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EMEL BAŞARAN 180201024. Birth and Adoption. Steven Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco on February 24, 1955 Mother ; Joanne Carole Schieble Father ; Abdulfattah John Jandali . A week after birth he was put up for adoption. He was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs.
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EMEL BAŞARAN 180201024
BirthandAdoption • Steven Paul Jobs was born in San Francisco on February 24, 1955 • Mother ; JoanneCaroleSchieble • Father ; Abdulfattah John Jandali. • A week after birth hewas put up foradoption. • He was adopted byPaul and Clara Jobs.
ChildhoodandTeenageYears • Since he was a boy, hisskills became so apparent • He was allowed to skip5th grade and go straight tomiddle school. • When he became 11 yearsold he moved to Los Altos • Jobs then attended HomesteadHighSchool in Cupertino, California.
College Life • After Steve finished HighSchool, he attended ReedCollege in Oregon. • Reed was an expensive college which Paul and Clara could will afford. • Jobs dropped out of college after six months • He continued auditing classes at Reedthe next 18 months dropping in on creative classes.
EarlyCareer • In 1974, Jobs took a job as a technician at Atari Inc. • In the early 1970s, Jobsand his friendSteveWozniak had designed “blue box”. • In 1976, Jobs and Wozniak formed their own business, which they named “Apple Computer Company“. Steve Jobs (left) andWozniak (right) with a“blue box”
AppleComputer • In 1976, Wozniakinvented thefirstpersonalcomputerApple I . • The Apple I went on sale in July 1976 at a price of US$666.66
In 1977, theystartedworking on the Apple II. • More than twomillion were sold. • At this time, Apple gave upits old logo and adopted itsstriped apple-with-a-bite logo. • Apple became the companyof personal computers. • In 1983, the Apple Lisa wasintroduced.
Steve, who owned $7.5million of Apple stocks, wasworth $217.5 million by theend of the day. • By early 1981, Steve took over the Macintosh project. • He wanted the Macintosh tobe a PC “as easy to use as a toaster”. • Macintosh, the firstcommercially successfulcomputer to feature a mouse and GUI
The first figures of Mac saleslooked very promising. • Deterioration in Jobs‘s working relationship with Sculleyeventually became a power struggle between them. • It all came to an end on Tuesday,May 28, 1985. • Jobs was forced out of thecompanythat he founded. • This was the beginning of one of the darkest period in Steve’s life.
NeXTComputer • After leaving Apple, Jobsfounded NeXT Computerin 1985, with $7 million. • Userfriendly • Fastprocessingspeed • Excellentgraphicdisplays • Outstandingsoundsystem • Toocostly • Could not be linkedtoothercomputers
Pixarand Disney • The story of Pixar began in 1985. • Steve purchased Pixarfrom Lucasfilmfor the price of $10 million. • The first film produced by the partnership, Toy Story(1995), with Jobs credited as executive producer. • Toy Story was a critical success and earnedasmuchas29millioninUSboxoffice.
TheReturntoApple • In 1996, Apple boughtNeXT for $427 million. • Apple entered into a partnership with its competitor Microsoft. • In September of 1997 Jobs was named interim CEO of Apple. • At the 2000 Macworld Expo, Jobs officially dropped the "interim" modifier from his title at Apple and became permanent CEO.
Think different campaign. • iMac (May 6, 1998) • That design was also usedon the iBook with the samesuccess. • The iPod (October 23, 2001) • TheiPhone(June 29, 2007)
HealthIssuesandDeath • In 2004, Jobs was diagnosed with pancreaticcancer. • Steve Jobs, died at his home on October 5, 2011, due to complications frompancreatic cancer. • Jobs' death was announced by Apple in a statement which read:"We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed away today. Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve. His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched by his extraordinary gifts."
10 iLessons from SteveJobs
iLesson #1 : FollowYourHeart “ Yourwork is goingtofill a largepart of your life, andtheonlywayto be trulysatisfied is to do whatyoubelieve is greatwork. Andtheonlywayto do greatwork is tolovewhatyou do. Ifyouhaven’tfound it yet, keeplooking. Don’tsettle.”
iLesson #2 : Make a Dent in theUniverse “Beingtherichestman in thecemetarydoesn’tmattertome…. Goingtobed at nightsayingwehave done somethingwonderful… thatswhatmatterstome.”
iLesson #3 : ThinkDifferent “Kick start yourbrain. New ideascomefromwatchingsomething, talk topeople, experimenting, askingquestionsandgettingout of theoffice!”
iLesson #4 : SellDreams, Not Products “Yourcustomersdream of a happierandbetter life. Don’tmoveproducts. Enrichlives.”
iLesson #5 : MakeProductsforYourself “Wethinkthe Mac willsellzillions, but wedidn’tbuild Mac foranybody else. Webuild it forourselves. Wewerethegroup of peoplewhoweregoingtojudgewhether it wasgreator not. Weweren’tgoingtogooutand do market research. Wejustwantedtobuildthebestthingwecouldbuild.”
iLesson #6 : Say No to 1000 Things “It’sonlybysaying no thatyou can concentrate on thethingsthatarereallyimportant.”
iLesson #7 : Keep it Simple “That’sbeenone of mymantras- focusandsimplicity. Simple can be harderthancomplex: Youhavetowork hard togetyourthinkingcleantomake it simple. But it’sworth it in theendbecauseonceyougetthere, you can movemountains.”
iLesson #8 : GoForExcellence “Be a yardstickofquality. Somepeoplearen’tusedto an environmentwhereexcellence is expected.”
iLesson #9 : Break theRules “Here’stothecrazyones, themisfits, therebels, thetroublemakers, theroundpegs in thesquareholes… theoneswhoseethingsdifferently – theyare not fond of rules… becausetheoneswhoarecrazyenoughtothinkthatthey can changetheworld, aretheoneswho do.”
iLesson #10 : YouOnlyLiveOnce “Iftodaywerethelastday of my life would I wantto do what I amaboutto do today? Andwheneveransver has been “no” fortoomanydays in a row, I know I needtochangesomething.”
“Don’twasteyour time livingsomeoneelse’s life. Stayhungry. Stayfoolish.” -SteveJobs
Preferences • http://articles.businessinsider.com • http://en.wikipedia.org • http://www.notablebiographies.com • http://www.authorstream.com • http://tr.scribd.com • SteveJobs’ 2005 Stanford CommencementSpeech