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JOBS WELL DONE |
Steve Jobs made the computer a thing of beauty, and therefore, to stay with the poet's words, a joy forever. He not only made computers a necessity of modern life but he also made them aesthetically appealing. Taste was an important element in all that Jobs did. He believed that great products were always statements of good taste. The beauty of all that Jobs put out on the market emanated from his unique ability to make complex and intricate products incredibly simple. Here lay his genius. In this sense, he was like a philosopher. In his mind he grappled, as philosophers invariably do, with devastatingly complicated ideas or entities and then communicated them in easy, elegant and comprehensible terms. In thought and in deed, elegance, for Jobs, was an important and indispensable category. He did not believe that his products were worth anything unless they looked and felt beautiful. He refused to accept the divorce between form and content. Jobs was an artist and a philosopher who was coincidentally an innovator and an entrepreneur. Jobs refused to swim with the tide. This, for him, was the easy way out. He loved being different. When the entire world of business took the path of decision-making through committees — men and women in black suits or dresses, one Steve Jobs, college drop-out and sometime hippy, chose to be the maverick in faded blue jeans and black turtleneck jersey. He celebrated individuality over the power of the committee men. When business decisions were taken on the basis of elaborate market research, Jobs decided to trust his instincts, his gut feelings. He had no faith in market research. One of his memorable quips was: "It's not the consumers' job to know what they want." He picked up the gauntlet thrown down by market research and went on to create his own market. He refashioned the world of business. Jobs was always confident that what he was offering his consumers was nothing short of the best. This confidence and the relentless pursuit of the best and the beautiful made him an entrepreneur that others could only envy, never emulate. Steve Jobs excelled in being excellent. Jobs had the rare gift that the gods give only to a few humans — of transforming dreams into reality. His early critics commented that he created a "reality distortion field". As if with one movement on the tracking pad, those three mocking words soon became words of unalloyed admiration. Yesterday's distorted reality, in Jobs's skilled hands, became today's everyday reality and tomorrow's beacon. Jobs had a vision and opted to live by that. He knew no other way to conduct his life. Jobs's life work is rightly associated with the name of a simple but healthy fruit. The reasons of naming his company are not exactly known, but apples have played significant parts in human history. Adam offered one to Eve and this resulted in the emergence of human beings from the world of illusory innocence. A falling apple ushered in modern science. And then there was Steve Jobs. |
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Heard of Apple TV? A lot of people have not. That is because even though Steven P Jobs helped upend so many businesses with a string of groundbreaking products in music, mobile phones, games and tablet computers, he barely made a dent in television.
One of the magazine covers he wanted most was one he didn't get. A front-runner for Time's 1982 Man of the Year, he lost out to a machine; the computer.
As the man who introduced the iPod, iPhone and iPad to the world, Mr Jobs became a kind of folk hero of American business for his intuitive understanding of consumer sentiment.
In August, seven years back, Jobs told Apple employees that he has been diagnosed with islet cell neuroendocrine tumour.
It is hard for agency creatives who have grown up in a world that takes for granted the visual interface and graphic possibilities opened up by the Mac.
Steve Jobs and Bill Gates may have shared their birth year and destiny as two of the biggest stars of the technology universe, but everything else about them is as different as chalk and cheese.
It took only hours on Wednesday night for Walter Isaacson's forthcoming biography of Steve Jobs to shoot up the best-seller list on Amazon.com, eventually moving from No 384 to the No 1 spot.
A perfectionist with exceptional attention to detail. A radical visionary. Demanding and passionate. Creative genius. A leader.
However, the bigger picture is how an icon like Jobs thought. He is in the same league as the person who created the wheel, writes HCL's Shiv Nadar.
Prayer and tribute meets were organised in coffee shops, on Twitter and Facebook by groups of Apple followers across major cities in India.
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