Tag Archives: steve-jobs

Steve Jobs Show Premieres Off Broadway Next Week

Link: http://mashable.com/2010/04/15/steve-… See playwright Mike Daisey perform his monologue, Notes Toward the Agony and Ecstasy of Steve Jobs in a one-night-only run on April 22 at the New York Ensemble Studio Theatre. Read

Welcome To Steve Jobs’ Dark Side [Media Wars]

Steve Jobs seduced New York’s media moguls all too easily, convincing them his iPad would magically keep them in business — and in chauffeured limos. But nothing easy comes free, and the publishers’ digital debt is now due. More

iPhone OS 4.0 Coming This Summer, Includes Multitasking

Apple has confirmed what we all suspected: multitasking is coming to the finally confirmed iPhone OS 4.0 upgrade. The upgrade itself won’t be available for consumers until sometime this summer (Apple CEO Steve Jobs did not get more specific than that), but Apple claims their long-coming implementation of multitasking is “gonna be the best.” Jobs demonstrated multitasking on the iPhone, but it’s expected for iPod Touch and iPad, too. Essentially, when a user double clicks the home button, it pulls up a dock-like interface (very similar to what you’d see in a normal OS X session) that allows the user to swap between applications that are running. Jobs showed a user jumping from a URL in an e-mail to Safari, double clicking the home button, pulling up the apps that are running — in this case Safari, Mail, ESPN and Tap Tap Revenge — and simply clicking Mail to return to the e-mail account. The company claims their solution to multitasking avoids the common issue with adding multitasking to device: sluggish performance of the device and a rapidly draining battery. How much that claim holds up won’t be known for a few months yet. Have something to share? Sitting on a news tip? E-mail me . You can also follow me on Twitter . Apple – iPhone – iPod Touch – Steve Jobs – Safari

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iPhone OS 4.0 Coming This Summer, Includes Multitasking

Close Encounters of the Steve Jobs Kind (Part 3) [Nerdspotting]

It would appear we’ve giving people flashbacks: Readers are still sending us their Steve Jobs sightings. According to the latest batch, the Apple CEO detests a certain partner company, hangs with Larry Ellison and refuses special hospital blankets. More

My Job's Done Here…For Now

Steve Jobs sneaks by a line of people waiting to purchase an iPad on Sunday at the Palo Alto Apple Store. ( via ) View

A Treasure Trove of Steve Jobs Stories [Nerdspotting]

Yesterday we asked readers about their run-ins with Steve Jobs , and they delivered. The Apple CEO is quietly ubiquitous, seen from Palo Alton to SoHo, from Whole Foods to French cafés, a shaggy-dressing crazy driver who’s kind to strangers. We asked how Jobs behaves in the wild for two reasons : One, we thought his outdoor café meeting with the powerful CEO of Google was probably staged for publicity , and wondered how common it was for him to be so conspicuously out in public. Two, we were curious if the most famous CEO in the world is able to connect with ordinary people — i.e., his ideal customers — while under constant threat of becoming a public spectacle. It would seem, based on the emails and comments we’ve received, that Jobs is able to mingle freely in public, albeit with an eye on the exits in case things get awkward or dangerous. Like our colleague Brian Lam over at Gizmodo, we’re coming around to the idea that the Jobs-Schmidt coffee might not have been staged. Jobs and Schmidt are regulars at the café where they were spotted , according to a source Lam quoted last night. Our readers, meanwhile, tell us Jobs is regularly out and about in Silicon Valley and New York. He’s not afraid to cut in line, dine alone, or speed around corners in the Apple parking lot. He does his own dishes. And sometimes security guards make him show his ID, just like anyone else. We’re keeping the identities of our tipsters confidential; if you see your email below and want to claim credit, just shoot us an emai . And now, for our catalog of Encounters of the Turtleneck Kind: Insane driver, part 1: I used to work for apple for about 5 years Quite often I would have to go to Cupertino for work stuff. One time I was pulling out of the IL 1 parking lot ( 1 infinite loop) and this silver mercedes near swiped me as he pulled in. I slammed on my breaks and was like who the f* #k was that? The car next to me stops, rolls down his window, and says “Oops my bad, you okay?” (it was Steve Jobs) I sat there with my mouth open as he rolled his window back up and pulled in the handicap spot. The guy next to me goes “damn i wish he would’ve clocked us, imagine the settlement!” dude drives like a maniac Insane driver, part 2: From BootHillBossanova’s comment : I was working as a bagger at the Palo Alto Whole Foods in the summer of ’97 [he probably means ’98, when the iMac debuted in August]. I was shagging carts one afternoon when I saw this silver Mercedes parked in a handicapped spot. Steve Jobs was inside screaming at his car phone . This was right before the first iMac was unveiled and I’m pretty sure I could make out, “Not. Fucking.Blue. Enough!!!” Insane driver, part 3: From steve.krupf’s comment : A couple years ago, I had a networking-type breakfast with a friend of a friend who worked for Apple, in the main cafeteria on the company’s campus in Cupertino. After I’d finished my tasty chorizo omelet (Apple has an amazing omelet bar), my guy on the inside walked me back to my car. We started saying our goodbyes, and I wasn’t really paying attention to where I was standing. Suddenly a silver Mercedes roadster-type car with no license plates came screaming around a bend and swerved ever so slightly to avoid me . And my Apple guy said: “Do you know who that was who almost ran you over?” It was an honor to have impeded your trip to your parking spot, Mr. Jobs. Steve’s turn to do dishes this is interesting timing for your article because this happened the other week. I live in Palo Alto and am a grad student at Stanford. We were in Jobs’ neighborhood two weekends ago having dinner with some friends of my parents, and we decided to take a walk in order to look at Steve Jobs’ and Steve Young’s houses, which are right next to each other. We headed over, and all of a sudden were alongside Jobs house. It’s a really unusual and interesting house, but very understated and relatively small. You can just freely walk on the sidewalk right next to it. Well, we were walking along, and I heard dishes clattering, coming from his house, and I look over and there he was in his kitchen window, black turtleneck and all, washing dishes . He just looked up at us, maybe 15 feet away. Nothing in between us but a window, no tall fence (a short, decorative, waist-high one). And we just walked on and proceeded to admire the apple orchard he has in his front yard, and even walked up his driveway a little to see his tulip garden (we were with a kindly old lady, so we didn’t look too menacing). His neighbor, who we were walking with, told us that his security lives in the house next door, and he is under constant surveillance, but I still couldn’t help but be shocked at how simple and unassuming his house was, and the fact that we saw him washing his dishes. If he doesn’t need security gates, I don’t know who does. My guess is that his coffee date with Eric Schmidt was very heavily guarded, its just you don’t see his security. As for whether it was staged or not, I don’t know. People seem to see him around Palo Alto a lot, so it seems like he is just living his normal life here, and that probably includes having coffee with other high-powered tech folks. The Sloppy CEO: A brush with a potential tantrum I was sent to the Apple campus to do a demo for the Final Cut group in ‘the Piano Bar’. We had a Genelec surround system sent directly to our contact at Apple and I loaded this on a huge cart along with other hardware and my Warr Guitar strapped to my back. We ‘booked’ the room so we were sure it would be abandoned, including the allocated setup time. So, I come crashing into this room with the cart *KERBLAM* and I see a group of five people talking quietly at a table in the back. I begin to unload and set up. Our Apple contact says, “We should, uh, get out of here.” I shrug and follow him out. He and my co-worker leave to go do something and I’m sitting outside the piano bar making sure nobody walks off with my gear. Moments later four, ashen Apple employees scurry out of the room and head out the door followed by a scruffy unshaven fellow. He stops, surveys the area, and, like a missile locking on to a strong heat signature, zeros in and walks towards me , the person who burst in on the private meeting. It is funny how the brain works. As this person approached me, I had time to string the following thoughts together: “This guy is coming to talk to me. Heh. He kind of looks like Steve Jobs, but Steve wouldn’t wear torn jeans and have a three day beard and what are the chances that within 15 minutes I’d bump into… OMFG…” He holds out his hand and says, “Hi, I’m Steve.” I owned a 128K Mac in 1984. Before that, a Lisa. What I do today was shaped largely by Apple, and what this person did. Heck, I started writing music by dragging notes onto a screen with a program called MusicWorks – it isn’t hyperbole to say my very interest in music started with the Macintosh. Being a fairly eloquent person, I summon up the response: “Hey.” Smooth. I don’t remember if I shook his hand or not. Stopping to chat up a fellow cancer patient I don’t personally have a Steve Jobs sighting, but my friend did, probably about four years ago. She lives in downtown Palo Alto a few blocks away from University Avenue, same neighborhood as him. She was recovering from chemo (she has cancer) and was taking a walk with her husband near the house when they ran into a man who noticed her headscarf and asked her how her treatment was going. They discussed their respective cancer treatments for a while; after he’d moved on, her husband told her who she’d been talking to. Also, it’s not surprising that he got lost going to the movies. I grew up on the Peninsula, and it happens to me every time I try to go to those big AMC theaters in Mountain View or Cupertino. Imagine a huge parking lot with no obvious landmarks and all the buildings looking indistinguishable from each other. It’s not like trying to find the AMC in Union Square!!! Steve Jobs waits in line for food like a normal person I never realized that he had a problem being in public. I was getting a smoothie at Whole Foods a few years ago in downtown Palo Alto one day and guess who was in line in front of me! After I ordered I went to sit down at the tables and there he was again, eating like a normal person. No bodyguards and no disguises . I mean, he lives in Palo Alto so why would it be weird to see him at a cafe there? First and last time I’ve ever seen him (I live in San Jose now). Steve Jobs does not wait in line for food like some peon From nataliekei’s comment : Not sure if this qualifies, but as a former Apple employee, Jobs was knows to park in the first spot closest to the door – even though it was a handicapp spot! HR finally had to tell him that isn’t OK even for him. Eventually they chalked a spot marked “Jobs” for him. Also, in the company cafeteria, there could be a HUGE line, however he would rush in and get his food by just cutting in line . Its good to be the king! Do You Know Who I Am? Not 100% sure if this is what you were looking for, but in 1998, the first year Macworld moved from the two convention centers in Boston to the Javits Center in New York City, I was walking around the lobby area trying to make my way back onto the convention floor. I was 13 at the time, playing with my 4 year old Newton 120 which my dad had given to me. Now back in 1998 Steve Job wasn’t supposed to show up for the Keynote, he was going to do it via satellite [ this is true] , but much to my amazement however I see 10 feet in front of me, Steve Jobs. I’m standing there watching the CEO of Apple and his 4-5 deep entourage yelling at the security guard . As I moved closer I heard one of the entourage say “This is Steve Jobs, he is the CEO of Apple Computer” to which the guard replied “He is not the CEO of the Javits Center, he needed a badge to enter .” So it seems in his last minute choice to go to Macworld, no one got Mr. Jobs an badge. Whoops. Steve Jobs does not shake hands with stangers I’ve just read this http://valleywag.gawker.com/5505515/how-steve-jobs-behaves-in-public and I can personally assure Jobs don’t like to shake hands to unknown people, here is a video taken at the end of a Macworld Expo keynote: http://www.setteb.it/?p=774 follow the second link to watch. The article is in Italian, Google Translator is embedded. Toward the end of this short clip , Jobs does indeed appear to avoid shaking hands several times. But we thought we heard him tell someone “I’m sick,” with the sound turned all the way up. Steve Jobs does shake hands with strangers, and remembers names as well as a politician From raincoaster’s comment : He met a friend of mine at some huge geek event, and two years later bumped into him at a different event, walked right up, stretched out his hand for a shake and said, “It’s Dave, right? From SFU?” Don’t make Steve Jobs shake your hand, he is sick, you insensitive clod: From DoctorJezebel’s comment : Readers of gawker blogs: the dude had a fucking liver transplant. He is chronically immunosuppressed for life to prevent his body from rejecting the new liver. This is basically the functional equivalent of having full-blown AIDS and being susceptible to all sorts of weird, normally benign conditions. No wonder he doesn’t want to shake your hand. This is a very good point; read the rest of the thread for more good comments along these lines. He’s good with kids and apparent crazy people From itmustbeken’s comment : Many years ago, my family were hanging out at a park near downtown Palo Alto. My kids were running around like they were insane and soon we were joined by several others. As I am want to do, I turned into a monster and chased the kids bellowing at the top of my lungs and generally acting like the worlds largest 7 year old. One little girl went up to her dad and said ‘This is the best park ever! He’s so funny!’ Her dad was Steve Jobs. He was warm, friendly and thanked me for running his kids ragged at the park. His wife was nice too. My brush with awesomeness. He’s good with kids, when his mind doesn’t wander: My first Steve Jobs sighting took place at Stanford Shopping Center, in Palo Alto, California, in the fall of 2002. It was on a Saturday, in the heart of the Christmas shopping season. I was sitting with two of my teenaged cousins at one of the outdoor cafes, La Baguette, when Steve walked by with one of his children. I noticed him right away because he was wearing his black turtleneck and blue jeans, as well as his wire-rimmed eyeglasses Another thing I observed: As he strode along with his child, he seemed very focused — as if on a mission to get someplace by a certain time. And though he was holding his child’s hand — which I thought was cute, on his part — he also appeared not to notice his child was walking next to him . PS — Since then, I’ve seen him a number of times during visits to Apple HQ — particularly inside IL 1 and at Caffe Mac — usually alone, though once with Jonny Ive. He takes care of his vehicle Hello, I live in Mountain View, CA right next door to his home town of Palo Alto, and occasionally drive by his house on Waverly. One time my wife and I drove by and saw him outside either washing or waxing his SL 55 —can’t remember, this was a few years ago, I think even before the iPhone. He looked in our direction as we drove by, and nodded as he probably noticed that both of us were staring, but that was about it. Cool on the catwalk From Motoko Kusanagi’s comment : When the Apple store in SoHo NYC opened, Steve was hanging out chatting with anyone who recognized him (surprisingly few people in NYC cared about him back then). I caught him hanging out on the little bridge connecting the two sides of the upper floor. He was just soaking up the launch of his newest baby, taking a moment to enjoy what was undoubtedly a whole lot of hard work. For such a private and allegedly aloof person, he is cool as can be. Couple of more details from the Apple store sighting we ran last time I used to work at one of the Apple Stores here in [New York] city. He was scheduled to come in, we didn’t know exactly when. He got out of a town car out front, walked in, and right up to me – shaking my hand and saying, “Hi, I’m Steve Jobs! Is XXXXX (name of the store manager) here?” When I said he was and called him, [Jobs] said he was going to run to the bathroom first – and went to the customer’s bathroom (which anyone can use – and isn’t exactly the cleanest). He came out, walked right back up to me, and started talking about the store. After about 5 min customers around us starting walking up asking to take pictures, and asking questions, when he promptly asked to be excused and left – back to the car and away. We had all heard stories about his desire to not shake hands (he offered first), his desire to not be in public (he spent his entire time in full view in open areas of the store) and his general shitty attitude (he was super nice and cordial). Just something I thought of when reading your article. All that being said, the company is security crazy. [After a follow up question:] The dude took a pilgrimage to India and shit in a hole – he had nothing at all to say about the bathroom . He talked about random stuff in the store, asked how we we doing, etc. He noticed a stain on a fixture and said it should be the first priority to get that fixed . Honestly, I think he is a seriously focused and dedicated guy who is a normal nerd at heart – except he’s been made into a hero by a group of people. Im not saying that the treatment he gets isn’t his fault, but he struck me in person as a completely different person than what he’s portrayed as. Got a story that can top these? We’ll take it ! (Top pic: Jobs at an Apple store, by JD Lewin )

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A Treasure Trove of Steve Jobs Stories [Nerdspotting]

RNC Spent Thousands on ‘Office Supplies’ At Ronald Reagan Gift Shop, Liquor Store [Documents]

While we were digging around the itemized disbursements of the Republican National Committee in search of lesbians , we found a couple trips marked “office supplies” that are both wonderful (and wasteful?) in very different ways. On 2/4 and 2/25, someone picked up $200 worth of supplies from Congressional Liquors on Capitol Hill. And in what I like to imagine was the prelude to a night at the lesbian bondage nightclub, someone spent more than $2,200 at the Ronald Reagan Museum Store in Simi Valley, California, on 2/4, the same day as the infamous Voyeur West Hollywood trip. They apparently needed a little bit more of whatever the hell they bought there, because on 2/18 they went back to spend another $215. A wet office is a happy office, so we do not begrudge the RNC their twice-monthly booze runs, but what does $2,424 even get you from the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation Museum Store? Hundreds of “Rap Master Ronnie” 12-inches? The original list of names he gave HUAC?

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RNC Spent Thousands on ‘Office Supplies’ At Ronald Reagan Gift Shop, Liquor Store [Documents]

Why Steve Jobs’ Coffee Date with Eric Schmidt Was Probably Staged [Flackery]

Steve Jobs is paranoid about security. The Apple CEO doesn’t just happen to allow strangers to approach him, as during Jobs’ coffee with his Google counterpart last week. Just ask anyone familiar with Jobs’ high-security New York Times visit. Journalists, of all people, seemed especially skeptical about Jobs’ public appearance in front of a Silicon Valley café last week, Google’s Eric Schmidt across the table from him. The intriguing coffee date, first reported by our colleagues at Gizmodo , smelled like a staged publicity event, as Gizmodo noted in its initial reporting. The odor of deception would have been especially strong for those trained by the legend of Jobs’ recent visit to the New York Times newsroom to demonstrate the iPad. Word from the newsroom is that Jobs had an advance team on site for days and days before he showed up. The security preparations included planning to ensure that Jobs could immediately enter and exit an elevator car at the Times building without being approached by Times reporters or other strangers. (If you have more details, do get in touch .) That sort of shielding will sound familiar to those on hand for Jobs’ exit from his iPad press event in January. When Jobs left the San Francisco demonstration hall he’d used to demo the device to press, he was accompanied by handlers who deflected the press and insisted they stop taking pictures of the CEO . So now we’re to believe that the man whose team meticulously planned a visit to a New York newspaper office to avoid undue exposure to strangers, and who had an entourage deflecting pictures during his walk across a short stretch of sidewalk in San Francisco — that this man didn’t realize he’d be photographed and possibly mobbed at a shopping center in the heart of Silicon Valley, Palo Alto? “Let’s go discuss this somewhere more private,” one of the two men reportedly said. Uh, sure, like in one of their highly secure mansions or corporate offices, or in the private dining room of a restaurant, or in the main dining room of a restaurant, or really anywhere indoors, for example inside the very café where the men were sitting. To be sure, this was no case of direct manipulation by Apple. Gizmodo’s Jobs photo was not supplied by Apple PR or even an anonymous source. The photographer was a reader Editorial Director Brian Lam had met at Snowmodo events and brought on to work one such event; Lam traded a snowboard for the photos. After gawking at Jobs with his friends, the high schooler returned to take the pics. It’s also true that Jobs has been seen relatively unguarded in public before, like that time he showed up to a children’s soccer game with an iPhone prototype, or that time he supposedly bought a treat from the loose-lipped employees at Fraiche Yogurt . But when there’s a likelihood of cameras and/or press and/or mass gawking — at the Times , in front of the iPad event — security has been tight. And a sit-down meeting with Eric Schmidt at the height of the Apple-Google rivalry is one of the more gawkable, photographable moments we can imagine, involving Jobs. The fact there was no apparent security between Jobs and the cameras tells us as much as the image of the sit-down itself. The only question is why these companies are so eager to tamp down talk of their rivalry. It’s hard to imagine the fight is hurting sales. (Update: Added context about the original Jobs photographer.) )

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Why Steve Jobs’ Coffee Date with Eric Schmidt Was Probably Staged [Flackery]

Let’s All Email Steve Jobs! [Correspondence]

It is well known that you can email Steve Jobs at sjobs@apple.com. It is less well-known that he sometimes responds. He has been doing this a lot lately. Come on, everybody, let’s email Steve Jobs! The New York Times has a delightful article today about Steve Jobs’ recent burst of email correspondences with Joe Mac User. Including: John Devor, a 23 year-old student at University of Virginia emailed to complain that Apple lawyers were hassling for the name of an application he developed, iPodRip. Jobs’ response: “Change your apps name. Not that big of a deal. Steve.” Swedish music producer Jezper Soderlund emailed Jobs to ask if his iPhone data plan would work with the iPad. Jobs’ response: “No.” Devir Kahan complained about a keyboard problem. Jobs’ response: “Software Fix coming soon. Sorry for the bug.” Italian Blogger Andrea Nepori asked Jobs if she could get free e-books on her iPad. Jobs’ response: “Yep.” How exciting! Now that we know there’s signs of life at the other end, it is up to you, dear Gawker reader, to email Steven P. Jobs. What will you email him? Here are some suggestions: To: sjobs@apple.com From: adrian@gawker.com Subject: Broken-hearted Will you ever take Eric Schmidt back ? He misses you! To: sjobs@apple.com From: Adrian@gawker.com Subject: Play What did you think of that one-man play about you, The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs ? If it was applying for inclusion in the App Store, would you let it in? To: sjobs@apple.com From: Adrian@gawker.com Subject: iPad question I know that the iPad is supposed to save the newspaper industry . But is there any way you can include a feature that would let the Washington Post’s opinion section continue its downward spiral to the very depths of Hell? To: sjobs@apple.com From: adrian@gawker.com Subject: There’s an app for that Is there an app for not dropping your iPhone into the toilet when you’re drunk? If so, is there an app for traveling back in time to right before I dropped my iPhone into the toilet when I was drunk? To: sjobs@apple.com From: Adrian@gawker.com Subject: MacBook Pro My MacBook Pro appears to be made of the broken dreams of 16 year-old Chinese factory workers . My question: Is this covered by AppleCare? Alright, email Steve Jobs right now. First one to get a response wins our dead iPhone battery.

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Let’s All Email Steve Jobs! [Correspondence]

Steve Jobs Cheese Plate

A step-by-step guide on how to make a cheese plate resembling Steve Jobs' head can be found here . I would take a giant bowl of Steve Jobs nachos over an iPad any day. The Best Links: Spicy Steve Nachos, iPad Thai and an Apple Cheese Plate Wait, What?: Steve Jobs Cheese Heads via theCHIVE View