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And while Isaacson never shies away from Jobs’s often vitriolic temper (and indeed he sometimes seems to dwell on it to make his point), it is clear that in some respects, Steve Jobs is a book ...
Steve Jobs journeyed to Moscow, aiming to introduce Macintosh computers to the Soviet Union amidst internal Apple turmoil.
Jobs spent months trying to figure out what to say to Stanford’s graduates. Newly released materials show how he went from ...
In the new authorized biography of Apple’s enigmatic founder, Walter Isaacson reveals how Jobs regretted his alternative cancer treatments, how he pushed for the book so his children could know ...
This for-sale farm was the apple of Steve Jobs’ eye. The 388-acre property recently listed for $5 million and boasts an apple ...
But not Jony,” Steve Jobs’ widow, Laurene Powell Jobs, told Isaacson. Their admiration was mutual. Of Ive, Jobs said to Isaacson: “He gets the big picture as well as the most infinitesimal ...
Steve Jobs, renowned as one of the most influential and visionary leaders of this time, ... "I wanted my kids to know me," Jobs told Isaacson. "I wasn't always there for them, ...
Walter Isaacson, the best-selling biographer of Steve Jobs and Albert Einstein, has spent the last two years shadowing Elon Musk and interviewing his family, friends, colleagues and critics. On ...
Isaacson writes that Steve Jobs did maintain a friendly relationship with his biological mother, who after divorcing Jandali remarried for a short time to ice skating instructor George Simpson.