(CNN) -- Steve Jobs, the visionary in the black turtleneck who co-founded Apple
in a Silicon Valley garage, built it into the world's leading tech
company and led a mobile-computing revolution with wildly popular
devices such as the iPhone, died Wednesday. He was 56.
The hard-driving executive pioneered the concept of the personal
computer and of navigating them by clicking onscreen images with a
mouse. In more recent years, he introduced the iPod portable music
player, the iPhone and the iPad tablet -- all of which changed how we
consume content in the digital age.
His friends and Apple fans on Wednesday night mourned the passing of a tech titan.
"Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless
innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives," Apple said in a
statement. "The world is immeasurably better because of Steve."
More than one pundit, praising Jobs' ability to transform entire
industries with his inventions, called him a modern-day Leonardo Da
Vinci.
"Steve Jobs is one of the great innovators in the history of modern
capitalism," New York Times columnist Joe Nocera said in August. "His
intuition has been phenomenal over the years."
Jobs' death, while dreaded by Apple's legions of fans, was not
unexpected. He had battled cancer for years, took a medical leave from
Apple in January and stepped down as chief executive in August because
he could "no longer meet (his) duties and expectations."
Born February 24, 1955, and then adopted, Jobs grew up in Cupertino,
California -- which would become home to Apple's headquarters -- and
showed an early interest in electronics. As a teenager, he phoned
William Hewlett, president of Hewlett-Packard, to request parts for a
school project. He got them, along with an offer of a summer job at HP.
Jobs dropped out of Oregon's Reed College after one semester, although
he returned to audit a class in calligraphy, which he says influenced
Apple's graceful, minimalist aesthetic. He quit one of his first jobs,
designing video games for Atari, to backpack across India and take
psychedelic drugs. Those experiences, Jobs said later, shaped his
creative vision.
"You can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them
looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow
connect in your future," he told Stanford University graduates during a
commencement speech in 2005. "You have to trust in something: your gut,
destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and
it has made all the difference in my life."
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US : 05 October 2011
Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs
1955 - 2011
R-I-P
WEN
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