The Apple founder birthed the personal computer, was banished from his empire and then saved it from ruin. Along the way, he changed the way we work, play and communicate. And he's not done yet.
On a foggy, cool day in January, Steve Jobs and Apple are
bidding to change the world again. Jobs sits comfortably in a
leather chair in front of a rapt San Francisco auditorium crowd, a large
video screen tracking his hand movements on a thin, slate-looking
object resting comfortably in his hands. Dressed in his trademark blue
jeans, dark turtleneck, and New Balance shoes, the wire-framed Apple
co-founder and culture-shaper peppers his speech with “remarkable,
awesome” and “amazing” references to his company’s latest new wave—a
notebook device called the iPad. This “truly magical and revolutionary
product” fills a category need between his company’s successful laptop
and iPhone and iPod business lines, Jobs says.
To read the full, original article click on this link: Steve Jobs: Master of Innovation | SUCCESS Magazine | What Achievers Read
Author: John H. Ostdick