dx23 wrote:
Just saw that on CNN and I'm in utter shock.
Hardly shock - he never struck me as the kind of man who'd hand over his company until the absolute last possible minute, so it was sadly clear that his days were numbered from the moment he did so in August. Lasting seven years following a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is a pretty amazing achievement in itself, though I daresay he had the best medical attention imaginable.
I've just posted a Facebook status eulogy, to the effect that I'm "writing this on a MacBook Pro, and an iPhone is lying a few feet away: later, the latter will accompany [me] to London, along with [my] iPad. [My wife] is currently listening to Harry Potter audiobooks on an iPod while using her own Macbook. It's very likely that [our] kids will watch something made by Pixar later today. None of this will be any kind of special tribute: it's just a completely normal day."
mfunk9786 wrote:Jobs was truly a modern day Edison, or at least as close as we've come.
As the Guardian obituary
points out, he significantly changed the shape of four major industries: personal computing, mobile telephony, music and film. Most other great visionary entrepreneurs, even at the level of Henry Ford or Conrad Hilton, shaped just one.