“Steven Paul Jobs, 56, died Wednesday at his home with his family. The co-founder and, until last August, CEO of Apple Inc was the most celebrated person in technology and business on the planet,” Steven Levy writes for Wired. “No one will take issue with the official Apple statement that ‘The world is immeasurably better because of Steve.'”
“It had taken a while for the world to realize what an amazing treasure Steve Jobs was. But Jobs knew it all along. That was part of what was so unusual about him. From at least the time he was a teenager, Jobs had a freakish chutzpah. At age 13, he called up the head of HP and cajoled him into giving Jobs free computer chips,” Levy writes. “It was part of a lifelong pattern of setting and fulfilling astronomical standards. Throughout his career, he was fearless in his demands. He kicked aside the hoops that everyone else had to negotiate and straightforwardly and brazenly pursued what he wanted. When he got what he wanted — something that occurred with astonishing frequency — he accepted it as his birthright.”
Levy writes, “The full legacy of Steve Jobs will not be sorted out for a very long time. When employees first talked about Jobs’ ‘reality distortion field,’ it was a pejorative — they were referring to the way that he got you to sign on to a false truth by the force of his conviction and charisma. But at a certain point the view of the world from Steve Jobs’ brain ceased to become distorted. It became an instrument of self-fulfilling prophecy. As product after product emerged from Apple, each one breaking ground and changing our behavior, Steve Job’s reality field actually came into being. And we all live in it.”
Read more in the full article – recommended – here.
Magicians will tell you that the best magic trick is the one where you REMOVE the illusion just as you call your audiences attention to it. Steve Jobs saw the illusions that we had built around ourselves, and cast them aside to our amazement.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
“When employees first talked about Jobs’ ‘reality distortion field,’ it was a pejorative — they were referring to the way that he got you to sign on to a false truth by the force of his conviction and charisma. But at a certain point the view of the world from Steve Jobs’ brain ceased to become distorted. It became an instrument of self-fulfilling prophecy.”
Sweet!
The Onion’s take is painfully true:
http://www.theonion.com/articles/last-american-who-knew-what-the-fuck-he-was-doing,26268/
Sad, but true.
Wow. I know my family will be buying me Steve’s biography for Christmas. The wait will be torture.
While you’re waiting, if you haven’t already, you might consider reading “West of Eden: The End of Innocence at Apple Computer” by Frank Rose (1989).