Into The Wild: Lost Conversations From Steve Jobs' Best Years - Fast Company
5 weeks ago by edmadrid
"Jobs may have been impulsive at times, but he was always methodical. This kind of nature suited an autodidact with eclectic tastes, empowering him either to obsess impatiently about a pressing problem that had to be dealt with immediately--much like an engineer--or else to let an idea steep and incubate until he got it right. This is why Jobs was so often right on the big picture, even when he got the details wrong."
apple
business
stevejobs
5 weeks ago by edmadrid
The Real Leadership Lessons of Steve Jobs - Harvard Business Review
8 weeks ago by edmadrid
"In the months since my biography of Jobs came out, countless commentators have tried to draw management lessons from it. Some of those readers have been insightful, but I think that many of them (especially those with no experience in entrepreneurship) fixate too much on the rough edges of his personality. The essence of Jobs, I think, is that his personality was integral to his way of doing business. He acted as if the normal rules didn’t apply to him, and the passion, intensity, and extreme emotionalism he brought to everyday life were things he also poured into the products he made. His petulance and impatience were part and parcel of his perfectionism."
stevejobs
apple
business
design
process
8 weeks ago by edmadrid
The Book of Jobs - The Great Debate
february 2012 by edmadrid
Steve Jobs smelled so foul that none of his co-workers at Atari in the seventies would work with him. Entreating him to shower was usually futile; he’d inevitably claim that his strict vegan diet had rid him of body odor, thus absolving him of the need for standard hygiene habits. Later, friends would theorize that he had been exercising what would prove a limitless capacity for sustained and gratuitous lying that came to be nicknamed the “reality distortion field.”
stevejobs
apple
tech
february 2012 by edmadrid
The momentum of Steve Jobs - Craig Mod
december 2011 by edmadrid
the quicker you can kill a dream by making it real, the quicker you see bigger, more important dreams once blocked by the first.
stevejobs
process
december 2011 by edmadrid
Presentation Zen: Steve Jobs: "People who know what they’re talking about don’t need PowerPoint"
december 2011 by edmadrid
“I hate the way people use slide presentations instead of thinking,” Jobs told biographer Walter Isaacson when describing meetings upon his return to Apple in 1997. “People would confront a problem by creating a presentation. I wanted them to engage, to hash things out at the table, rather than show a bunch of slides. People who know what they’re talking about don’t need PowerPoint.”
stevejobs
process
december 2011 by edmadrid
Eric Schmidt on Steve Jobs - BusinessWeek
october 2011 by edmadrid
Steve and I were talking about children one time, and he said the problem with children is that they carry your heart with them. The exact phrase was, “It’s your heart running around outside your body.” That’s a Steve Jobs quote. He had a level of perception about feelings and emotions that was far beyond anything I’ve met in my entire life. His legacy will last for many years, through people he’s trained and people he’s influenced. But what death means is you can’t call—you can’t call him. It’s a loss. I’ll miss talking to him.
stevejobs
october 2011 by edmadrid
Steve Jobs, 1955 – 2011 - Wired.com
october 2011 by edmadrid
“If you view computer designers as artists, they’re really into more of an art form that can be mass-produced, like records, or like prints, than they are into fine arts,” he told me in 1983. “They want something where they can express themselves to a large number of people through their medium, and their medium is technology and manufacturing.” Later he would refine this point of view by talking about Apple as a blend of engineering and liberal arts.
stevejobs
business
october 2011 by edmadrid
Steve: Who’s Going to Protect Us From Cheap and Mediocre Now? - Monday Note
august 2011 by edmadrid
For a long time, I’ve seen him as having an animal inside him, the one with the desires, the instinct, the drive. In 1985, that animal threw Steve to the ground. He picked himself up at Pixar — you’d be a captain of industry for doing no more — and NeXT. Then, in 1997, armed with Pixar’s success and Next’s technical prowess, he came back to run Apple and make it really his.
He had learned to ride the animal.
business
design
stevejobs
He had learned to ride the animal.
august 2011 by edmadrid
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