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Screen shot 2011 10 06 at 10.47.26 AM2 380x226 Steve Jobs, RIP.

The image from Apples website today.

Apple has confirmed that Steve Jobs passed away on Wednesday (US time) due to pancreatic cancer.

He was 56.

And the world now turns to discuss what ‘Fortune 500′s CEO of the Decade’ has achieved. In short, no matter your outlook on the Apple brand, it has been complete technological dominance. Apple is the biggest technology company in the world, worth more than $300 billion.

It has redesigned some of the most popular gadgets and reimagined what technology can do for us.

Steve, for his part, was the founder of the company. A brilliantly sharp man who didn’t follow trends, but tried to imagine what people needed before they needed it. He left the company in the late 80s after much friction but was welcomed back as the ‘Prodigal son’ in the late 1990s when Apple lost its way.

That’s when the tech magic happened. He took control of the design and marketing process with ruthless ideology and the result was the iPod. The music player that launched an array of products that people are still using today.

His former rival Bill Gates, who founded Microsoft, had this to say:

“I’m truly saddened to learn of Steve Jobs’ death. Melinda and I extend our sincere condolences to his family and friends, and to everyone Steve has touched through his work.

Steve and I first met nearly 30 years ago, and have been colleagues, competitors and friends over the course of more than half our lives.

The world rarely sees someone who has had the profound impact Steve has had, the effects of which will be felt for many generations to come.

For those of us lucky enough to get to work with him, it’s been an insanely great honor. I will miss Steve immensely.”

Wired had this obituary:

A visionary inventor and entrepreneur, it would be impossible to overstate Steve Jobs’ impact on technology and how we use it. Apple’s mercurial, mysterious leader did more than reshape his entire industry: he completely changed how we interact with technology. He made gadgets easy to use, gorgeous to behold and essential to own. He made things we absolutely wanted, long before we even knew we wanted them. Jobs’ utter dedication to how people think, touch, feel and interact with machines dictated even the smallest detail of the computers Apple built and the software it wrote.

Jobs was born in San Francisco on Feb. 24, 1955, and adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs of Mountain View, California. He was a techie from a young age, often sitting in on lectures at Hewlett-Packard in Palo Alto while attending Homestead High School in Los Altos. He eventually landed a summer job there, working alongside Steve Wozniak.

Jobs enrolled in Reed College in Portland, Oregan in 1972, but dropped out after six months – he later said he “didn’t see the value in it.” He eventually returned home to California. He got a job at Atari, renewed his friendship with Wozniak and started hanging out with the Homebrew Computer Club. After trekking to India in 1974 — a trip he, like so many others, made to find enlightenment – Jobs returned home and looked up Woz.

The two of them launched Apple in 1976. Their first project, the Apple I, wasn’t much to look at — just an assembled circuit board. Anyone who bought it had to add the case and keyboard. But it was enough for Jobs to convince Mike Markkula, a semi-retired Intel engineer and product marketing manager, that personal computing was the future. Markkula invested $250,000 in the fledgling enterprise.

The Apple I begat the Apple II in 1977. It was the first successful mass-market computer, and easy to use, too. That would become a hallmark of Apple under Jobs.

The Apple II had a huge impact on the tech business, but cheaper alternatives, like the Commodore 64 and the VIC-20, quickly eroded Apple’s market share. IBM’s open PC platform eventually won out over Apple’s closed approach, and the die was cast. The PC dominated the market.

Still, Apple was by any measure a success. By the time Jobs was 25 in 1980, he was worth more than $100 million. Not that it mattered to him.

“It wasn’t that important because I never did it for the money,” he once said.

Worth a read. Steve Jobs worked almost until his death.

Here’s an ad from Apple’s 1997 ‘Think Different’ campaign.

How will you remember the man?

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75 Comments so far

  1. pletcheriuj

    1992

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  2. Mel

    I feel so sad about Steve’s passing. I can only imagine how hard he fought in those last few years. It’s terribly sad when anyone is having to fight or dies of cancer. It seems like even though he was a genius and changed the way we work and enjoy technology, he put his family first. I think he was a truly inspirational person (I love re-reading some of his quotes) and he gave so much to others. I am grateful for the way Apple has impacted on my life, too. I love the way it all works and it’s a joy to use but also efficient and it has meant i’m less stressed. I often thought of Apple as the Disney of computing because I couldn’t believe how far technology has come. What an amazing legacy Steve- gifted, genius, generous, humble…

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    • Melissa

      He’s responsible for Disney’s improved tech as well – he bought Pixar and produced the first Toy Story while he was fired from Apple.

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  3. Langers

    so sad.

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  4. Guest

    I feel like crying. Steve Jobs changed the way millions of people around the world live everyday. More than a singer, or actor, or politician, he really impacted on how we live.

    The ipod has given my so much joy, I travel on PT for at least an hour a day, sometimes much more and when the ipod replaced my discman I was so happy – more than 15 songs! Instant uploading of new ones! Playlists! Amazing.

    And my Macbook Pro is now one year old and has not had a single proble, fingers crossed, unlike the 5 previous laptops I went through.

    If you have time, google Steve’s Commencement Speech to Stamford University, it’s truly inspiring stuff.

    RIP Steve.

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  5. haz1902

    No matter who it is, pancreatic cancer is one of the most painful to endure. A sad loss and sympathy to all his family and friends

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  6. Nico

    Really not understanding the extreme sympathy/emotions going on, but hey, I was pretty upset when Amy Winehouse died, so who am I to judge?

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  7. Mia

    I feel so drawn to the Apple store today to pay my respects somehow (by upgrading my iphone maybe?).
    I wonder if the blue-shirts are black today……

    What a remarkable brain he had. What an innovator.

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    • Anonymous

      Upgrade my iphone! Disgusting Mia

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    • just a thought

      maybe donating money to the cancer council would be better.

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  8. singleinoz

    I am not an apple user but that doesn’t mean i don’t appreciate the brilliance that is Steve Jobs. Many you Rest In Peace.

    I work near the apple store in Sydney and I am watching a slowly but still increasing pile of flowers building up at the front.

    Please Apple donate any flowers to a cancer ward.

    Apparently in the US they were handing out post its and pens to people to leave notes. I think this is much better idea.

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  9. Just read that the delightful Westboro Baptist Church are going to picket Steve’s funeral.

    What’s the bet most of them have iPhones.

    Assholes.

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    • Why are they doing that? Are they that hate group that hates everything that isn’t middle class, white, strictly religious and male??

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      • Becnherboys

        No they hate the middle class white male too.

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      • Mish

        The irony of it is that Westboro made the announcement that they would picket his funeral on Twitter… via an iphone.

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  10. peppy

    I’m not sure why, but I don’t feel the communal sadness that everyone seems to be experiencing over Steve Jobs’ death. I felt much, much sadder when Heath Ledger died, but in this case I kind of feel… nothing.

    I can definitely appreciate the influence that Jobs has had on technology and modern society as a whole… his achievements have affected the way that we communicate with each other on almost a minute-to-minute basis. Yet I can’t help but feel that the world, and Apple, will go on. He was certainly an inspirational person, and my thoughts go out to his family and friends. I just wonder, am I the only one who feels a little bit ‘meh’ about the whole thing…

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    • You’re not the only one. I can recognise his achievements…and I feel for his family…but in the end, he was just a guy…he wore turtle-necks…he ran a company or two…he made money for his stakeholders…

      I work for another IT company that has been just as innovative and inspirational as Jobs and Apple, but I bet you wouldn’t be able to name our CEO…

      I have to admit, the idolatry surrounding Jobs and Apple, like any other idolatry, has always made me feel a little uncomfortable…Jobs and Apple didn’t change the world by themselves…he is simply part of a much bigger story that includes Xerox, Microsoft, IBM, Cisco, Amazon, Google, Facebook etc etc…while this is an important news story, I think there’s been an awful lot of hyperbole in the media today.

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    • Melissa

      I don’t know how old you are, but I was upset by Heath Ledger dying because he was close to my age (3 years older than me, almost to the day) and I’d never known anyone close to my age who had died. It was that first intimation of mortality that hit me as much as I had been a huge fan of the guy. Just a theory.

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  11. MiddleC

    The world has lost a true visionary, a wife has lost her husband and children their father. You were an inspiration to many and I hope your legend will continue to inspire a new generation.

    RIP Steve.

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  12. Leela

    The man was responsible for a huge leap in technology and let’s not forget Pixar.
    You don’t have to be an Apple fan to feel sad – the amount of PC-ers that write horrid things is disgusting. I will never understand peoples hatred towards popular things, they’re popular because they’re AWESOME.

    Leela – owner of iPod, iPhone & MacBook Pro.
    Thank you Mr.Jobs & may you rest in peace.

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  13. Leni

    I am very sad for his loved ones. I, like so many others, love my apple products.
    I don’t want to take away from this horrible event, but I must say I was so surprised to learn that when he returned to Apple he cut all philanthropy – can anyone confirm is this is true? It seems at odds with his personality.

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    • jessbath

      It is correct. He cancelled all company philanthropy to make Apple profitable, but never reinstated it even though they are clearly now extremely profitable. It’s for that reason I find it difficult to have the intense sadness everyone else seems to feel. There is a documentary by Mike Daisy about the horrific conditions at the Chinese factory they use to make Apple products… He was aware but did nothing. I am saddened by the death of a man but…. I also feel he shouldn’t be put on such a hero-type pedestal.

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      • Leni

        jessbath I completely understand what you are saying and agree with you. I wonder if Bill Gates will be honoured like this one day? I suspect not because, although he has donated so, so much money, he is not loved and revered like Jobs is.
        I am not at all trying to take away from what is an incredibly tragic event – the loss of a partner and father at a relatively young age – but I’d like to question whether his cult like status is worth it. There was someone on the other apple post which mentioned the conditions in the apple factories and it really made me think about the whole apple brand

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      • rainbow

        bill gates does so much, particularly in vaccinating kida round the world who otherwise would not have access.
        i didn’t realise apple didn’t do anything, is that what you are saying?
        if so it is shocking!

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        • Leni

          Yep that’s what we’re saying. Apparently Apple has no corporate philanthropy program, and when Bill Gates and Warren Buffett got together to pledge all that money to aid, they asked Steve Jobs, but he refused.
          I read in one report that he has donated a lot to cancer research.

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  14. I didn’t know Steve Jobs had pancreatic cancer, but I should have realised by just looking at him.

    My father died of pancreatic cancer, too at 56, and he looked the exact same way Steve did. It is a horrible horrible disease and a terrible way to die. Less than 10% of those diagnosed live past 5 years, as the symptoms do not show until it is too late.

    Those statistics have not changed in almost 50 years, unlike statistical suvival rates for cancers like breast which have reduced greatly in the last 10 years even.

    It is disgraceful the lack of funds that are allocated to researching this disease in Australia.

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    • Endocrinologist

      So sorry to hear about your father.
      Steve Jobs actually had a neuroendocrine tumour. It often originates in part of the pancreas but may also arise from other parts of the body. The prognosis is often better than for pancreatic cancer. Nonetheless, there is a long way to go in the management of both conditions.

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  15. missamoo

    At high school in the mid 80′s we were learning on an Apple IIe when discs were still floppy. I am now as my brother calls it a “Macfag” i have all of it a Macbook, an IPod, an IPhone, a shuffle and soon Apple Tv. Amazing how one man’s vision has changed our world now if only someone else can pick up the gauntlet and change the world in a different direction.

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  16. Kirsty

    I live by some of his words every day/hour/minute. He was and will continue to be such an inspiration to me. I feel very, very sad :(

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  17. JellyBelly

    I’m actually really sad that Steve Jobs has died. I’m no techie, but I found him inspirational as a human being. Not only in regards to his career but just the way he seemed to live life in general. The following quote from him in 2005, is my fave:

    “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life. Don’t be trapped by dogma, which is living with the results of other people’s thinking. Don’t let the noise of others’ opinions drown out your own inner voice, heart and intuition. They somehow already know what you truly want to become. Everything else is secondary.”

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    • marmalady

      Thanks for sharing this, JellyBelly. Great words from a great man.

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  18. amy1

    ‎”The world has lost a visionary. And there may be no greater tribute to Steve’s success than the fact that much of the world learned of his passing on a device he invented.” —President Obama

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    • mum2maxnlucy

      Wow, so true… Reading this on my iPhone right now

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  19. becnherboys

    Steve Jobs has changed our lifestyle and his loss will be felt for a long time. When I was 10 years old our neighbours had an apple computer. It was the first time I had seen a computer and I was amazed by it. A few months later Mum bought us a Commodore 64. It was crap, I couldn’t get it to do anything our neighbour’s Apple did!
    RIP Steve. Thanks for everything!

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  20. red shoes

    For some reason this really affected me. I think it was the wording of the headline, I don’t dislike it, but it was certainly not what I was expecting to log on and see.
    Apple has been part of my life since I was little, my dad was involved with it and my husband is an ‘applephile’. My sons will also be surrounded by that famous logo as well, name a piece of their technology and we have it. In fact my 4 year old could out iPad anyone who chose to challenge him, and my 8 month old has a crack at it too.
    That’s part of Steve’s legacy I suppose, younger generations involved and submersed in all that technology can do for them.

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  21. blondage

    The world has lost a true modern-day pioneer. A shame for the world and a tragedy for his family and friends. RIP

    http://thefridgedoorblog.com

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  22. MikeyMike

    There’s an excellent movie called ‘Pirates of Silicon Valley’, about the early days of Apple & Microsoft http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0168122/
    It shows the fierce devotion that Apple staff had to Steve Jobs, I think this was the key to his success. RIP sir.

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  23. Meerkath

    He was a genius and I will be forever grateful to him for the I phone and I pad LOL, however, more importantly, he was a husband and father and my heart goes out to them. May he rest in peace free from the pain of an awful disease.

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  24. Bride Body

    I feel very sad at his death. He did work right till the end didn’t he? It was a strange morning. A colleague first got some reports through Twitter that he was dead, but SMH hadn’t even caught up with the news yet. A funny world we live in where the traditional news sites are late breaking stories we already find out from social media….admittedly on my i-phone or i-pad. Yep, big Apple fan here. I have been devouring as many bio’s as I can on Steve to learn more about the story behind this inspiring man. I want to share this with you for anyone at a cross roads in their life or needing to make a big decision, here’s some timely advice from a very wise man indeed….

    In 2005, Job’s remarks to Stanford graduates included this line: “Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything–all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure–these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important.”

    RIP Steve.

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  25. jec

    I’m thinking how Steve Jobs only stopped working a short while ago when he resigned from his position with Apple. I do hope that was long enough for him and his family to have together. They are the ones that matter more than us, who only knew of his genius and work through Apple and the products they made. As the saying goes, at the end of your life people don’t say, “I wish I’d spent more time in the office”. Family matters, and they are the ones in my thoughts today.

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  26. nicks02

    So very sad. Pancreatic cancer is a disease without a happy outcome.
    Steve Jobs changed the way people use technology.
    The mark he left of the world is huge.

    RIP Steve Jobs

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  27. I’d just fired up the laptop and was going to comment on Ric’s piece about the iPhone. Got up to make a coffee and when I came back there was the news on my screen. I’m sad.

    Someone on Twitter has just compared him to the Thomas Edison of our time, whilst others are calling him a visionary, an innovator and a legend.

    Last night I put my name down on a list regarding the iPhone 4S and was looking at how I can afford to buy an iPad in the next few months or an Apple laptop. I have become a bit of a tech nerd/junkie and it is all because of Apple products. Up until a couple of years ago computers and phones were just computers and phones to me and I didn’t get the fuss. Yesterday, when I first heard the news there wasn’t going to be an iPhone 5 I felt disappointed. Me disappointed over a piece of technology, silly really. Yep I have changed and if I have changed then I’m guessing many others have to. I still don’t really get technology but for me it became something I wanted to know a little about, it was easy to use and it was fun. Steve Jobs and Apple did that.

    In the back of my desk draw is an old iPod shuffle. One of those little devices that Steve Jobs came up with that started to change technology and how we see it and use it. I’m pretty sure it does not work but I’m going to get out it anyway.

    No, Steve Jobs wasn’t perfect and I am sure neither is his company. Every human life is valuable and today we have lost someone of amazing expertise and passion that had a very big hand in helping to create and shape this thing we call the future. The world has made a loss today.

    Namaste.

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  28. @joshglid

    If you want to get a feeling for the man Steve was, I’d recommend having a listen to, or reading the transcript of, his Stanford Commencement Speech from 2005. He talks about death, about passion, and about inspiration.

    Bye Steve. Stay hungry, stay foolish. You touched our lives.

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  29. missjane

    iSad

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  30. Pip73

    What an amazing man! He has made my family part with a few thousand dollars, but well worth the money! Apple Mac Computer, iPhone, Apple TV, iPad and a heap of peripherals! Isn’t this the stock standard house now?!

    Another young life taken way too early. My thoughts go out to his wife and children and also all of his employees.

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  31. KR

    I am at a lost to explain it but this makes me so terribly sad. It is nice change that the world is mourning the death of someone so brilliant, so influential, yet someone who was not another actor, singer, celebrity or sports star. I hope he’s now at peace.

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  32. Liz

    Pancreatic cancer is horrible horrible way to go. I feel very sad for him and his family left behind.

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  33. Anonymous

    i don’t know why but this has saddened me terribly. i am sitting here typing on a macbook, charging my iPod next to me, with my iPhone just half a meter away downloading some apps.. what a loss to the world. steve jobs unquestionably changed my life for the better and i am so thankful for that. i hope he is now at peace, whatever that is.

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  34. Kate!

    Sad that he died so young but the man made a significant and positive contribution to the world (whether you are an Apple fan or not), and in that sense he had a very fortunate life. Most of us would be happy to achieve a fraction of what Steve Jobs did. His life is certainly worth celebrating.

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  35. Lily.

    The headline “Steve Jobs is dead” irks me, I’m not quite sure why. It’s just a bit abrasive. Either way, this is horribly sad and another example of how cancer doesn’t discriminate.

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    • Rick Morton

      Was having discussion with some others on the old post about this. I’m not sure why we think ‘dead’ is a bad word. It’s sad, death is sad, but it’s a headline. I hate euphemisms.

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      • Lily

        I know, that’s why I’m not sure why it irritates me so much. I think it’s because I would never say that someone I care about is ‘dead’, or I would never expect a doctor to tell me that my loved one ‘is dead.’

        Regardless of the fact that death is a part of life, it just SOUNDS insensitive.

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        • Melissa J

          Actually at uni and at most places I’ve worked doctors and nurses are trained to say ‘dead’ ‘died’ etc when informing next of kin of a sudden death, because otherwise people can’t grasp it. They need to hear abrasive words like that to comprehend what they’re being told.

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          • Lily.

            Died doesn’t bother me. I would rather hear someone say that my loved one “has died” than “passed away” (because I too hate euphemisms.)

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      • anon this time

        I think the problem is actually the ‘is’ part of is dead. If you say ‘has died’ it sounds less abrasive. I think the is kind of dehumanises him. Sort of like when people call an unborn baby ‘it’.

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    • Totally agree.

      I was just writing the same comment. I think it sounds so harsh. Steve Jobs has died would have been more appropriate. It seems very BREAKING NEWS cheap news story. Not the dignified send off we should be giving him.

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    • katehunter

      I am actually very sad about Steve Jobs death, but a headline is a headline, not a eulogy. Apple was about simplicity. I think Rick’s headline is appropriate.

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    • Anonymous

      i agree, it seems disrespectful

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      • amy1

        I think it’s all about context. For a headline, it is what it is. He’s dead, and the headline reflects that. However if you were to receive that as a text message or an email, then yes, I think there are more appropriate ways to put it.

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      • Ellie

        Oh come on – he died. There is no other way to say it. ‘Steve Jobs dead’ is simple, clean and respectful.

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        • I disagree.

          Out of all the choice of words we have to use to annouce this sad news, I think it could have been said a little better. Just saying…

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          • Friday

            I understand the “tell it like it is” idea and agree with it, but I too found the headline jarring.

            We all knew he was dying and near death, so I think it would be less sensational (sorry that’s the way I felt it read) and more , I don’t know, respectful to say something like “Steve Jobs finally succumbs to cancer” “Steve Jobs loses his battle with cancer” or even “Steve Jobs has died.” is somehow more in keeping . I think “Steve Jobs is dead” is something you would write if he had died unexpectedly.

            Anyway, it doesn’t really matter.. a very sad day but what a wonderful contribution and legacy he has left behind. Truly a history maker.

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  36. Anonymous

    Such a brilliant man who believed in what he did and created, taken way too early.

    Cancer sucks big fat hairy donkey balls and robs us of too many.

    RIP Steve – you will be longed remembered xx

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  37. andrinalum

    SO so sad! What a great man. I hope there was peace in the end.

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  38. Feel sad for him and his family…yes, a visionary, but I’m not a big Apple fan personally…

    My first computer was an Apple II (with a cassette tape drive, then a floppy disc)…and I own a Nano…that’s about as far as my relationship with Apple goes…

    …my relationship with technology has largely been Windows-based…I was aware that there has been a parallel Apple universe, but my technology universe has been dominated by the story of Microsoft and Windows.

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  39. katehunter

    I am an Apple person through and though. It was my very first computer and I struggle to use any form of PC. I’m proud to have written Apple ads in my career. When the slogan ‘Think Different’ was launched, small minded people criticised the grammar. They didn’t get that was the soul of Apple – it’s about the people that use it as much as the device – and people don’t speak perfectly. Jobs created one of the few true brands and the only one I can say I’m absolutely loyal too. Is it because of the image or because iDevices are genuinely better. It doesn’t really matter – that was the genius of Steve Jobs. I can’t believe he was only 56.

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  40. Rick Morton

    The man was a genius, in the true meaning of the word.

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    • Simone

      Kinda spooky that you are running another Apple story right now.

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      • Rick Morton

        Totally weird timing. Totally. Other story still up in the back, but thought we had better be a little more respectful today.

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        • ladybird73

          Right decision I reckon (look at the reaction to just saying he’s ‘dead’ after all) but I’m a bit bummed cos I was looking forward to reading the reactions to my comment (and cow picture).
          I’m off to Big W to buy some purple sneakers that are like your (and my dad’s) red ones.

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          • Melissa J

            I liked your cow photo, it made me laugh.

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  41. Emma in Melbourne-land

    I JUST GASPED! OMG I can’t believe it… What a visionary man, he’s changed the way I use technology, what a loss.

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