively early in his career, and Steve Jobs was travelling in Japan. In a hotel lobby, a gaggle of girls came up and asked for his autograph.
Jay Elliot was an Apple executive at the time, travelling with Jobs
. “I was thinking, wow, how many CEOs have girls coming up and asking them for autographs?” Elliot says now.
Over the next few decades, Jobs’ fame only increased, of course, and exponentially.
By the time he died on Wednesday, after years of medical problems, Jobs had appeared on some 100 magazine covers and had numerous books written about him, not to mention an off-Broadway play, an HBO movie, even a “South Park” episode. He wasn’t the first celebrity CEO, and he won’t be the last. But he may have been the first in modern times to transcend the business world and become a veritable pop culture icon.
And yet Jobs, who seemingly enjoyed the access his celebrity brought, also appeared deeply conflicted about his fame, zealously guarding the smallest details of his private life. And though he appeared smiling on countless magazine covers, he had a prickly relationship with the media and those who sought to write about him.
“Steve had a love-hate relationship with his own fame,” says Alan Deutschman, author of “The Second Coming of Steve Jobs,” an unauthorized biography. “He wanted it both ways. He clearly enjoyed the celebrity and the access it gave him, but he wanted total control over his image.”
And he largely got it. “Steve was masterful,” Deutschman says. “No one has come close to Steve in his ability to control and manipulate the media and get what he wants.”
Where does Jobs fit in the pantheon of celebrity CEOs? Analysts struggle to find apt comparisons in the business world.
“He’s on another plane,” says Robert Sutton, a professor of management science at Stanford University. “He reached a level in the public consciousness that’s beyond that of anyone in modern times. I mean, my mother doesn’t know the name of (former General Electric CEO) Jack Welch.”
Sutton and others find that they have to reach back into history for comparisons- to Henry Ford, for example, who revolutionized transportation with the Model T automobile, or to Thomas Edison, the master inventor who similarly transformed the way we live. Or to Walt Disney, with his vast influence in entertainment.
It’s Edison’s name that pops up the most often, partly because he wasn’t only a visionary but, as Sutton says, “He could really sell. He was very good at his external image.”
Like Jobs, whose name is well known to children as young as 6 or 7 (even if they’re too young to read business magazines or, let’s hope, to see that edgy “South Park” episode), Edison was emulated by young children of his time, says Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a professor at the Yale School of Management.
Sonnenfeld, who studies business leaders, compares Jobs and his fame to other “folk heroes” who’ve emerged in various fields at times of great change in our history, be it politics, culture, or, in this case, technology.
“What heroes do is personify complex change,” Sonnenfeld says. “It’s a shorthand that we use. It reduces things to the level of an individual.” Jobs’ ability to channel technology into products people didn’t even know they wanted but then had to have is “almost unfathomable,” he says.
Unfathomable, uncanny, otherworldly such adjectives have frequently been used to describe Jobs. But there’s another side to it all. Can being a celebrity be detrimental to one’s performance as a CEO?
“It’s a huge problem when the boss becomes the brand,” Sonnenfeld says. “The upside is, it gives the brand human terms. The downside is that none of us are immortal. These branded bosses often start to believe in their own immortality.”
Sonnenfeld, like some others, believes that Jobs should have stepped down as CEO earlier than he did because of his health.
On the other hand, one could argue that no rules or generalizations apply to Jobs and Apple. Sutton, at Stanford, wrote years ago that there was evidence that the more famous CEOs were distracted by all that public scrutiny, to the detriment of their companies. But, he says, “Jobs clearly doesn’t fit into that category.”
Compounding Jobs’ astonishing fame was the early age at which he achieved it. He spent virtually his entire career in the public eye, co—founding Apple at age 21. His first magazine cover came just five years later, at 26, on Inc. magazine, with the headline- “This man has changed business forever.” Four months later he was on the cover of Time.
One of the covers he wanted most, though, was one he didn’t get. A front-runner for Time’s 1982 Man of the Year, Jobs instead lost out to a machine the computer. An accompanying article about him included descriptions of him as a sometimes fearsome boss, and the fact that he had a daughter, Lisa, by a former girlfriend, whom he had not acknowledged and was not supporting. (He later acknowledged Lisa, and she became part of his family.)
“Steve was incensed,” says Deutschman, the author, who also teaches journalism at the University of Nevada, Reno. “Ever since then he has been extremely controlling of everything except for small, handfed amounts of carefully managed information.”
Of course, that only led to huge curiosity about Jobs, compounding his fame. “He wasn’t flaunting it like Donald Trump,” says Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at the NYU Stern School. “He didn’t do Architectural Digest. Do you even know what his wife looks like?” Indeed, Laurene Powell Jobs, whom Steve married in 1991, was rarely photographed with him, their children even less so.
Yet Jobs also showed early on how he enjoyed his fame.
At the 1999 Macworld Expo, he was the star of the show, coming out in his trademark black mock turtle, jeans and sneakers, hands clasped together as if in prayer, giving a pep talk about “the resurgence of Apple.” But actually it wasn’t Jobs at all it was actor Noah Wyle, of “ER” fame, who had played Jobs in the HBO movie “Pirates of Silicon Valley.”
Then the real Jobs, who had asked Wyle to make the appearance, came onstage, jokingly telling the actor his imitation was all wrong, all to the delight of the crowd. It ended with Jobs asking Wyle for a part on “ER.”
As a celebrity himself, Jobs had easy access to other celebrities. Before his marriage, he was said to have dated Joan Baez, and, at one point, Diane Keaton.
Yet there were times that Jobs did appear to eschew his fame. Deutschman describes an incident where Jobs was helping a woman who had fallen on the street in Palo Alto, Calif., not far from Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino. Her reaction- “Oh my God, it’s Steve Jobs!” Deutschman says the incident left Jobs deeply upset.
However Jobs may have felt about his fame, there’s no question that one key element of it was his struggle with and triumph over adversity.
It was a truly American story in many ways- First, achieving success despite humble beginnings. Then failure getting pushed out of his own company. And finally, a return to grace, first at Pixar, then by returning to Apple for a string of huge successes that continue to this day.
“Our heroes are only truly heroic if they suffer crushing defeat then come back from it,” Sonnenfeld says. And again, the comparisons to Edison, Ford, Disney apply- Each suffered failures before their ultimate triumphs.
There was also, of course, Jobs’ illness in his later years a final bout with adversity. In keeping with his penchant for secrecy, few details were shared. However, his determination to keep working even as he appeared increasingly and alarmingly thin buoyed many, Galloway says.
“Everyone in America over 30 has had their life touched by illness in some way,” he says. “This humanized him. You just felt for the guy. It was hard not to pull for him.”
After years of opposing attempts by writers to capture his life not only declining to cooperate in biographies but actively discouraging them Jobs finally agreed in 2011. Simon & Schuster announced in April that Walter Isaacson, who’d written biographies of Ben Franklin and Albert Einstein, would come out with “iSteve- The Book of Jobs” in early 2012. (The release date was later moved up to November.)
As one small measure of the intense interest in Jobs, news of his first authorized biography was the top story on blogs that week a rare occurrence for a technology story and the second top story on Twitter that week, according to the Pew Research Center.
“There are very few business people who’ve been cultural heroes, icons, heroic figures to ordinary people and we desperately want these heroes,” Deutschman says.
“We needed Steve’s story.”

iConic Jobs


Source :The Hindu :Editorial:Aug 27,2011


Steve Jobs could connect the dots and how. Apple Computer, which he co-founded with Steve Wozniak in 1976, has been a world-beating success under his visionary leadership. It soared from its start as a garage venture into a technology giant with a market valuation of $350 billion, and an unmatched reputation for inventing disruptively brilliant gadgets.
 Apple's orchard has been sprouting wonderful things starting with the Macintosh computers and going on to the iPod, the iPhone, and the iPad, each testifying to the value of fine minimalist design and excellence in performance.
 What makes the legacy of Mr. Jobs remarkable in the fast-changing world of consumer electronics is his ability to come back to the core of innovation after fighting tough battles, and set the bar higher. Neither a 12-year absence after his 1985 exit due to an internal power struggle nor serious health setbacks seemed to curb his spirit.
 Now that he is stepping down as CEO, the question naturally arises — can Apple maintain its pre-eminence without the boss at the helm? The answer would seem to lie in the leader's own philosophy of life and work.

Mr. Jobs, who was raised by working class parents, did not graduate from college. But he continued to learn. He listened to intuition. He is listed as either primary inventor or co-inventor in more than 230 awarded patents or patent applications. 
Talent must be allowed to speak and experiment with ideas, even if every move is not bound for immediate commercial success. Mr. Jobs has a timeless message for everyone — the only way to do great work is to love what one does
. A second powerful message from the 56-year old tech wizard is to learn from failure. Mr. Jobs is on record that his departure from Apple in the mid-1980s was one of the best things that happened to him — the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of becoming a beginner once more.
 He proved himself all over again before returning to the company. Perhaps even more extraordinary is his triumph over life-threatening health challenges. Yet, as events show, indomitable spirit must also defer to the constraints of physical ability.
 Today, legions of fans look differently at music, video, and the web with each wave of innovation at Apple.
 The iPad tablet computer is the latest. They will look for the same game-changing impact in future products, an expectation that incoming CEO Tim Cook will have to meet. In a competitive future, Apple will have put its trust in itself.
 As Mr. Jobs told Stanford University graduates in a 2005 commencement address: 
“You have to trust in something. Your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever.”
 A fine thought from someone who has lived it.

Jobs script skipped India, twice

A Macbook Air floats in the window of the Apple store at Legacy Village in Beachwood, Ohio on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.
A Macbook Air floats in the window of the Apple store at Legacy 
Village in Beachwood, Ohio on Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011.


Source :The Hindu :DEEPA KURUP:Oct 6<2011

Having returned disillusioned with Indian spiritualism in the 1970s, he later abruptly closed his centre in India.
It wasn't “all romantic,” as Steve Jobs said at the inspiring commencement address that he delivered at Stanford in 2005. Talking about that phase in his iconic life when he chose to drop out of college and spend time simply dropping in on interesting lectures — including one on calligraphy, which gave him ideas he would later incorporate into the first Macintosh 10 years later — he recalled his weekly excursion across town for one good vegetarian meal a week at the Hare Krishna Temple. His “curiosity and intuition turned out to be priceless” later on in life, he said.

This popular quote, often invoked in order to establish the elusive “India connection” to this great success story, went viral on the web soon after Jobs' sudden demise was announced on Thursday morning.

Jobs' real Indian connection, however, dates back to the 1970s, when he made a trip to India while working at the video game developing firm Atari, along with college-mate Dan Kottke, who later became one of the earliest employees at Apple Computers. Like many of their generation, the duo travelled to India in search of ‘enlightenment', and to meet Neem Kairoli Baba, a Hindu spiritual guru and Hanuman devotee obviously better known in the West than in India.

According to one story, when they arrived at the ashram, the Guru had already passed on. Another version has it that Jobs was disappointed with the “spiritualism” he encountered, and was quoted in one of his biographies as having said: “We weren't going to find a place where we could go for a month to be enlightened. It was one of the first times that I started to realise that maybe Thomas Edison did a lot more to improve the world than Karl Marx and Neem Karoli Baba put together.” Yet another biography, by Micheal Moritz, says he found Indians “far poorer than he had imagined, and was struck by the incongruity between the country's condition and its airs of holiness.” His friend Steve Wozniak, is quoted as recalling Jobs returning from his India travels a Buddhist, shaven-head and all.

If India disappointed the young Jobs, three decades later it was his turn to let down the Indian technological industry when he decided to close down his month-old India operations in May 2006. The 30 employees Apple had hired were retrenched, and the grand plans to ramp up operations by hiring 3,000 workers for a technical support centre were shelved.

At a time when companies overseas were turning to India — most notably his contemporary and rival Bill Gates — he chose to stay away. A report in BusinessWeek attributed this to the “tough-minded executive” in Jobs, who knew “when to cut and run.”

However, its sales and marketing team in India continues to be headquartered in Bangalore.

City Union Bank to open 9 branches


Panning out: Dr N. Kamakodi, MD and CEO of City Union Bank, addresses the inaugural session of the national seminar on ’Perspective view on asset valuation’ organised here on Friday by Madurai Chapter of Institution of Valuers. — Photo: G. Moorthy

Panning out: Dr N. Kamakodi, MD and CEO of City Union Bank, addresses
 the inaugural session of the national seminar on ’Perspective view on 
asset valuation’ organised here on Friday by Madurai Chapter of Institution of Valuers.
  — Photo: G. Moorthy


Source :BL:Oct:7,2011



City Union Bank Ltd will open nine branches during October-November.
While seven of them will be in Tamil Nadu, one will be in Bhubaneshwar and another in Raipur, according to Dr N. Kamakodi, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the century-old private sector bank.
“The bank has a total business mix of Rs 25,000 crore and hopes to achieve a growth rate of 25 per cent to 30 per cent in both the business and profits. The bank has continuously declared dividend and the return on equity has been over 20 per cent,” he told Business Line on the sidelines of a seminar on ‘Perspective view on asset valuation' organised by the Institution of Valuers, Madurai branch, here on Friday.
He said the bank has 275 branches that are equally spread in rural or semi-urban and urban or metro areas. Two-thirds of the business comes from agriculture, small and medium enterprises, and trade. The bank is targeting to make three-fourths of the transactions through alternate channels such as ATM, mobile banking and Internet.
He said the bank has started priority treatment for VIP customers in Chennai, under which bank representatives will visit customers instead. This facility will be soon extended to other cities, including Madurai. The bank is currently working on a system to help customers open fixed deposits and issue overdrafts against deposits online, he said. He added that the bank was working with the Tamil Nadu Electricity Board to enable electronic payment of electricity bills free of charge and the facility would be in place in two months.




BoI subsidiary opened in New Zealand




Source :BL:Oct 7,2011


Bank of India (New Zealand), a wholly-owned subsidiary of Bank of India, was inaugurated on Thursday by Dr Alan Bollard, Governor, Reserve Bank of New Zealand.


Apart from financing  corporates, the bank will offer its clients a full range of retail products, including savings and current accounts, cards, term and call deposits, mortgages  and international funds transfer, said Bank of India Chairman and Managing Director, Mr Alok Misra.


 With its entry into New Zealand, BoI has expanded its presence to 19 overseas countries. Almost 20 per cent of the bank's business comes from its overseas operations.

A life well choreographed


Source :LLOYD MATHIAS:BL:Oct 7,2011


What Steve Jobs asked John Sculley when he wanted to recruit the Pepsi hand in 1983, was this: “Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want a chance to change the world?” Sculley did join Apple and subsequently fired Jobs from Apple. It's Jobs' genius that he came back to Apple and did indeed change the world.

The oft-quoted and immortal question is testimony to the purpose with which Steve Jobs pursued his passion. It was a manifestation of the supreme confidence of the CEO, entrepreneur, innovator and salesman par excellence that was Steve Jobs.

The mobile handset industry– which I was a part of – was keeping close tabs of the iPhone launch. There was enormous anticipation for the product, coming as it was from the game-changing Apple. Everyone knew that it was due in three to four months.

 Yet, a lot of handset manufacturers considered that it would be very difficult for a company like Apple to succeed in this space considering how closely handset makers had to work with telecom service providers. In the largest handset market, the US, service providers defined specifications to manufacturers and were marketing the bundled handsets themselves. All that changed soon.

The first few users of the iPhone helped redefine the category; service provider AT&T signed an exclusive deal with Apple for the iPhone. The success of the iPhone changed the face of the smart phone business and importantly how people used their phones.

It's no different from the Mac or iPod or the iPad. Computers existed before the Mac. MP3 players existed before the iPod. The concept of a tablet existed before the iPad. It was Jobs' ability to see things in a manner that consumers could not that defined him – that understanding of human psychology, of latent expectations, and the ability to create enhanced consumer expectations, and then exceed them. Not impossible, as Jobs has shown, in a life well choreographed – up to the succession of Tim Cook who unveiled the next offering from the Apple stable just a day before Jobs passed away.

Readying the Future for an Idea

I have not seen the kind of outpouring that has accompanied the passing away of Jobs for any other business leader, anywhere in the world. Apple is clearly not the largest. Microsoft touches more people through numerous applications around the world than Apple does. There have been great scientists and inventors and innovators – they have not attracted this kind of a mass tribute. That begs the question - why?

The answer lies in the emotional chord that Steve Jobs and Apple struck with consumers. Apple successfully got people to become emotional about their experience intuitively. And at the heart of this phenomenon was Jobs, the man who dramatically unveiled the next thing that changed consumers' lives for the better. Steve Jobs created and nurtured a cult out of an idea. It was an idea whose time was yet to come when it was conceived. Jobs also incubated a future that welcomed the idea.

And importantly, Jobs did all this even while staying away from the corporate mainstream. A quote of his reflects his view: “It's more fun to be a pirate than to join the navy.”

But success does not come without failures and the accompanying criticism. Whether it was the Pippin or Apple TV, they didn't change the game like the better-known Apple products have. Success or failure, Jobs believed in doing things exactly the way he wanted to. He was a man who had the long-term vision coupled with the courage to steadfastly spurn the compromises arising from pressures on short term growth that is so pervasive today.

Some say it's almost dictatorial; others say they perceptibly remain true to who they are – people who re-define categories with superior user experience. India, for example, is one of the few markets where iPhone sales lag that of BlackBerry.

One of the legacies that Jobs leaves behind is about who the next visionary will be. Who will give consumers the things that they don't know they need? Knowing Jobs, there's a whole universe out there that his team is working on. In delivering the next big things alone can Apple pay a fitting tribute to the man who created the future that consumers evolved to embrace.

(The author is President – Corporate, Tata Teleservices. The views are personal.)

The Jobs, not so well-known


source :BL:MOUMITA BAKSHI CHATTERJEE:Oct 7,2011



In his now famous 2005 Stanford commencement speech, Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, in a rare, poignant moment, described death as the single best invention of life.

He urged audiences to have the courage to follow their “heart” and “intuition”, and not be trapped by dogma “which is living with the results of other people's thinking”.

In his storied career, Jobs seemed to have followed every bit of this belief right till the end, as he created, was ousted, and then returned to steer the company that has changed the way the world computes, listens to music, or enjoys movies, videos, and books.

A charismatic inventor, entrepreneur and tech visionary behind iconic products like iPod, iPhone and iPad – Jobs lived his life under constant media glare even as he battled pancreatic cancer for seven years. Here is a glimpse of some less-publicised facets of his life:

Jobs' biological mother Joanne Simpson was a young, unwed college graduate, who decided to put him up for adoption. But when she found out that Jobs' new parents were college and high-school dropouts – Paul Jobs and his wife – she initially refused to sign the papers, and gave in only after the latter promised to send him to college when he grew up.

Jobs graduated from Homestead High School in Cupertino in 1972. He went on to attend Reed College in Portland, Oregon, only to drop out after one semester. But he hung around the campus for another year and a half, sleeping on the floors of his friends' rooms, returning coke bottles for the five-cent deposits to buy food, and walking seven miles across town every Sunday night to get the one good weekly meal at the Hare Krishna temple.

At Reed College, he decided to take a calligraphy course and learned about serif and san serif typefaces. Ten years down the line, all that knowledge went into designing the Mac. “If I had never dropped out, I would have never dropped in on this calligraphy class, and personal computers might not have the wonderful typography that they do,” he later said.

The story has it that Jobs sold his Volkswagen micro-bus and Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak his Hewlett-Packard scientific calculator to raise $1,300 for starting their new venture and setting up the first production lines. They made their first big sale when the Byte Shop in Mountain View bought their first 50 fully-assembled computers.


Jobs' spiritual quest brought him to Indian shores in early 1970s, before he co-founded Apple. Details of his India visit with a friend from Reed College, Dan Kottke, remain sketchy, though tales abound over his flings with psychedelic substances and a more abiding relationship with Buddhism.
Jobs' wedding to Laurene Powell, in March 1991 was presided over by Zen Buddhist monk Kobun Chino Otogawa.

moumita@thehindu.co,in


When will India have its own Jobs?


Source :B. S. RAGHAVAN:BL:oCT 7,2011



Steve Jobs is dead. I wanted to make history by saying just that in this column and dramatically leaving the rest of the allotted space blank. I couldn't at first think of anything more to say. For, in the words of a poet: “Death. Nothing is simpler. One is dead!”

After setting out at the age of 21 to redraw the map of the cyber world with his out-of-the-box thinking, in his 56 years on the planet, this drop-out produced out-of-the-hat rabbits such as Macintosh, iTunes, iPod, iPhone and iPad. It will all be Jobs dominating the media and Web sites with innumerable tributes to his unparalleled genius which stood the computer industry on its head. 

The obituaries will liberally draw on his 2005 Stanford Commencement Address in which he recounts three stories that shaped his life and thinking, pointing out how his chucking structured educational courses, and later, being “publicly” fired from the company he himself founded, gave him the courage to follow his “inner voice” and his heart's dictates. 

He then movingly talks of the immensely creative force that awareness of approaching death can be.
At the moment, though, my thoughts are not on the passing of this innovator par excellence who gave the world the intriguing mantra: Stay hungry, stay foolish. The question uppermost in my mind is: When will India have its own Jobs? Or Gates? Or Larry Page and Sergey Brin?

TECH-COOLIES

Despite all that India boasts of its ancient cultural heritage — its epics, Upanishads, Arya Bhatta, Varahamihira, Sushrutha, the decimal system, the zero — it has not been able to match the Western mind in respect of the latter-day inventions and discoveries. India's record is abysmal in regard to the number of Nobel Laureates, scientific papers and patents.

I have long wondered why a Columbus should be discovering America, a Scott exploring the South pole, a Livingstone uncovering the Dark Continent of Africa, or a Cook claiming Australia and not a Ramaswami or a Rakesh Bhatt?

 Why should the falling of an apple lead a Newton to his Laws or the rattling of the lid of a kettle of boiling water lead a James Watt to the steam engine? 

Why did Indians with all their thousands of years of investigation into the mysteries of Brahman, the soul and the like fail to go into the scientific significance of day-to-day happenings as Wright Brothers, Salk, Fleming, Edison, Marconi or Baird did?

Even in regard to the so-called success stories in software, it is all an extrapolation of what was already common knowledge handed from the West, and not the result of any original thinking. Indeed, in some circles, Indians in the software field are regarded as no more than tech-coolies!

NEXT BILL GATES

There are, no doubt, success stories of Indians in other countries but only in run-of-the-mill professions (teaching, financial services, medicine).

 Most of them are mere salary-earners. The only Indian names coming up again and again for their extra-ordinary contributions in science are C.V.Raman, S. Chandrasekhar, H.L. Khorana and V. Ramakrishnan, of whom all but one were expatriates. 

What is it in the soil of the US that enables it to grow geniuses of the likes of Gates and Jobs and Page and Brin, and that too at such a young age, while India is yet to produce achievers of comparable calibre?

Here is a quick check list of reasons: 

The hierarchical set-up reflective of a feudal mindset, breeding conformity with established conventions and incapacity to break new ground or take risks; want of sustained focus on, and allocation of the needed funds for, both pure and applied research; absence of a sense of perfection, thoroughness and excellence; lack of self-pride.

However, here is a tidbit that should gladden our hearts: The Consumer Electronics Association of the US recently asked in a survey where the next Bill Gates will come from; 40 per cent of Americans predicted that he would be from either India or China. Amen (despite being bracketed with China)!