Requiem for Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs, the founder of Apple died yesterday at the age of  56 from pancreatic cancer. The lesson of his life for all is finding what you love. "You have to trust in something-- your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has made all the difference in my life," he said at the 2005 Stanford commencement. He started Apple, was fired by its board of directors, still loved what he was doing and life took him back to Apple. He didn't lose faith. From that same speech:

     ...the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do
     great work is to love what you do. If you haven't found it yet keep looking. Don't settle. As with all
     matters of the heart, you'll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship it just gets better
     and better as the years roll on.

Here is the rest of that speech:

I was first introduced to Apple when as a Reading Specialist for the Detroit Public Schools I was part of the team that introduced the very first computers to the schools. We trained specially to open those new boxes full of equipment and installed one in each school and then trained the teacher on how to use them.  Fast forward to today, I now refer to my Macs as my "significant others."

Many thanks, Steve, for everything, but especially your vision that is an inspiration.

And as I heard on NPR today, there are three apples that have changed the world: Eve's, Newton's and Steve Jobs.

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  • I've seen a bunch of very good cartoons regarding Steve. Here is a whole page of jokes:  http://www.sickipedia.org/search/1/?q=Steve+Jobs

    Please note: I would not be posting this if I didn't think Steve Jobs wasn't an amazing guy. He changed my life.

  • Steve is probably revolutionizing in the Great Beyond as well
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  • correction - can count, not can can't.  Ha!
  • Barry, I love my IPhone and wasn't buying into the hype until I needed a new phone.  Looked into it and must say it revolutionizes how I do business - the best thing is being able to take credit cards at a show with a quick swipe of a card (with a card reader adapter) and it saving me more money than I can can't, not to mention having a receipt emailed - instantly to a customer stating they were at that location (of the fair) and bought "xyz" from me.   You will quickly find it to be addictive - leisurely (music, educational podcasts, movies) and for the business.  And never in a million years would I have ever thought this would ever be possible in my lifetime.   But here it is - the future and thankful Steve Jobs helped make it all possible.  Let us know what you think of the Iphone - I have an Iphone 3g and most likely will get the newer version in February when the contract I have runs out.   I'm lucky that my husband works for At&t to get a reduced price - not a free one.  On a solemn note - I am sorry to hear your cousin passed from pancreatic cancer.  - Michelle
  • My cousin died of the same pancreatic cancer.

     

    I just ordered the I-phone 4S. It'll be my first Apple product.

  • Love that last line about the 3 apples that have changed the world.  We will never know what we will miss with him passing away so young.

    Jacki B

  • I've been hearing amazing stories all day about him, Phil. Guess this means we shouldn't give up on our kids, grandkids who don't go to college... although I heard this statistic today: 4% of recent college graduates are unemployed; 16% of non grads are unemployed.
  • Not bad for an old acid head!
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