Steve Jobs (2011) This book is particularly fascinating because you are seeing the birth of the computer age, not just through
Steve Jobs eyes but through an assortment of friends, coworkers and enemies as well. And when it gets to the moment of
Steve Wozniak putting together the first computer and typing on the keyboard to display text on a screen it's pretty heavy. Think about that for a second. It so easy to get lost in the 'simplicity' of doing something that we all take for granted now. We know nothing else but this. Typing now on the PC it seems so effortless. But try to imagine being
Woz on June 29, 1975 when his computer worked with the end result of text on screen, the first person on the planet to do so. Man, that must have been a rush like no other. In that nanosecond of success, he literally change the course of humanity and how we live now. That's some pretty heady stuff right there.
Also mind blowing was that of
Ron Wayne, who's initial investment into
Apple for 10% and subsequent withdrawal due to fear of the unknown could be looked at as the most EPIC FAIL of all time. Had he not gotten cold feet, he would be worth $2.6 Billion as of 2010. Holy crap!!! It shouldn't surprise me either that one of the first
Apple Computers sold for $213,000 at
Christies back in the same year as well.
Before the book, I never really knew
Steve Jobs and what he was like other than what I saw on TV like everyone else. So it's kind of baffling that this hippie with long hair, dirty feet, refusing to bathed would change the world.
We've all heard about what a collosal dick and ass hole
Steve Jobs is with regards to other people and the manner in which he dismisses people without provocation. It's really hard to find sympathy in someone that is as classless as he was or so I thought. The more I read, the more I got to understand that he wasn't being a dick for the sake of being one. He just couldn't help himself. He didn't have empathy in his personality. It's also some of the most riveting reading you will come across. All the showdowns and arguments are layed bare in the book and the best of the bunch is clearly the
Scully/Jobs coup. But leave it to
Scully's wife to sum it up best when she confronted him about the way he was treating her husband. "Can't you look at me when I'm talking to you? Nevermind, don't look at me, when I look into most people's eyes, I see a soul. When I look into your eyes, I see a bottomless pit, an empty hole, a dead zone". Game. Set. Match.
We all know how driven
Jobs was to create the perfect product and how he would rant at any perceived flaw, real or not, regarding whatever must-have device he was working on. I find it fascinating that he always strove for perfection and never wavered in his quest to get there. But the mindset of
Jobs, although impressive was way off. He could fix anything and everything put in front of him, but he couldn't fix the one thing that had the biggest flaw of them all...himself. Personality wise or health wise, he had to work with what he had and there was no changing who he was, even in the face of death.
I am not a
Mac user, and I have never owned a
Mac product, so I can rate this book on it's merit alone and not that of a fan-boy. This is a thoroughly engaging and fascinating read. And at a whopping 800 pages for the Large print (it was the only copy available at the Library), I read from cover to cover fairly quickly because there are so many pivotal moments that came at the hands of
Jobs. For me the best part of the book was his showdown with
Michael Eisner and the behemoth that was and is
Pixar. The only part of the book that I really didn't care for was the section devoted to the women in his life. I just didn't care much about who they were and it did bring the book to a halt for me. Other than that,
Walter Isaacson did a fantastic job writing the book.
I definitely recommend this book as a
Buy for sure.