I came to Canada in 1986 from a country where I never saw a computer, didn't even know how it looks like! But In 1987 I created my very first Type III font using Macintosh Computer and since then I have created over 250 styles of fonts in different languages. Now millions are using them and all for free. And all thanks to him! RIP
While I was watching this it occurred to me that I was watching it on my iPhone as I lounged on my bed. Here in my hand I was holding exactly what that young man in 1980 was envisioning. Thanks Steve.
it is not his idea, steve initially thought that iPhone is stupid idea and only because of people of whom we don't hear of iPhone exists, not because of him.
0:30 - 1:39 Kids on the Apple 2 2:25 - 4:31 How they started 4:33 - 5:25 Growth 5:27 - 7:16 Bicycle Analogy 9:10 - 10.22 Foreshadowing of his philosophy 10:23 - 13:45 Removing the barrier 14:20 - 15.33 Naming Apple and simplicity is the ultimate sophistication 17:10 - 18:38 Software + hardware and future tools 21:28 - 22:59 - People at Apple and company ambitions
So much that he articulated in such a short period of time. Don't forget that he's no graduate. Don't forget that he was only 25 at the time. He was way ahead of his time. Genius!
The reason why this talk was insanely great is that Jobs had a crystal clear vision of everything that Apple would become, even at that very young age of his company. It is quite remarkable.
Love him or hate him, everyone surely has to admit Jobs was an extraordinary person when you consider Steve Jobs was only 25 here! How many people at 25 have the ability to be so confident, speak so eloquently in front of a crowd, and be the head of a company that was started only 4 years prior and quickly on it's way to be one of the biggest players in the computer market? He really did have something remarkable about him... from starting apple to when he returned in the late 90s and totally reveresed their fortunes from being almost bankrupt to being the most valuable company in the world. I mean that's just crazy, and yes I would say that was all down to Jobs. No way it would have happened if he didn't return, he made it happen.
Enjoy and Travel The World! Without Steve Jobs, Wozniak would be just another engineer working for salary. Jobs idea to create a company helped Wozniak became filthy rich. Also, Woz forgave Jobs, he was young and poor. About the daughter that he denied, a little bit of background research on the mother's behaviour would explain Job's distrust of her. In any case, Jobs and Lisa reconciled and Lisa inherited a fortune from his father. As for the friend who denied stock options, he wasn't eligible on technical reasons. While it's true that Jobs wasn't the nicest person, his personal problems had been blown out of proportions but of course small minds gossip about people.
@Enjoy and Travel The World! Jobs and the Woz were like bread and butter......Jobs was definitely a selfish sneaky person, but Apple wouldn't have existed without him. Woz designed the product, but Jobs sold it.
The fact that this roll of footage from this small conference at such an early stage in Jobs' career survived so many years, was digitized, and is now on display for us all to watch globally, in part from Steve's vision and tenacity, is just so amazing.
What an amazing speech! The funny thing is you can go throughout his speech, and cross check all his whishes and predictions. Definitely a man ahead of his time!
He was talented, just a second rate human being. Look how he treated his own daughter and his ex-wife. Look how he behaved with his employees. His talent may make him famous, but that does not make him a great human.
He also had a lot of experience in the tech industry and actually tried to write code in college. But who are we kidding that was a Movie and he's an actor.
Fassbender was a better theatrical interpretation. What Ashton Kutcher did was a creepy obsessive impersonation. Everything from the Gait (walk), twitches and mannerism stuff I only realised i knew about Jobs when watching the movie. Add ontop Kutcher has a massive background in the technology field and that technical part was not acting. There is a scene where he has to grow up and put on a suit infront of the mirror the 80s, that gave me chills. That film did not work as a story and entertainment, it was a creepy Reenactment.
you think Fassbender did a better job because the character came across as more human and more believable... but that isn't who Jobs was in real life. Some people really are crazy caricatures of themselves. The kutcher movie was closer to reality...
A lot of the early Apple employees were put off by early versions of the scripts and refused to have anything to do with the Kutcher film. Those that remained involved make it clear that they felt it wasn't a fair representation of Steve Wozniak, who they felt was every bit as committed to innovation and excellence as Jobs was. The role the garage played in the early business is also apparently overplayed. They also found the portrayal of Rod Holt as a biker was hysterical. They had no idea who the actor was meant to be when they were on set. He looks nothing like Holt, and the only connection Holt has to motorbikes is that apparently he had talked about liking dirt bikes. Wozniak isn't a fan of the film. He was offered a consult, but turned it down after seeing early scripts. Wozniak did get involved in the Sorkin film, which he also says portrays things that didn't happen but felt that overall it was a better and more representative film than Kutchner's.
Amazing footage, his insight , knowledge of the fledgling industry and where it was going in the next 10 to 20 years incredible. Gifted is probably the best way to describe him. R.I.P.
I bet 15 minutes before this speech, he was pissed off with traffic and finding a parking space. It is amazing how calm he was when he started talking.
i was one of those 5th graders that went through the same experience when we got our first apple 2 computers. It changed my life, i payed attention, and looked forward to going to that class more than any other. ill never forget just leaning how to tell it to do things and play Oregon trail. Ever since i have been a computer nerd to the core. Thanks Steve for seeing what that meant to people like me and helping put those computers in public schools when you did. We will miss those ideas...
As the interview took place in 1980, the Apple computer at this time is the Apple II with a 8-bit MOS Tech microprocessor with only 64k of addressable memory space.
Oh, Steve, you could not have imagined. II’ve been on Macs since '92-and my grandson born in 2001 has been for some years way ahead of me just “getting” the iPhone and iPad. It was in the air, when he was born, and he simply absorbed it. Way to go!
He was visionary and the reason Apple became so great. You can tag him with making toys for the rich, but he made tools too and many poor people became rich using them. You can say he was vindictive, or angry or petty at times, but he was also kind, considerate and brilliant. We were better off by far for having him around. I am anyway.
Way more mature than his years in this. Some people in high positions in business don't start an MBA until they are 30 then take 20 years to mature to the level he had at 25. Amazing.
Amazing! Just 40 years, and where we have come! At that time our house had one radio for everyone, and then i managed to buy a transistor radio for myself, and i was so empowered!
It really was a great computer. It was able to so many things that it wasn't designed to do. And Steve Wozniak was a genius at making every chip and circuit work as efficiently as possible. With time, all machines will reveal their limitations.
Steve Woz is a personal friend and he never says anything bad about Jobs. So I will. Jobs was very smart, but he didn't build the first two computers, woz did and Jobs wasn't very truthful anout it. Jobs screwed people over, acted like a tyrant and was generally kinda nuts. If you watch, you can see it in the smile on his face. Look close.
Whether you loved him or hated him, you can break down this presentation and realize what made him difference. His confidence and eloquence is impressive. What gets me the most is his ability to paint the vision and sell it to this audience.
It was almost like Steve Jobs had access to a time machine and had glimpsed the future. An incredible mind, a true visionary. If only Apple would stay true to his vision today.
Gian you are listening to too much rogan. These things are available and more powerful to a sober mind. LSD and the like may do you the service of showing you alternative perspectives, but waking up and carrying it with you sober, and not just chasing the drugs is another thing. People often struggle there.
Seeing Steve Jobs this early in his remarkable career, so clearly articulating his vision and knowing what the future will bring, is a near Messianic experience.
I’m a founder who first read Jobs Bio a decade ago. Always felt we had things in common, the personality issues; the often obsessive nature and the quest for godly perfection. Last year during my cancer operation, I had a chemically induced vision: a dusty road ahead, seemingly a tropical island in remote S.America or thereabouts; a mirage popped up, it was Steve’s. I inherently knew he was directly talking to me in the same mannerisms and I believe he said something pertaining to my current start up but I don’t remember hearing exactly what, to this day the more I look into the 80s, I keep stumbling into Jobs 80s clips and it was definitely him when he was about my age mid thirties in Silicon Valley. Could have been the cocktail but the cancer hasn’t returned and we’re headed to TechCrunch disrupt next week
Just came from a leadership training and Steve Jobs clip was shown. I found this in UA-cam and found this jewel. Thank you for sharing! Amazing that this was up from 2011. His vision can be applied in any endeavor.
He mentions the importance of VisiCalc, which is what made the AppleII a success. Without VisiCalc, Jobs would have been marketing the computer as a way to store recipes.
This man was talking about developing a user-friendly UI long before there were UIs and before “UI” was a thing. Trying to tackle the learning curve that it would take an end user to learn to use their new Mac? Yes, he was 50 years ahead of his time.
Imagine what it would have been like, to work with someone who had the vision like Jobs', & Woz's technical capabilitied? That concept alone is mind-blowing!
What anyone needs to take away from this interview is nothing computer related, however, realize that Steve Jobs was one of the most forward thinking individuals of his generation (and likely all ours as well). His out-of-the-box sense of idealism was unprecedented in terms of maximizing the human potential. He truly was able to see the future, and had he been in any other field of work would have likely revolutionized it just as profoundly. Jobs was a rock star in his own right, exuding talent and creativity in it's purest form, IMHO.
Alternatively, he was a narcissist who told people the story he knew they wanted to hear and that would resonate with them. Not a bad one, - just a very different skill set. He got insight in the second half of his career
RESPECT! Not just because he was greatly successful, visionary, real, articulate, precise, doer, and confident, but because you would see a type of person like him very rarely throughout the lifetime and even history. I can name a few in let's say modern history, Henry Ford, Andrew Carnegie, ...
He seems to be like alot of the people who I know in person. The difference is that he is a great story teller. He seems to also understand at least the fundamentals of accounting and even math, i.e, stats, etc. Other than that he seems to just be experienced with life, computer assembly, programming, and economics and math. Really I think the people he surrounded him self with played a major role in his life.
Steve Jobs core..interest is not to make his company big and get revenues..he is more keen on bringing personal computing more accurate,portable way for global human race...that shows he is a great human being..and from India..we salute his nature and innovation.
+Katragadda Vijayshankar : I think his experience in India, his acquaintance with Buddhism as well, might have helped him greatly in becoming this way.
I can't believe people are still hounding Steve Jobs. These are the people who have absolutely no idea of anything truly computer related. Like him or not, he truly helped Apple change the world and the way we look at computer electronics today.
I'm basing it on their ignorance. No matter whether you are Steve Jobs fan or not, he took a very important role in the computer and electronics industry. If it wasn't for Steve Jobs I doubt that I could type this comment right now or if UA-cam would even exist. He may have been a bit of a tyrant at times, but if it wasnt for him leading the Apple team there may have never been smartphones, user friendly personal computers, mp3 players, tablets etc. If it cant be accepted then its pure ignorance.
Wow you are insanely childish. First of all, i'm a technologist that uses both iOS and Android; both Windows and OSX; iPad and any tablet, etc. So i'm not bias when it comes to technology. I actually prefer Windows over OSX. Also, I own both an iPhone 5S and a Galaxy S4. I like both of them but I prefer the iPhone for its simplicity, which is also why i said "user friendly". User friendly doesn't mean that it has to have all the crap in the world you can load it down with, not does it mean you can customize it until you don't even remember what the original product's interface looked like. When I said "user friendly", I meant how simple it is to use. Xerox invented a crap OS with a mouse pointer, so what? It doesn't matter who invented it. It's all about how it was utilized and executed. IBM had plenty of power to do whatever they wanted to do at the time, but didnt. Steve Jobs was originally an artist, who had a very creative mindset. Did IBM have the knowledge to do it? Hell yeah they did. Did they have the creativity? No. What good is knowledge without creativity? Now, to support your side of the argument, IF (and that's a huge IF) IBM would have thought about doing things the way Apple was doing things before Apple did things, then I think IBM would have dominated the industry with an 100 times better machine than anything Apple produced in its entire first 10 years. Mostly because IBM was rich and had the manpower and all the technology to boot.
You don't have a winning argument you're just broadcasting your foolishness and preference. I like Steve Jobs but credit should be given where credit is due and Microsoft and other software companies assisted in the usefulness of Apple. Apple only had the chassis.
I just explained to you that I am not bias when it comes to technology. Bottom line is : Apple started out as a group of kids in a garage. That same group of kids had all odds against them, including the rich and powerful IBM. Going against a corporate giant like IBM in that day and age would have been business suicide, yet somehow they used their knowledge and creativity to produce a premium brand of computer that reigns as a consumer electronics empire till this day. I respect all of the forefathers of the electronics revolution, including Gates. I have to, because I want to do what they did, again, someday. Not just with any technology, but with great quality. Smooth, finished quality, I think it's something that all technologist can agree on, if nothing else.
and then... these dinosaurs at IBM (that did not even understand why an ordinary person would want a computer) made the PC architecutre free, allowing for cheap clones... the power of Open source vs. overpriced snake oil seller (moreover, in a black LOCKED bottle), using "changing the world" and other reality dostorting mantras.
That's not right. HP and some other clone makers actually reversed engineered IBM's PC's. Later on HP, MicroSoft, and Intel along with some others came up with open standards. IBM was never in favor of open standards and in fact sued many people including HP who lost and then had to pay IBM.
budes matpicu not true. IBM PC was based on open architecture because they didn't have time and focus to develop in-house microcomputer architecture to compete with Apple II. IBM tried to lock the PC by creating proprietary BIOS. The PC only became truly open when the BIOS was reverse engineered by Phoenix, and Microsoft's MS-DOS and later Windows became a viable alternative to IBM's exclusive PC-DOS and OS/2.
The 80s were extremely advanced and oft forgotten by the liberal media that hated the Reagan revolution and all stood for: naked capitalism. Love it or hate it
Steve Jobs is a God to the Machine. When others speak the video goes buggy. When he starts speaking again it slowly gets better. His voice will always be clear in the mind of the machines.
Thank you for sharing this piece of history allowing us a glimpse of what would have become the leader of one of the greatest brand, today. As I am typing I am staring at a computer that is a few years old, I wouldn't trade it for any other brand, unless it was a newer and better IMAC. He is intuitive, intuitive to society and people's needs.
I came to Canada in 1986 from a country where I never saw a computer, didn't even know how it looks like!
But In 1987 I created my very first Type III font using Macintosh Computer and since then I have created over 250 styles of fonts in different languages. Now millions are using them and all for free. And all thanks to him! RIP
You could do a mind-blowing video about it. Including some tutorials
so you are the one who gave ridiculous names for these styles
Wow that’s incredible. Though hopefully in the future people like yourself get paid for their work
@@ss10483To be fair, how do you name a style?
While I was watching this it occurred to me that I was watching it on my iPhone as I lounged on my bed. Here in my hand I was holding exactly what that young man in 1980 was envisioning. Thanks Steve.
I'm using an Android, thanks Obama!
it is not his idea, steve initially thought that iPhone is stupid idea and only because of people of whom we don't hear of iPhone exists, not because of him.
@@supa1009 it's because of Steve, go cry about it
0:30 - 1:39 Kids on the Apple 2
2:25 - 4:31 How they started
4:33 - 5:25 Growth
5:27 - 7:16 Bicycle Analogy
9:10 - 10.22 Foreshadowing of his philosophy
10:23 - 13:45 Removing the barrier
14:20 - 15.33 Naming Apple and simplicity is the ultimate sophistication
17:10 - 18:38 Software + hardware and future tools
21:28 - 22:59 - People at Apple and company ambitions
qwertyuiop asdfghjkl This should be stickied.
Thank you. This was the comment. I was looking for.
So much that he articulated in such a short period of time. Don't forget that he's no graduate. Don't forget that he was only 25 at the time. He was way ahead of his time. Genius!
qwertyuiop asdfghjkl Thanks for posting these links.
The reason why this talk was insanely great is that Jobs had a crystal clear vision of everything that Apple would become, even at that very young age of his company. It is quite remarkable.
turn off those MiFi based stations you pinecone
When you realize your’e watching it on an iPhone, it hits..
Love him or hate him, everyone surely has to admit Jobs was an extraordinary person when you consider Steve Jobs was only 25 here! How many people at 25 have the ability to be so confident, speak so eloquently in front of a crowd, and be the head of a company that was started only 4 years prior and quickly on it's way to be one of the biggest players in the computer market?
He really did have something remarkable about him... from starting apple to when he returned in the late 90s and totally reveresed their fortunes from being almost bankrupt to being the most valuable company in the world. I mean that's just crazy, and yes I would say that was all down to Jobs. No way it would have happened if he didn't return, he made it happen.
Enjoy and Travel The World! Without Steve Jobs, Wozniak would be just another engineer working for salary. Jobs idea to create a company helped Wozniak became filthy rich. Also, Woz forgave Jobs, he was young and poor. About the daughter that he denied, a little bit of background research on the mother's behaviour would explain Job's distrust of her. In any case, Jobs and Lisa reconciled and Lisa inherited a fortune from his father. As for the friend who denied stock options, he wasn't eligible on technical reasons. While it's true that Jobs wasn't the nicest person, his personal problems had been blown out of proportions but of course small minds gossip about people.
@Enjoy and Travel The World! Jobs and the Woz were like bread and butter......Jobs was definitely a selfish sneaky person, but Apple wouldn't have existed without him. Woz designed the product, but Jobs sold it.
I ran a hotel when I was 25 and wasn’t a complete asshole to everyone around me.
@Yousef Ghaneemah mashallah
It’s amazing what AGENTS can accomplish
The fact that this roll of footage from this small conference at such an early stage in Jobs' career survived so many years, was digitized, and is now on display for us all to watch globally, in part from Steve's vision and tenacity, is just so amazing.
As soon as I noticed he started by telling a story...I knew people would love him. Story telling at its finest 🔥
What an amazing speech! The funny thing is you can go throughout his speech, and cross check all his whishes and predictions.
Definitely a man ahead of his time!
Steve isn’t a technical genius. He is a human genius. He understood what people fundamentally need, even if they didn’t even know it themself.
poggies
He was talented, just a second rate human being. Look how he treated his own daughter and his ex-wife. Look how he behaved with his employees. His talent may make him famous, but that does not make him a great human.
@@anwarulbashirshuaib5673 he may be a brat, but at least he knows a greater deal about business and companies than you do.
He's a neoliberal dick. Business acumen my ass. Fuck Jobs. Fuck Apple. Fuck silicon valley. Fuck finiacial capitalism. Fuck rent extraction. Fuck patents. Fuck privatization.
perhaps it was a no brainer in those days..yes he had vision for sure.
steve jobs told the bicycle story on many occasions for the next 30 years..amazing.. you can tell this story motivated him
It‘s his way of explaining techné.
dude, I loved you in That 70's Show
haha
Alex Kuhn BURN!
Alex Kuhn We have breaking news: I'm toasted.
+Alex Kuhn Funny Ashton plays him in the movie!
+Mario J. Rivera Genius.....
Now that I see this old footage I realize that Kutcher really was the right guy for the Job...s
He also had a lot of experience in the tech industry and actually tried to write code in college. But who are we kidding that was a Movie and he's an actor.
Fassbender was a better theatrical interpretation. What Ashton Kutcher did was a creepy obsessive impersonation. Everything from the Gait (walk), twitches and mannerism stuff I only realised i knew about Jobs when watching the movie. Add ontop Kutcher has a massive background in the technology field and that technical part was not acting. There is a scene where he has to grow up and put on a suit infront of the mirror the 80s, that gave me chills. That film did not work as a story and entertainment, it was a creepy Reenactment.
you think Fassbender did a better job because the character came across as more human and more believable... but that isn't who Jobs was in real life. Some people really are crazy caricatures of themselves. The kutcher movie was closer to reality...
*****
what was factually incorrect? no doubt there were inaccuracies just wondering what in particular stood out to you.
A lot of the early Apple employees were put off by early versions of the scripts and refused to have anything to do with the Kutcher film. Those that remained involved make it clear that they felt it wasn't a fair representation of Steve Wozniak, who they felt was every bit as committed to innovation and excellence as Jobs was. The role the garage played in the early business is also apparently overplayed.
They also found the portrayal of Rod Holt as a biker was hysterical. They had no idea who the actor was meant to be when they were on set. He looks nothing like Holt, and the only connection Holt has to motorbikes is that apparently he had talked about liking dirt bikes.
Wozniak isn't a fan of the film. He was offered a consult, but turned it down after seeing early scripts. Wozniak did get involved in the Sorkin film, which he also says portrays things that didn't happen but felt that overall it was a better and more representative film than Kutchner's.
Amazing footage, his insight , knowledge of the fledgling industry and where it was going in the next 10 to 20 years incredible. Gifted is probably the best way to describe him. R.I.P.
I bet 15 minutes before this speech, he was pissed off with traffic and finding a parking space. It is amazing how calm he was when he started talking.
you bet ? you bet on a small minded person ?
i was one of those 5th graders that went through the same experience when we got our first apple 2 computers. It changed my life, i payed attention, and looked forward to going to that class more than any other. ill never forget just leaning how to tell it to do things and play Oregon trail. Ever since i have been a computer nerd to the core. Thanks Steve for seeing what that meant to people like me and helping put those computers in public schools when you did. We will miss those ideas...
He had Amazing presentation skills even at the age of 25..
As the interview took place in 1980, the Apple computer at this time is the Apple II with a 8-bit MOS Tech microprocessor with only 64k of addressable memory space.
This footage gets me pumped. Check out the AMC show "Halt & Catch Fire" for a whole period-set drama about personal computing in the early 80s!
Love the simplicity of Jobs approach. He cast his vision in a simple manner.
I wonder what other innovations this man would have come up with if he were still alive today.
From cheeky young salesman to boss of a corporate behemoth and high priest of consumerism. Quite a story.
I was 2 years old and this guy was already changing the world. Humbling.
well i don't think people expected much of you at 2. but are you changing the world now, that's the big question on everybody's lips
@@feralmode no it isn't.
I wasnt even born then
tinkers No he’s a bitch
@@arjunarun9147 people the world over are asking themselves right now "what did Arjun have for breakfast"
It's amazing the resemblance between Steve Jobs and Ashton Kutcher. Not to mention the similarities in their voice. Simply amazing.
He's probably Jobs' love child...
20 years later Ashton will meet jobs in Egypt on a spiritual journey and learn he was his father
Ashton is also a-rab, like Steve?
@@sadigov Steve was mixed afaik, half Syrian half Swiss
This guy is amazingly confident and eloquent for how young he is in that video
ghjlkhl that's very easy to do when you were simply imitating academic researchers whose ideas you borrowed...
ryanrc111 lol if that was that easy everyone would be famous and successful
@@ryanrc111 5 years later are you rich and famous like him now?
@@iammaxwell5773 lmfaoo
@@iammaxwell5773 everything is tapped now simpsons did it
It's clear that Jobs was a natural leader. Great spokesman, confident, dilligent, open-minded, etc...
MastaGambit hmm someone is moist
gueringtv
Moist? Because i'm analyzing the qualities of a deceased business CEO?
MastaGambit yes
gueringtv
...Okay.
*****
Yeah whatever. No homo, guys.
I'm watching this on a Mac. Thanks Steve.
AhYaOkRgT iPad for me
iPad Pro for me. Thanks Steve 😄
iPhone for me
On a Mac Pro here.
iPhone for me
He was 25. Utterly awesome.
´tools that amplify human ability´
Yeah
yet renders them so stupid
all human abilities including exploitation and disinformation
@@Daemon1995_ systems emergent from complexity seem to have higher intelligence with simple parts, e.g., an ant colony
So lost
Oh, Steve, you could not have imagined. II’ve been on Macs since '92-and my grandson born in 2001 has been for some years way ahead of me just “getting” the iPhone and iPad. It was in the air, when he was born, and he simply absorbed it. Way to go!
He was visionary and the reason Apple became so great. You can tag him with making toys for the rich, but he made tools too and many poor people became rich using them.
You can say he was vindictive, or angry or petty at times, but he was also kind, considerate and brilliant. We were better off by far for having him around.
I am anyway.
this guy got talent. im sure someday he will be a succesful businessman.
Way more mature than his years in this. Some people in high positions in business don't start an MBA until they are 30 then take 20 years to mature to the level he had at 25. Amazing.
Amazing!
Just 40 years, and where we have come!
At that time our house had one radio for everyone, and then i managed to buy a transistor radio for myself, and i was so empowered!
It's unbelievable that he was only 25 at this time. What a genius.
how?
he is just a genious thief, nothing more. 0 idea, 0 innovation, just all stolen things
I removed the annoying hiss in the original audio so you can hear Steve Jobs better. The video is on my channel.
“I don’t think the Apple 2 will ever become obsolete”... What a salesman!
It really was a great computer. It was able to so many things that it wasn't designed to do. And Steve Wozniak was a genius at making every chip and circuit work as efficiently as possible. With time, all machines will reveal their limitations.
Steve Woz is a personal friend and he never says anything bad about Jobs. So I will. Jobs was very smart, but he didn't build the first two computers, woz did and Jobs wasn't very truthful anout it. Jobs screwed people over, acted like a tyrant and was generally kinda nuts. If you watch, you can see it in the smile on his face. Look close.
They did support it for a loooong time, and kept releasing apple ][ based hardware until 1995!
You mean like how Bill Gates said the Internet was a novelty?
Shinigami Lee both Steve’s are great !
Whether you loved him or hated him, you can break down this presentation and realize what made him difference. His confidence and eloquence is impressive. What gets me the most is his ability to paint the vision and sell it to this audience.
I love this moment! brilliant!!!! and the audience is very alive!!!!! Thank you ;)
It was almost like Steve Jobs had access to a time machine and had glimpsed the future. An incredible mind, a true visionary.
If only Apple would stay true to his vision today.
LSD
Sushi Mamba He did. He experimented with potent substances that gives you divine experiences and perhaps visionary insights.
Gian you are listening to too much rogan. These things are available and more powerful to a sober mind. LSD and the like may do you the service of showing you alternative perspectives, but waking up and carrying it with you sober, and not just chasing the drugs is another thing. People often struggle there.
The reason he predicted the future so well, is because his actions literally defined it.
Apple is still great
Seeing Steve Jobs this early in his remarkable career, so clearly articulating his vision and knowing what the future will bring, is a near Messianic experience.
yure absolutely spot on. steve has this aura about him. i guess this is what those dudes back in the day thought about jesus et al...
I’m a founder who first read Jobs Bio a decade ago. Always felt we had things in common, the personality issues; the often obsessive nature and the quest for godly perfection. Last year during my cancer operation, I had a chemically induced vision: a dusty road ahead, seemingly a tropical island in remote S.America or thereabouts; a mirage popped up, it was Steve’s. I inherently knew he was directly talking to me in the same mannerisms and I believe he said something pertaining to my current start up but I don’t remember hearing exactly what, to this day the more I look into the 80s, I keep stumbling into Jobs 80s clips and it was definitely him when he was about my age mid thirties in Silicon Valley. Could have been the cocktail but the cancer hasn’t returned and we’re headed to TechCrunch disrupt next week
LOVED THIS, really really cool vintage video of SJ, fantastic!
Just came from a leadership training and Steve Jobs clip was shown. I found this in UA-cam and found this jewel. Thank you for sharing! Amazing that this was up from 2011. His vision can be applied in any endeavor.
Wow just started the presentation and you can feel the energy of this guy. Impressive
He mentions the importance of VisiCalc, which is what made the AppleII a success. Without VisiCalc, Jobs would have been marketing the computer as a way to store recipes.
This man was talking about developing a user-friendly UI long before there were UIs and before “UI” was a thing. Trying to tackle the learning curve that it would take an end user to learn to use their new Mac? Yes, he was 50 years ahead of his time.
50 is a stretch when Microsoft caught on pretty quick
Imagine what it would have been like, to work with someone who had the vision like Jobs', & Woz's technical capabilitied?
That concept alone is mind-blowing!
For a 3 years old any concept is a blow. Lol
Can’t wait to see what this guy has planned next!! Amazing!!!
-Sent from my iPhone
mmm i would love to see that to.... bein he has passed away.. now that would make him a god
What an incredible video. And to think I'm watching this over the internet in 2021, Thank you Steve
What anyone needs to take away from this interview is nothing computer related, however, realize that Steve Jobs was one of the most forward thinking individuals of his generation (and likely all ours as well). His out-of-the-box sense of idealism was unprecedented in terms of maximizing the human potential. He truly was able to see the future, and had he been in any other field of work would have likely revolutionized it just as profoundly. Jobs was a rock star in his own right, exuding talent and creativity in it's purest form, IMHO.
Alternatively, he was a narcissist who told people the story he knew they wanted to hear and that would resonate with them. Not a bad one, - just a very different skill set. He got insight in the second half of his career
"Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication" 15:00
15:21
@@WattsAYetiMan magic is the ultimate simplicity
@@mytube2013 deez nuts
Though I don't have an Apple computer, this is a great presentation.
Watching this, not only am I grateful for the advancements in computers the last 40 years, but also for the advancements in audio & video!
RESPECT! Not just because he was greatly successful, visionary, real, articulate, precise, doer, and confident, but because you would see a type of person like him very rarely throughout the lifetime and even history. I can name a few in let's say modern history, Henry Ford, Andrew Carnegie, ...
He seems to be like alot of the people who I know in person. The difference is that he is a great story teller. He seems to also understand at least the fundamentals of accounting and even math, i.e, stats, etc. Other than that he seems to just be experienced with life, computer assembly, programming, and economics and math. Really I think the people he surrounded him self with played a major role in his life.
Miss him so much ... long live Steve been thinking about you alot lately😢
I felt his passion, as I listened to his talk, and got a little emotional. Perhaps it was the gentleness of the way he spoke.
I'm from TML, watching this great video from Imphal, NE India on 6th January 2020!
I’m watching this on the iPhone, thanks buddy, the worlds misses you RIP
Truly inspiring, thought provoking and very special indeed
I'D LOVE TO GO BACK IN TIME AND SHOW THIS MAN THE I PHONE 60 SECONDS AFTER HE GAVE THIS PRESENTATION.
+ALBERT EINSTEIN He'd probably yawn and start pointing out everything wrong with it
+ALBERT EINSTEIN And say what? Look at this lump of shit? Look how it's turning people into introverted sad fuckwits?
Show him a modern PC and get apple to release windows 7 XD that would be a fun timeline
+nidkidwonderboy Einstein's General Theory of Relativity was published in 1903. We have learned a lot since then.
+nidkidwonderboy MY COMMENT DIDN'T STATE THAT IT'S POSSIBLE.
one intelligent man right there
Thank you.this is a gem & must watch for Steve fans.
Dude the same exact dude that was in the movie, well done to whoever made it...
Steve Jobs core..interest is not to make his company big and get revenues..he is more keen on bringing personal computing more accurate,portable way for global human race...that shows he is a great human being..and from India..we salute his nature and innovation.
+Katragadda Vijayshankar I think it was both.
+Katragadda Vijayshankar : I think his experience in India, his acquaintance with Buddhism as well, might have helped him greatly in becoming this way.
Fuck India
This man is Geniuses. Everything he said that he will do had come true
Except I'm pretty sure the Apple II is obsolete.
History! Cool! Been using them since 1978.
So great! Thanks for posting. I love the analogies used.
What a inspirational Man.We all leave everything behind one day....simple and straightforward.
Obviously, we like more of Jobs. But, what we need, is more Jobs on this planet.
I can't believe people are still hounding Steve Jobs. These are the people who have absolutely no idea of anything truly computer related. Like him or not, he truly helped Apple change the world and the way we look at computer electronics today.
" These are the people who have absolutely no idea of anything truly computer related."? what are you basing it on that those people have no idea?
I'm basing it on their ignorance. No matter whether you are Steve Jobs fan or not, he took a very important role in the computer and electronics industry. If it wasn't for Steve Jobs I doubt that I could type this comment right now or if UA-cam would even exist. He may have been a bit of a tyrant at times, but if it wasnt for him leading the Apple team there may have never been smartphones, user friendly personal computers, mp3 players, tablets etc. If it cant be accepted then its pure ignorance.
Wow you are insanely childish. First of all, i'm a technologist that uses both iOS and Android; both Windows and OSX; iPad and any tablet, etc. So i'm not bias when it comes to technology. I actually prefer Windows over OSX.
Also, I own both an iPhone 5S and a Galaxy S4. I like both of them but I prefer the iPhone for its simplicity, which is also why i said "user friendly". User friendly doesn't mean that it has to have all the crap in the world you can load it down with, not does it mean you can customize it until you don't even remember what the original product's interface looked like. When I said "user friendly", I meant how simple it is to use.
Xerox invented a crap OS with a mouse pointer, so what? It doesn't matter who invented it. It's all about how it was utilized and executed. IBM had plenty of power to do whatever they wanted to do at the time, but didnt. Steve Jobs was originally an artist, who had a very creative mindset. Did IBM have the knowledge to do it? Hell yeah they did. Did they have the creativity? No. What good is knowledge without creativity? Now, to support your side of the argument, IF (and that's a huge IF) IBM would have thought about doing things the way Apple was doing things before Apple did things, then I think IBM would have dominated the industry with an 100 times better machine than anything Apple produced in its entire first 10 years. Mostly because IBM was rich and had the manpower and all the technology to boot.
You don't have a winning argument you're just broadcasting your foolishness and preference.
I like Steve Jobs but credit should be given where credit is due and Microsoft and other software companies assisted in the usefulness of Apple.
Apple only had the chassis.
I just explained to you that I am not bias when it comes to technology. Bottom line is : Apple started out as a group of kids in a garage. That same group of kids had all odds against them, including the rich and powerful IBM. Going against a corporate giant like IBM in that day and age would have been business suicide, yet somehow they used their knowledge and creativity to produce a premium brand of computer that reigns as a consumer electronics empire till this day. I respect all of the forefathers of the electronics revolution, including Gates. I have to, because I want to do what they did, again, someday. Not just with any technology, but with great quality. Smooth, finished quality, I think it's something that all technologist can agree on, if nothing else.
he was SO far ahead of his time. this was 1980??? get OUT
He was absolutely ahead of his time. other tech companies were consistently playing catch-up
and then... these dinosaurs at IBM (that did not even understand why an ordinary person would want a computer) made the PC architecutre free, allowing for cheap clones... the power of Open source vs. overpriced snake oil seller (moreover, in a black LOCKED bottle), using "changing the world" and other reality dostorting mantras.
That's not right. HP and some other clone makers actually reversed engineered IBM's PC's. Later on HP, MicroSoft, and Intel along with some others came up with open standards. IBM was never in favor of open standards and in fact sued many people including HP who lost and then had to pay IBM.
budes matpicu not true. IBM PC was based on open architecture because they didn't have time and focus to develop in-house microcomputer architecture to compete with Apple II. IBM tried to lock the PC by creating proprietary BIOS. The PC only became truly open when the BIOS was reverse engineered by Phoenix, and Microsoft's MS-DOS and later Windows became a viable alternative to IBM's exclusive PC-DOS and OS/2.
The 80s were extremely advanced and oft forgotten by the liberal media that hated the Reagan revolution and all stood for: naked capitalism. Love it or hate it
Steve Jobs is a God to the Machine. When others speak the video goes buggy. When he starts speaking again it slowly gets better. His voice will always be clear in the mind of the machines.
This is such an important video to preserve
"What happens to the budget if I add 5 people? An hour later I know!"
Made me chuckle, too.
"what are we gonna do with this extra awesome power....?" I love hearing that from 1980.
speaking as a user of computers, i found this video on the internet
I just can't believe it was way back in 80's. Seriously he looks so confident, advance and diligent.
Thank you for sharing this piece of history allowing us a glimpse of what would have become the leader of one of the greatest brand, today. As I am typing I am staring at a computer that is a few years old, I wouldn't trade it for any other brand, unless it was a newer and better IMAC.
He is intuitive, intuitive to society and people's needs.
steve always sounds and looks like a man from the future
Definitely Ashton Kutcher.
thank you :)
Christian bale in American Hustle
+Ella Plitt Ashton was amazing in it, I love that movie. Great music too.
He was enjoying life more during this period as his smile is real not fake
thanks for your psychiatric interpretation, doctor
@@nbme-answers How did you know I was a Doctor ??
Thanks for posting this video. Isaacson's audio book 'Steve Jobs' is a fascinating listen.
This is fantastic. Thank you for sharing.
"I don't think the Apple II E is ever going to be obsolete" - Steve Jobs, 1980
A great man that changed the world.
1307scooter ya man just watching this is making me appreciate him even more than I already did XD
If you like this one, be sure to see "
Steve Jobs brainstorms with the NeXT team 1985"
''You can quote them
disagree with them
glorify or vilify them
but the only thing you cannot do
is ignore them,cause they change things''
This is precious. Preserve this video
dreams plus risks = enormous possibilities
God: Steve, you have 31 years left to build your company
Steve: Hold my Apple
Apple in 2020: one of the most valuable brands in the world
The most valuable brand*
^ the most* not one of
Interesting how much of these lines he used in the triumph of the nerd interview 15 years later
20something. Giving such speech. He is born to this.
As an entrepreneur, I am hearing STORIES, STORIES and STORIES that convince - with a bit of sass. This is gold!
I'm watching this on my mac book pro...
watching this on my MacBook!
I’m on my iPhone
on my Ipad
I am on my HP laptop running Windows 10
Android phone.
Now Apple is worth 2 trillion. The most valuable company in the world.
Innovation requires a lot of... liberating.
Thank you for posting this!
First got my hands on a Mac in 1989. It’s been a love affair ever since. Thank you, Steve Jobs.😎✌🏽☮️