From the 60 Minutes Archive: Steve Jobs

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  • Опубліковано 21 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @drinkingpoolwater
    @drinkingpoolwater 3 роки тому +961

    steve’s second act at apple is the greatest CEO achievement ever. literally turning a company from bankrupt to the most valuable company in the world.

    • @RockNRollJeezus
      @RockNRollJeezus 3 роки тому +22

      He was the Devil

    • @ksrajavel
      @ksrajavel 3 роки тому +7

      @@RockNRollJeezus How come? Just curious!

    • @MissBluebirddays
      @MissBluebirddays 3 роки тому +4

      @@RockNRollJeezus 🤣🤣🤣 freak

    • @Ethan-mv1rj
      @Ethan-mv1rj 3 роки тому +8

      @johnnytheprick definitely one of the most important of all time

    • @Ethan-mv1rj
      @Ethan-mv1rj 3 роки тому +6

      @johnnytheprick "there are some 588 million Apple users worldwide and 1 billion Apple devices (and counting) currently in active use across the globe"

  • @katielainedesigns
    @katielainedesigns 2 роки тому +40

    That last line gave me literal chills-makes sense now

    • @nelauren
      @nelauren 3 місяці тому

      Visionary but sh*t of a human being.

  • @raman6116
    @raman6116 3 роки тому +141

    My aunt worked with Steve at Apple during early 2002. She said she was terrified of Steve and so were her colleagues. My aunt admired his visions but absolutely hated working with him.

    • @jrock5830
      @jrock5830 3 роки тому +10

      Yes, that is pretty enormously common unfortunately. It’s not binary (in the words of Sorkin’s tunnelling Wozniak.

    • @Enlightenment246
      @Enlightenment246 2 роки тому +16

      Yes he sounds like a nasty person.

    • @rem-144
      @rem-144 Рік тому

      @@Enlightenment246 just typically NARCISSISTS

    • @JustinEdge-i3i
      @JustinEdge-i3i Рік тому

      Money

    • @Safz-c9b
      @Safz-c9b 10 місяців тому +2

      😂😂 fake

  • @habboscams6746
    @habboscams6746 3 роки тому +69

    this showed the iceberg under the cream top, people only usually hear what Steve Jobs did for others but never told the inside struggle we all have to get along with other and achieve our goals

  • @angelusa73
    @angelusa73 2 роки тому +36

    GOOD 60 minutes archive that taught me so much about this great man: very rich, but not materialist and quite simple man, simple house and simple family life. I would suggest everyone to watch this and learn about him. Interesting man with an wonderful mind.

    • @mwa1788
      @mwa1788 2 роки тому

      A filthy rich man, having people in foreign countries working for pennies a day to make his really expensive computers is not a materialist!!!!! ... Really now?! ...
      Meanwhile, he didn't produce anything, he just took the credit for other people's work! ... like almost all filthy rich people ... 😑

    • @CoolHand273
      @CoolHand273 Рік тому +2

      Just to note his simple houses even back then were very expensive and absolutely unobtainable to 99.8% of people today.

    • @BullyGarfield.
      @BullyGarfield. Рік тому

      @@CoolHand273 but with his money, he could build a kingdom

  • @abracadabruh1313
    @abracadabruh1313 3 роки тому +182

    That last line was absolutely beautiful!

    • @crazychicken8290
      @crazychicken8290 9 місяців тому

      wherre

    • @greg.peepeeface
      @greg.peepeeface 9 місяців тому +3

      ​@@crazychicken8290 "that's why I don't putting on/off switches on Apple devices"

    • @kumuda7197
      @kumuda7197 9 місяців тому

      @@crazychicken8290 at San Rafael Civic Center in Cali.

    • @kumuda7197
      @kumuda7197 9 місяців тому

      @@crazychicken8290 San Rafael Civic Center, CA in 1990.

    • @etomichelverny
      @etomichelverny 7 місяців тому +1

      My Overoverovergod

  • @barak-rocky-giles2081
    @barak-rocky-giles2081 2 роки тому +128

    Watching this just made me want to know more about Steve Wozniak.

    • @kiran-thetributechannel
      @kiran-thetributechannel 2 роки тому +4

      Read iWoz ! it shows a glimpse into his life, childhood and Apple . Im gonna finish it

    • @matthewcohen7488
      @matthewcohen7488 2 роки тому +8

      Woz was the real genius behind Apple. He does quite a lot of interviews which can easily be found

    • @pyrotechnick420
      @pyrotechnick420 2 роки тому +17

      The Woz was the brains behind Apple but like most engineers, he wasn't good at marketing

    • @matthewcohen7488
      @matthewcohen7488 2 роки тому +4

      @@pyrotechnick420 in his case, he didn’t have to. And in the end, he was the one that really got to enjoy the fruits of Apples success. Jobs just worked himself to death, in a way. Wiz got out of the Rat Race early and seems to be just cruising through life.

    • @pyrotechnick420
      @pyrotechnick420 2 роки тому

      @@matthewcohen7488 If it wasn't for cancer, Steve would have never stopped working. Also, Steve and Woz were never truly in the "rat race," they made millions of dollars within the first few years of founding Apple, and had board member and executive positions ever since. Also also, Steve didn't "work himself to death," either. He just stupidly thought that he could use holistic medicine to treat his cancer. That's literally why he died...

  • @ptys.
    @ptys. 3 роки тому +164

    Steve Croft was such a hard-nose, no-nonsense reporter. Something 60 minutes today needs more of with their newer members.

    • @garlandremingtoniii1338
      @garlandremingtoniii1338 Рік тому +3

      @Nox I disagree. Steve Croft “Investigative-Style”, was always that way, the way he was at the end was, his same way at the beginning when he joined, 60 Minutes.

    • @etomichelverny
      @etomichelverny 7 місяців тому +1

      Hire me & my Overoverovergod

  • @PsoriasisChannel
    @PsoriasisChannel 3 роки тому +28

    I’m humbled. Thank you 60 Minutes.

    • @etomichelverny
      @etomichelverny 7 місяців тому +1

      You are welcome my friend because my father worked as a cameraman for this specific show & my Overoverovergod

  • @alohatraveler
    @alohatraveler 2 роки тому +64

    Jobs was a product of perfect circumstances. The good and bad, combined with a deep human desire to understand why and seeing opportunity in areas most people couldn't

  • @jerryli5555
    @jerryli5555 3 роки тому +126

    People are often mean. Actually woz is an unsung hero.

    • @nexusyang4832
      @nexusyang4832 3 роки тому +7

      Truth.

    • @patrickbateman6885
      @patrickbateman6885 3 роки тому +3

      We in our every days lives wouldn't be here without Woz. Jobs was the marketing man and did the hardware.

    • @jonesp3398
      @jonesp3398 3 роки тому +6

      Wozniak deserves more credit than Jobs. Apple wouldn't be what it is today if it wasn't for him.

    • @saunaboi5866
      @saunaboi5866 3 роки тому +4

      @@patrickbateman6885 steve jobs doesn't even know how to code

    • @hardcoredoom5892
      @hardcoredoom5892 3 роки тому +5

      Everyone who knows anything knows Woz is Jobs’s equal if not his superior. Woz just didn’t want the spotlight at all.

  • @rahmatadebayo2458
    @rahmatadebayo2458 Місяць тому +1

    Highly motivational life story. In fact, his perseverance reminds me of my biological mother who believes that whatever is worth doing at all is worth doing well and if you accept to do something make sure that you get the BEST out of it. Indeed he was a great man

  • @collinreesejones5525
    @collinreesejones5525 3 роки тому +63

    FANTASTIC interview.. I think its great! 🥰

    • @brilliantmalcolm1544
      @brilliantmalcolm1544 3 роки тому +1

      You enter the world with nothing and you leave the world with nothing!!

    • @nonamenolastname4450
      @nonamenolastname4450 3 роки тому

      @@brilliantmalcolm1544 We come to this world naked and leave naked. We did not bring anything with us , we cannot take anything with us! Some believe we can take good deeds with us as like money in the bank account for hereafter!

  • @supreme2005
    @supreme2005 9 місяців тому +29

    The story about his biological father's restaurant is absolutely nuts.

    • @19374hklmaq
      @19374hklmaq 21 день тому

      It shows how God is real.

  • @Cwgrlup
    @Cwgrlup 2 роки тому +4

    People need to look closer at his trip to India, his reading/studying of “Autobiography of a Yogi” and how Paramahansa Yogananda influenced his life. Yoganandaji was extremely positive about the new technology that was happening in the world and encouraged talented people to pursue these skills as they pursued their spirituality.

  • @michaelwoods4495
    @michaelwoods4495 2 роки тому +25

    His family belonged to the same church as my uncle Mart and aunt Elsa. After church one day, they sat behind us and for some reason he wanted to go to the front as we were leaving. So there we were, face to face, unable to pass in the narrow aisle, and someone thought to introduce us. He may have been twelve at the time. I wish I had contacted him again later but that's life!

    • @pjjj8117
      @pjjj8117 3 місяці тому

      I’d like to know when that might have been because that would be interesting. I used to go to the same church. We’re talking about the same church.

  • @stephk42
    @stephk42 3 роки тому +94

    7:01 "Explain to me how somebody who was a hippie, a college dropout, somebody who drops LSD and marijuana, goes off to India and comes back deciding he wants to be a business man." He was in the right place at the right time. There's no better explanation. There was no other time in history when the beginnings of a far-reaching technology was so accessible that a couple of kids could build in their garage.

    • @Germatti13489
      @Germatti13489 3 роки тому +9

      Dropping marijuana! LOL. You smoke or eat it, you don't drop it. 😁👵

    • @teresalinton5898
      @teresalinton5898 3 роки тому

      its "beginnings of a far-reaching technology WERE so accessible

    • @sibylb974
      @sibylb974 3 роки тому

      @@Germatti13489 you usually Smoke it and Then drop the Jt

    • @jennifersun2638
      @jennifersun2638 3 роки тому +7

      Timing is important,but a lot of people at the time tried to be entrepreneurs and most failed.

    • @ginawhiteley8834
      @ginawhiteley8834 Рік тому +2

      Steve Jobs understood the importance of copyrights.

  • @brooks5895
    @brooks5895 3 роки тому +20

    HIs philosophy is so sophisticated! The ending about not implementing an off switch on Apple devices now makes so much sense

    • @etomichelverny
      @etomichelverny 7 місяців тому +2

      My Steve Jobs is the GOAT in technology alongside Paul Allen! Wish that Paul Allen and Steve Jobs met & my Overoverovergod

  • @kimberlykay1614
    @kimberlykay1614 3 роки тому +138

    Imagine how much more advanced and innovative technologies would continue to grow today if Steve Jobs is still here in this world.

    • @Zeerialo
      @Zeerialo 3 роки тому +14

      Not a lot

    • @salvadorpradoramos
      @salvadorpradoramos 3 роки тому +20

      He would have gotten cancelled.

    • @sistermaryfrances4480
      @sistermaryfrances4480 3 роки тому +4

      And wasn't an a******

    • @astroemerald3175
      @astroemerald3175 3 роки тому +3

      Yes , yes , yes especially the SJ of his last days . More compassionate than previous years . I think he realised he lived more through his wounds than his heart , however it was too late .

    • @yt_nh9347
      @yt_nh9347 3 роки тому +10

      Steve jobs is a bloody marketer not engineer or innovator that actually produced the technology

  • @natzz601
    @natzz601 5 місяців тому +4

    So heartwarming to read all these positive messages. God bless you all.

  • @duallylicensed145
    @duallylicensed145 3 роки тому +14

    That last part....the very last statement in this video....was the most profound 💯

  • @mjay4700
    @mjay4700 Рік тому +19

    I like how he goes from Ashton Kutcher in the 80's to Stanley Tucci in the 2000's.

  • @michealnadar8709
    @michealnadar8709 3 роки тому +30

    One of the best interview.

  • @andrewmiller4885
    @andrewmiller4885 3 роки тому +141

    I personally think Steve Jobs carried a lot of pain inside due to being abandoned by his parents , or rather let me say not wanted by them . The couple that did adopt him were very fine and loving people . However the knowledge of being an unwanted baby I feel was a major propelling factor in his life . It was also the source of his anger his meanness and his frustrations.
    Steve Jobs was a very complex man . He proved to be a good husband and a very loving father to all his children , even to the beautiful little girl he would not acknowledge for 10 years . The point is he finally did and he loved and embraced her completely . He was a marketing genius and a true visionary . R.I.P. Steve Jobs .
    Steve Jobs together with Steve Wozniak , a genius of another kind ,created History .

    • @reneesantiago6496
      @reneesantiago6496 2 роки тому +8

      I agree with you. Its called childhood trauma and i believe the "not wanted" issue stayed deep inside him as a wound. It caused alot of the unpleasant ways Steve was. Childhood trauma is extremely common and is always at the root of addicts. Im not saying Steve was an addict.....im just stating how serious trauma during childhood is.

    • @andrewmiller4885
      @andrewmiller4885 2 роки тому +1

      @@reneesantiago6496 I think the word "trauma" was spot on. You are absolutely correct. Thank you for your response.

    • @NewWorldDAO
      @NewWorldDAO 2 роки тому

      I like no way I can write a post on this

    • @NewWorldDAO
      @NewWorldDAO 2 роки тому

      Jobs sidekick is Ted Cruz. Steven Spielberg is Steven jobs! both of them created the Blockchain which is a solution to you guys stupidity and their stupidity!!!!!!! they are at the Texas White House. lindig family ranch! LBJ was a combination of Lindig Bush and Kardashian. initial names are a team effort!

    • @jamamusseadan2090
      @jamamusseadan2090 2 роки тому +1

      ​@Renee Santiago

  • @edum.6353
    @edum.6353 2 роки тому +18

    "thats why I dont put on/off switches on apple devices" that was beautiful

  • @lukesky1998
    @lukesky1998 3 роки тому +35

    Damn. Almost teared up. I think he needed someone who was an excellent interviewer to extract more info. His way of thinking shows little windows into deeper things.

    • @kevinkemble3718
      @kevinkemble3718 3 роки тому

      Pain of failure or pain of success.
      mistakes or mentors

    • @Ihsan097
      @Ihsan097 2 роки тому

      I guess he become teary at 3:24, Did he? but man! Did I feel his emotion; YES

  • @iffyelan8166
    @iffyelan8166 10 місяців тому +5

    WATCHING THIS WITH AN IPHONE 👏

  • @zhongruili1377
    @zhongruili1377 3 роки тому +50

    Wozniak, in an interview a few years ago, said:
    “Steve Jobs played no role at all in any of my designs of the Apple I and Apple II computer and printer interfaces and serial interfaces and floppy disks and stuff that I made to enhance the computers. He did not know technology. He’d never designed anything as a hardware engineer, and he didn’t know software. He wanted to be important, and the important people are always the business people. So that’s what he wanted to do.”

    • @Laughnowcrylaterx2
      @Laughnowcrylaterx2 2 роки тому

      He was an artist and I don’t think you know what that is. I’m sure you know the word tho

  • @robertharrison9452
    @robertharrison9452 3 роки тому +7

    Excellent response maintaining dignity of person asking question, his own and that of Apple as a company, as well as, all employees involved in developing solutions to problems he recognized and apologized for and continuing to improve for customers

  • @benjaminduval6054
    @benjaminduval6054 Рік тому +54

    The man was incredible. He changed the world.

    • @benjaminduval6054
      @benjaminduval6054 Рік тому +2

      @@Dennco2000 sounds a little pessimistic. What do you want to see to be happy?

    • @TenTenJ
      @TenTenJ Рік тому

      @@benjaminduval6054 A move away from all this myopathy. I shutter to think what civilization will be like in less than a lifetime.

    • @victorblock3421
      @victorblock3421 Рік тому

      He didn't change the world. He learned terrifically how to take technology everyone already had and do a great job packaging it better and making a very successful company from it. More importantly was that, as a man, he was a disgusting pig.

    • @JesuSaves79
      @JesuSaves79 Рік тому

      A revolutionary for sure! Whether we like Him or not; humanity is forever changed for the better!!!

    • @jorgeparodi
      @jorgeparodi 9 місяців тому

      He ruined the world stealing technology structured by the military research center funded with our taxes .

  • @andycapsphotos
    @andycapsphotos 3 роки тому +9

    HOW can this story NOT be a 2 season tv series with like 10 episodes each?! HOW?! I can't wrap my head around it...

  • @MrPreet23
    @MrPreet23 3 роки тому +5

    Sometimes being nice does not help to achieve what you want

  • @ML-jw4cd
    @ML-jw4cd 3 роки тому +8

    On a side issue .. I never get over how high his voice was . It surprises me everytime

  • @jimmyispromo
    @jimmyispromo Рік тому +2

    he couldnt write one line of code or anything else. the true heros are the engineers, men and women who actually did the work and not the "i was a rectangle device that holds music and calls people"....

  • @geekmeee
    @geekmeee 3 роки тому +90

    What makes Steve Jobs interesting.... Is his comebacks from his flaws.

    • @mitchdavis6001
      @mitchdavis6001 2 роки тому +4

      How did he make a comeback from how he treated his kids?

    • @Donyourmom
      @Donyourmom Рік тому +1

      @@mitchdavis6001Or from the mother of his children, who he said that it’s possible any man in California could be the father.

    • @rodrigo445678
      @rodrigo445678 8 місяців тому

      @@mitchdavis6001he did, his kids with Powell all loved him and he was there for them.

    • @d-darkness-within
      @d-darkness-within 2 місяці тому

      ​@@mitchdavis6001 Think about it this way:
      Many people have treated their kids well, but have not build one of the most influencial companies in history.
      Steve Jobs built one of the most influencial companies in history, but did not treat his kids well.
      Lol, I guess it's a trade off.
      You can't have everything.

  • @cards4life66
    @cards4life66 3 роки тому +62

    One of Jobs' greatest strengths was to be able to see a different reality, the one he envisioned vs the one that existed. For example, he thought of products we didn't even know we needed. This belief may have cost him his life as he refused to be operated on when his tumor was, accordingly to Issacson, "curable". He waited too long and only agreed after it was clear that his reality, addressing the illness with diet and alternative therapies, was doomed to fail. Tragically, it was too late
    Wiki: "Reality distortion field (or RDF) is a term first used by Bud Tribble at Apple Computer in 1981, to describe company co-founder Steve Jobs' charisma and its effects on the developers working on the Macintosh project."

    • @LizInTheB
      @LizInTheB Рік тому +2

      I have often wondered if 'he' wondered whether or not alternative methods could actually cure cancer and used himself as a guinea pig of sorts to find out? (Because imagine if he 'did' stumble upon a method that worked? He'd have 'changed the world'...again.)

  • @tammysharonlorettastafford6271
    @tammysharonlorettastafford6271 2 роки тому +7

    Whatever his faults,Steve has enriched my world,kept me safe and inspired me to become a better person.

    • @manolokonosko2868
      @manolokonosko2868 2 роки тому

      Adolf Hitler's Autobahns built during his dictatorship greatly enhanced my visit to Germany last year as the roads are perfectly designed and well maintained. My vacation was one of the best in my life, and has inspired me to vote RepubliKKKan this November.

  • @jasonwright9173
    @jasonwright9173 3 роки тому +14

    I've never heard Steve Jobs speak before. By the way people describe him they make him sound robotic. Him speaking just now did NOT sound robotic- he sounded authentically human, a great story teller, an emotional person.

    • @777jones
      @777jones 9 місяців тому +1

      He was damaged emotionally, and strategic in how he used emotion to manipulate people. But he was effective and understood emotion.

  • @Sundayvibe5
    @Sundayvibe5 Рік тому +9

    We miss you. This world is bleak w/o you😢

  • @mpesmail1834
    @mpesmail1834 2 роки тому +98

    From inside, Steve was an unhappy man, a lonely soul, but he was a true genius.

    • @manujohn99
      @manujohn99 2 роки тому +4

      Who said he was unhappy???

    • @mpesmail1834
      @mpesmail1834 2 роки тому

      @@manujohn99
      All his close associates said, media said so. He even went to India to join some cult to get peace.

    • @marios3202
      @marios3202 2 роки тому +6

      He pointed at overworked, underpaid engineers who got none of the credit, and said "make this thing that the technology to create doesn't exist yet, and make it by the end of next month!". I'll have to disagree with him being a "genius".

    • @manujohn99
      @manujohn99 2 роки тому

      @@marios3202 Forget about genius, what made Steve talk like that.

    • @horse-4598
      @horse-4598 2 роки тому +2

      I think he was happy but just in a bad mood very often.

  • @shahabahmed9158
    @shahabahmed9158 3 роки тому +40

    "you born alone and you die alone." Very sad!

    • @Liitebulb
      @Liitebulb 3 роки тому +6

      Umm it's true we all die that way

    • @Cwgrlup
      @Cwgrlup 3 роки тому +3

      Not sad. This guy had a connection with Paramahansa Yogananda. One of the greatest gurus in the history of the world. “Alone” means humans are not the most important part of life. God is.

    • @jimmyjohnn19
      @jimmyjohnn19 3 роки тому +2

      your born near a mom usually

    • @Jazzthink
      @Jazzthink 3 роки тому

      "If you enter this world knowing you are loved, and leave the world knowing the same, everything that happens in between can be dealt with" Is a M. Jackson quote a friend of mine had in his bedroom.. :)

    • @graerindley6312
      @graerindley6312 3 роки тому +1

      If you dont believe in cosmic connectedness.

  • @awwwyeaboyeeee
    @awwwyeaboyeeee Рік тому +12

    It’s amazing what you can accomplish when you don’t care about people.

    • @DanielHill-h1o
      @DanielHill-h1o 6 місяців тому +1

      40 hate crime hand

    • @rebekahfisher8585
      @rebekahfisher8585 5 місяців тому

      Yep. He parked in handicapped parking spaces because he had so much to contribute and his convenience was more important than anybody else’s.

    • @pjjj8117
      @pjjj8117 3 місяці тому

      He cared deeply about people and you didn’t know him so you don’t know, only people who didn’t understand him have negative reviews

  • @allentheproyt
    @allentheproyt Рік тому +10

    Steve Jobs was the goat and will always be remembered

    • @etomichelverny
      @etomichelverny 7 місяців тому +1

      My Steve Jobs is such a GOAT that he is even capable of going to Mars & my Overoverovergod

    • @robertgiles9124
      @robertgiles9124 2 місяці тому

      what nonsense

  • @BLAISEDAHL96
    @BLAISEDAHL96 3 роки тому +136

    He definitely could have done things differently. He could have been more polite to his friends, his business partners and the rest. He certainly had vision, and was in the right place at the right time. His wrongdoings can be learned from, as well as his success. Hopefully the next tech titan can learn and do right.
    But It’s undeniable he changed the world.

    • @MM-oq1lb
      @MM-oq1lb 3 роки тому +24

      Without Wozniak there would have been no Apple.

    • @boatman222345
      @boatman222345 2 роки тому +1

      So didn't Hitler...

    • @osiris_blanche
      @osiris_blanche 2 роки тому +7

      It's probably why Jobs suffered Cancer so early in life & died before his time. His Stress, Anger and all of the Inner Angst put him into his casket of hate.

    • @mitchelll3879
      @mitchelll3879 2 роки тому

      If jobs had been an ordinary joe instead some wealthy piece of garbage, not only would he have been in jail, a disgruntled ex employee would probably have beat him within an inch of his life or murdered him..he wasn't a visionary, he is like bill gates, a scumbag salesman.. that's it...also he stunk because he wouldn't bathe

    • @pyrotechnick420
      @pyrotechnick420 2 роки тому +1

      The current mindset is that people don't get anywhere by being nice to each other. I think that your priorities are out of order, unless you really think that a couple people's feelings are more important than changing the world. The most successful people in business have always been the most cutthroat. But I'm sending you positive vibes regardless

  • @eltamarindo
    @eltamarindo Рік тому +3

    The "No License Plates" is only news to people not from California. Steve Jobs was not alone in this. For many decades the were no "temporary tags" in California; new cars would simply have no plates at all. If people were either rich and had special relationships with car dealers or were gangsters who had relationships with used car dealers, they would never ever have tags. The no plate situation only ended in 2019.

  • @joannekleveland4944
    @joannekleveland4944 Рік тому +2

    Ms. Kleveland's class at LF Smith HS in Indio, California is giving you a giant SHOUT OUT📣📣📣📣 and we're hoping for one in return! We watch CNN 10 everyday and enjoy learning a little something new with each episode. Goooo Hawks!!!

  • @MadSaila
    @MadSaila 15 днів тому

    A few things stand out…
    1. Apple products reflect a lot of Steve Jobs character. No on and off switches.
    2. He was very self-aware and extremely private which highlight the Apple iPhone.
    3. Control freak, highlights the many aspects of the iPhone, privacy, being able to find your iPhone, even if the battery is off now, goes to show how far his ambition went.
    4. This interview was amazing, I can only imagine the level of conversations both had the last two years of his life.

  • @georgerodriguez3014
    @georgerodriguez3014 3 роки тому +21

    In spite of his short comings and internal turmoils look how much he accomplished.

    • @manolokonosko2868
      @manolokonosko2868 2 роки тому

      He would have thought of you as nothing more than an illegal alien gardener or shoe shine boy. Great leaders are also horrible inhuman beings. Be careful who you worship.

    • @vicheakeng6894
      @vicheakeng6894 Рік тому

      Adam and Eve you and I Steve Jobs The halfe bidden apple. What a great BITE!

  • @schawnettarobinson8584
    @schawnettarobinson8584 2 місяці тому +2

    I completely understand Steve Jobs.

  • @Jazzthink
    @Jazzthink 3 роки тому +40

    Interesting stuff. I hope he has peace now :)

    • @Jazzthink
      @Jazzthink 3 роки тому

      @80skid90sguy yes i see

  • @Lowkey_ID
    @Lowkey_ID 2 роки тому +12

    Being courteous doesn't take away from being brave. That's one lesson he never learned.

  • @Acode7940
    @Acode7940 2 роки тому +3

    Enjoyed finding out about this unusual man. Thank you.

  • @SonyDjuana
    @SonyDjuana 3 роки тому +11

    He said it, he's a marketer not an engineer

  • @NNNN-cp4bn
    @NNNN-cp4bn 8 місяців тому +10

    Steve Jobs was Leonardo da Vinci of our time! Genius!

  • @bdflatlander
    @bdflatlander 3 роки тому +15

    I read Isaacson’s book on Jobs.
    It was one of the most fascinating books I’ve ever read. I had a hard time putting it down.
    I can certainly appreciate Jobs’ genius - I have owned a lot of Apple products over the years and love them. I am typing this comment on my iPad and I don’t know how I ever lived without it - I am on it probably 3 to 4 hours a day.
    However, I would never have wanted to work for Steve Jobs. I think the issue with Jobs as a manager is that he is so brilliant that he gets impatient with people he considers inferior to him in terms of intelligence and doesn’t know how to relate to them.
    Sorry he left the world at such a relatively young age and it didn’t have to happen the way it did. Again, I think that Jobs believed he knew more than the doctors who treated him and therefor delayed the surgery that could have prolonged his life. But that was his call and he paid the price for his decision.

    • @mymoodz
      @mymoodz Рік тому +2

      agreed. Isaacson is a great writer. you should also read his biographies of Einstein and Ben Franklin too.

    • @brittanyshinkle8696
      @brittanyshinkle8696 Рік тому +2

      Read the book while on hard times with a huge vision and ambition for 5 years prior to the reading , believing your chosen and special is a huge part of the process

    • @bdflatlander
      @bdflatlander Рік тому +1

      @@mymoodz : I read both of them. Both were excellent but I’ve come to expect that of Isaacson.

  • @RealParadoxed
    @RealParadoxed Рік тому +19

    The way he faced death and made huge innovations is outstanding.

    • @brotherwilliams4285
      @brotherwilliams4285 Рік тому +1

      Too bad he was the biggest asshole since donald trump.

    • @cardinalRG
      @cardinalRG Рік тому +3

      I don't consider Jobs to have been much of an innovator. He was a marketing genius, a master salesman, but that hardly requires innovation.

    • @BullyGarfield.
      @BullyGarfield. Рік тому +2

      @@cardinalRG computer, smartphones market. of course he did not technically make the products as he was not an engineer but he brought the vision and pushed people too much but it made progress faster for tech

    • @cardinalRG
      @cardinalRG Рік тому +2

      @@BullyGarfield. --Yes, marketing success inspires technological progress, and Jobs did that. But I don't see that he was much of an innovator.

    • @BullyGarfield.
      @BullyGarfield. Рік тому

      @@cardinalRG why do u say he not an innovator?

  • @mikerepairsstuff
    @mikerepairsstuff Рік тому +5

    This is a microcosm everyone can learn from and I thank 60 Minutes for making this documentary. Sent from my iPad 2023. ❤️Apple iPad

  • @gratitudeindeed8190
    @gratitudeindeed8190 3 роки тому +7

    Belief is Faith.

  • @TheSoloist1Alone
    @TheSoloist1Alone 3 роки тому +4

    Man I need this book🙏🏾

  • @elavke5441
    @elavke5441 3 роки тому +14

    Did his mom ever say WHY she gave him up for adoption?

    • @ROMAEUS
      @ROMAEUS 3 роки тому +15

      In other documentaries they mention that they felt like they were too young to be able to take the responsibility of raising him, so they gave him up.

  • @anthonyerdenetuguldur5609
    @anthonyerdenetuguldur5609 3 місяці тому

    I’m incredibly thankful to have grown up during the release of the first iPod and iPhone. Witnessing the product launches live on TV, watching Steve Jobs take the stage with rockstar charisma, and seeing the excitement of both employees and media was a remarkable experience.
    Going from a CD player to a Ipod was a big deal, as well as, from a Motorolla Razor to Iphone (Touch Screen Control + Web Browsing).

  • @alvapazz
    @alvapazz 3 роки тому +10

    this is such a beautiful piece of content! thanks

  • @shahabahmed9158
    @shahabahmed9158 3 роки тому +57

    He was genius. He changed many norms. RIP

    • @jonesp3398
      @jonesp3398 3 роки тому +8

      he came up with some of the ideas, but the person who really made ideas turn into reality was Steve Wozniak. Jobs would not have such a company without the true brains of Wozniak himself.

    • @15cedw
      @15cedw 2 роки тому

      @@jonesp3398 Jobs was a marketing design genius and innovater

    • @jonesp3398
      @jonesp3398 2 роки тому +2

      @@15cedw but did he actually take the time to program and help Wozniak with his works?

  • @Dbdb00-i7q
    @Dbdb00-i7q 3 роки тому +14

    Also, we are all still waiting for the 60minutes interview from 2003 (unreleased?)

  • @jandreneethling5664
    @jandreneethling5664 Рік тому +3

    Born alone
    Die alone
    What a philosophy..

  • @habboscams6746
    @habboscams6746 3 роки тому +3

    this really showed me that everyone will kneel down to TIME even Steve Jobs. its hard to fill your days, people will go far and many ways to fill it in the most positive way they perceive possible in order with their goals and morals in life

    • @isaacmukansi7379
      @isaacmukansi7379 3 роки тому

      Tops of the day to you. Although I am a day late to record my comment, information about these legends inspires many minds. We hoping for more investors to explore more avenues. IKE. Tzaneen. South Africa.

    • @zacharyart5860
      @zacharyart5860 3 роки тому

      It's true brother

  • @mohammedalsmadi680
    @mohammedalsmadi680 2 місяці тому

    Watching this on my phone thank you Wozniak

  • @JSVintage
    @JSVintage 3 роки тому +4

    One of the greatest kickers in 60 Minutes history.

  • @kimberlybourne-truog6829
    @kimberlybourne-truog6829 3 роки тому +2

    I noticed when I have liquidity I am able to feel comfortable and be me, I know that I could be more impactful, personally, professionally and philanthropy wise given financial security. For some as he mentioned it can ruin people, but if you’ve seen or experienced life with money previously and then without and you compare the two… the answer is there. I took much better care of myself with money than without. My confidence level was drastically different. It’s all relevant.

  • @ibrarali9369
    @ibrarali9369 3 роки тому +13

    Different level of natural intelligence with the work ethic and drive to match it.

  • @jamesyeechunfung1432
    @jamesyeechunfung1432 Місяць тому

    This is a great documentary. This is my treasure.Thank you

  • @slee5714
    @slee5714 2 роки тому +4

    Like physical traits , mental traits are inherited . From what I have read, his grandfather from his biological heritage was a self made millionaire . I think it is not coincidence that Mr Steve jobs should have a keen business sense as well.

  • @TheJapanChannelDcom
    @TheJapanChannelDcom Рік тому +2

    People listen to all these true, first hand stories, about how ruthless and selfish he was.. then they leave comments about how great he was. Same happens with Zucherberg and Musk and all the other ruthless mogels. People line up to pay money for their stuff.

    • @BadMannerKorea
      @BadMannerKorea 2 місяці тому

      It’s quite obvious that people favor the good he’s done over the bad that happened in his personal life, which is why people enjoy Apple products and defend him. If you want to boycott products, that’s on you, but it’s naive to think everyone should do the same.

  • @seanmolloy6188
    @seanmolloy6188 2 роки тому +5

    Don't believe the hype; this guy is a great salesman, and that's all. Other people invited and made the products that made apple what it has become. He stood on their backs, taking all the credit. He made many lives miserable for his own benefits. Not to mention all the products he has stolen from others.

    •  2 роки тому +1

      He is fake. Every idea he stole was from IBM and Microsoft. IBM had their own app store and smart phone back on 1993.

    • @josephanderson7237
      @josephanderson7237 Рік тому

      Yep.

  • @KatySueWho
    @KatySueWho 3 роки тому +2

    Please DON’T MISUNDERSTAND ME, I am NOT saying that Steve Jobs and #45 are the same. They are very, very different in a great many ways.
    But I was quite startled by how many words, phrases & descriptions that were used to describe Steve Jobs back in 2011, have also been used to describe ex-president #45, from the time of his 2016 campaign to today:
    “used magical thinking”
    “Steve’s ‘reality distortion field,’ which referred to his ability to convince himself, and others, to believe almost anything, using his indomitable will and charisma, to bend any fact to suit his purpose.” (gaslighting)
    “he believed himself to be ‘special’ and ‘chosen’”
    “he had convinced himself that he didn’t need to bathe very often, nor did he need to wear deodorant, all because of his dietary habits. He was wrong and his coworkers tried to convince him of this fact, but he couldn’t be dissuaded from this hygiene choice, even though he very clearly stank, and anyone who came near him bore witness to this fact. Could not be persuaded of an obvious, objective truth, once he chose to believe something to be true (more magical thinking).”
    “believed that the normal rules didn’t, and shouldn’t, apply to him”
    “did small acts of rebellion, as if to say, ‘I don’t succumb to authority’”
    “showed disdain for authority figures”
    “he loved the heated, shouting arguments at work, saying that it was just them being brutally honest with each other”
    “he was petulant and could be very, very mean at times- whether it was to a waitress, or to an employee”
    “he was a terrible manager- was always upending things and throwing things into turmoil”
    “abrasive”
    “a control freak”
    “he felt that if you ignore something, if you don’t want something to exist, you can will it away. This is more ‘magical thinking’” (uh, COVID-19!)
    “had medical procedures done in secret. He was lying to the public, saying he had perfect health except for a hormonal imbalance, when he was actually very, very unwell, and was not winning his battle with cancer.”

    • @AmziAsher
      @AmziAsher 3 роки тому

      Love this comment.

  • @saunaboi5866
    @saunaboi5866 3 роки тому +10

    Too much stress, anger and negativity killed him.

    • @yamil.343
      @yamil.343 9 місяців тому

      And a poor diet

  • @RyanWeaver-fp5kq
    @RyanWeaver-fp5kq 4 місяці тому

    Leadership… sales… marketing… strategy… empathy… reality… explaining. The mix of skills and solutions over time and space… the actuality of track records and also of ideas and concepts. If we breakdown and look whimsically at time and times… the needs of authenticity and connections through better work… begin to rise in Value… rapidly.

  • @darrinheike1495
    @darrinheike1495 3 роки тому +4

    His goal wasn’t to win awards for “most awesomest manager”. His goal was to create a FANTASTIC product. Steve Jobs did exactly that.
    So I’d say his leadership style should be revered.

  • @kimberlybourne-truog6829
    @kimberlybourne-truog6829 3 роки тому +2

    I’m not perfect in any way but I always get along with those who seek their highest self. I noticed I crave that level of interaction to encourage my growth in business.

    • @kimberlybourne-truog6829
      @kimberlybourne-truog6829 3 роки тому

      @johnnytheprick because it mentioned in the documentary that Steve Jobs did the same and I connected with that part ( and others). Thanks for the comment.

    • @kimberlybourne-truog6829
      @kimberlybourne-truog6829 3 роки тому

      @god I was referring more towards business and also social fraternization.

  • @buckyoung4578
    @buckyoung4578 2 роки тому +3

    Nothing great is ever done by people who "get along" with others. The goal of a coach, boss, company owner is to be fair with his employees/players etc., but not for them to like them. I have worked for some tough people who taught me much more than those that tried to be liked.

  • @tomcaron9113
    @tomcaron9113 Рік тому +1

    I want to dislike this guy but I can’t. His take on life and leadership are fascinating. His internal pain was just too much for him to bear but it was his driving force.

    • @Muppet-kz2nc
      @Muppet-kz2nc Рік тому

      i think its easy to opine after the fact. other leaders have tried to emulate his style and end up broke or behind bars.

  • @Hotlooksamerica
    @Hotlooksamerica 3 роки тому +43

    When they label it 60 minutes Overtime, but it ends in 28 min

    • @makedredd299
      @makedredd299 3 роки тому +2

      Overtime matches usually 2 x 15 minutes.

    • @mizera_mykle
      @mizera_mykle 3 роки тому +1

      Overtime Definition:
      "time in addition to what is normal, as time worked beyond one's scheduled working hours"
      So with this video it is 60 Minutes *plus* the 28.
      😀Hope that helps!

  • @emilybarrett
    @emilybarrett 10 місяців тому +1

    "I really want to be with people who demand perfection" - Steve Jobs

  • @LuxuryIncorp
    @LuxuryIncorp 2 роки тому +4

    Steve made people experience the future. But boy was he rude and disrespectful to those who made him the wealth that he had.

  • @structuralengineering3406
    @structuralengineering3406 3 роки тому +6

    Job isn't completely a emotion father/son. Maybe that's a trade off for his genius.

  • @mr.rochester1857
    @mr.rochester1857 3 роки тому +14

    Who else watching on iPhone?

    • @RuQuanSavion
      @RuQuanSavion 7 місяців тому +1

      😂😂😂😂 amazing

  • @mikemailei4491
    @mikemailei4491 3 роки тому +15

    interesting how in his last days of life he said he sometimes believes in God and a after life. When we are in our depths of despair or there's nothing else we then realize that there is a higher being or power. When we have everything we wanted do we need God then? I like how he lived in a normal house and neighborhood. If only he had the surgery to remove the cancer sooner.

    • @QuangTran_MQStudio8
      @QuangTran_MQStudio8 3 роки тому +2

      Very consistent with how humans have come to the idea of god and the afterlife. That is because human being do not want to admit that when one dies, everything ends. By thinking of the afterlife it gives a person hope that life goes on. Does it?

    • @MrKry
      @MrKry 3 роки тому

      @@QuangTran_MQStudio8 Exactly, the same argument can be used both ways. But the evidence we have access to isn't really in favor of the supernatural...

  • @jenkinsljenkinssquire9137
    @jenkinsljenkinssquire9137 3 роки тому +7

    Jobs is proof that the "good die young" theory isn't always accurate. Ironic how his disregard for the establishment became him becoming part of the establishment.

  • @5422074
    @5422074 2 роки тому +1

    This is amazing!! I think its the best doc on Jobs I have ever seen!!!

  • @michaelvaladez6570
    @michaelvaladez6570 3 роки тому +35

    Fate..shaking his fathers hand not knowing...life has it way, and we make these choices..so sorry for ignoring his positive choices.May he RIP..

    • @MUFCXI
      @MUFCXI 3 роки тому +1

      Nope, he knew it was his father. Even mentioned it in his book I believe.

    • @jpgrumbach8562
      @jpgrumbach8562 3 роки тому

      @@MUFCXI, the first meeting was in his father's restaurant, nobody knew nothing. And later, when informed, jobs was not interested.

    • @jojopuppyfish
      @jojopuppyfish 3 роки тому

      In the book, Jobs says he met his father (And didn't know it at the time) and when he found out later that person was his father, he remembered that he thought the guy was a phony.....and as a result of that he didn't want to meet him

    • @winter32842
      @winter32842 3 роки тому +1

      Steve Jobs knew. One of the first thing Steve Job did when got little bit of money was to hire private investigator to locate his birth parents. Steve Jobs acknowledged that he went to see his father but he never told him that he is his son.

  • @유희석-j6u
    @유희석-j6u Рік тому +1

    He is a inventor and great creator in computeriging the electronic. Phone, key board, monitor, chip, graphics, and web services.

  • @JenPurple2022
    @JenPurple2022 2 роки тому +5

    A genius, imperfect but pure genius.

    • @carolegrover3052
      @carolegrover3052 Рік тому +1

      “ oh brave new world/ that has such creatures in it…”

  • @kanicakhanom7483
    @kanicakhanom7483 2 роки тому

    Thank you for your watching ❤️💙💚❤️💙

  • @vspatmx7458
    @vspatmx7458 3 роки тому +21

    Why was this deleted and reuploaded?

    • @not_the_vampire
      @not_the_vampire 3 роки тому +14

      To bring it back to the top of the video list since it's the 45th anniversary of the founding of Apple.

  • @manolokonosko2868
    @manolokonosko2868 2 роки тому +2

    I give money to charities and hospitals that help people with cancer. Steve Jobs was the only exception in which I cheered for the cancer and felt greatly satisfied as it spread throughout his insides. He didn't suffer as much as he made countless others suffer with his abuse, treachery and lies.

  • @hugilpark
    @hugilpark Рік тому +11

    Steve, thanks for your creative thinking and unusual perspective

    • @js0988
      @js0988 Рік тому

      Creative thinking??? Stealing from Nokia and Samsung is creative???

    • @floofy5529
      @floofy5529 Рік тому +2

      ​@@js0988 Creative? You're stealing words from the english language you thief!

    • @js0988
      @js0988 Рік тому

      @@floofy5529 Oh look an incel, how cute. Now clean up your mom basement.

    • @floofy5529
      @floofy5529 Рік тому

      @@js0988 I see strong projections from this one. Don't worry, I believe in you. One day you will leave mom's basement and will aspire to be more than just an incel.

    • @js0988
      @js0988 Рік тому +1

      @@floofy5529 Awww....you deleted your dumb comment. How cute. That doesn't change the fact you're a sad little incel loser.

  • @yamil.343
    @yamil.343 9 місяців тому

    He was real. No filter. Mean, kind, mercurial. Like most of us. The difference is he was unique & needless to say smart. What he achieved very few do.

  • @czabeats2964
    @czabeats2964 3 роки тому +12

    Read the book. it was very good . i really enjoyed reading it . insightful.

    • @ereenatc6042
      @ereenatc6042 3 роки тому

      I ran the chapter in The visionaries or whatever from the same author. I know I read the Bill Gates chapter. I did not know that in the case of Apple the dying man had asked for this author to do the book. I have not been a fanboy for Apple or for Microsoft frankly. Some people come in here that it was luck. It wasn't just like it was cheating mainly and then look second and when somebody gets on top by cheating it doesn't mean that the world is not what it could have been when they die it means that the world is not what it could have been because they cheated.
      The final photograph of the house shows a huge mansion that is probably worth an outrageous amount but was a huge mansion by any standard. You can say the back door is unlocked but if there is a moat around the entire property what are you saying when you talk about the back door being unlocked. He seemed to have many enemies. The main thing about him was that he had that luck which although it ended up killing him had his madness be something that his customers were drawn to. Like those who drank the Kool-Aid Jim Jones poisoned Le lethaleyafly where.
      The college is mentioned but I don't know anything about the college and he didn't go to it. Would have gotten such a book written if he wasn't crazy and having died and being in a terminal illness making for a lot of publicity that helped the author do the book? Was the author paid by the man giving his wealth?
      I am somebody who had access to the next computer. I just learned today however that Apple bought it. Regarding the purchase of Pixar and the showing briefly in the story of The Muppets it is my understanding that the creator of the Muppets died in a similar way neglecting his health when he had pneumonia and I think that preceded. If I'm correct you would think that that would have been one of the questions. You saw the Muppets Jim Henson die from pneumonia because he didn't get medical attention. Why didn't that help him understand. On the other hand 9 months is a very short amount of time. And we don't know if he would have just had a very low quality of life and possibly died faster. My understanding of the reporting here is that that was extremely unlikely that the prognosis was extremely good but there was a chance that this man gambled and did not lose. We won't know it doesn't sound like he had a need to know when he died or at the time as much as could have been known. Regarding him bringing his daughter in to their home that is interesting especially in the context of him never reconciling with his father. I think it's because he wanted to suppress his Syrian background and if you would have reconciled publicly with his father everybody would have considered Apple a Syrian company.
      I watched this a double speed so it took 14 minutes. This of course is the majority of an hour when you had the commercials to it. For those who are not aware this did not get produced recently it got posted on UA-cam recently but this is for many many years ago obviously.
      For those who want to know what the myth of Apple would have on the market it would be the neck cooler so that you can leave your windows open and save tremendous amounts of energy without getting overheated. Fujitsu makes one. That doesn't mean they sell it not even in Japan but multiple generations have at least two workers in Japan that have to tolerate out their heat. Outdoor heat indoor heat it is best at rest by contact cooling. Apple believes in fanless cooling. I don't know if they will ever destroy the world with a car product but they certainly have the opportunity to save it by personalizing cooling like Sony did the Walkman. Keeping it simple would likely mean creating a way for people to get cheap liquid nitrogen. Liquid nitrogen presently costs 50 cents a gallon. You can buy a gallons of 80% ethanol for 50 cents on clearance these days and yes you can put that in your tank. Liquid nitrogen is more complicated but it is all so 50 cents a gallon delivered. It is $0.50 a gallon delivered because it is subsidized and it is not less per gallon because it is suppressed. A gallon of liquid nitrogen has more energy that can be harvested from it then a gallon of lithium ion battery and it weighs less as well then the battery of lithium ion that has the same energy storage. But if you use liquid nitrogen to drive a turbine to pump your body heat out through a small surface area on your neck comparing it to electricity is difficult. To compete electricity would have to cost something in terms of a tiny fraction of a single penny per kilowatt hour. And then when you compare using such a body cooler with operating a central air conditioner in the building there are additional orders of magnitude.
      Dehumidification as a technology for personal comfort should be one of the greatest crimes. Instead some 99% of the population is oblivious to how evil it is and believes that there is no alternative.
      Further Apple computing was based on the belief that the internet was the wrong way but that the computing should be local. iPhones are about doing work in the cloud. Especially now. Apple begs for disruption but continues to cheat to prevent that the companies they distributed disrupted were probably more ethical. That's what allowed them to be disrupted. If you think that's a good thing then you don't know what time will tell. It's possible that the currently unethical companies like Tesla and Apple Amazon and the rest because they don't have any integrity are dooming our very planet. Time will tell. And that may not be a story that 60 minutes is able to cover because they will have to be around and the truth is that newspapers and shows like 60 minutes don't exist anymore.
      It's one thing for the governor of Oregon to say global warming is proving itself to people like they're being kicked in the head. But people are pretty much like this idiot whether they're being kicked in the head or not they don't really notice it and they certainly don't respond in the appropriate way.

  • @hl3641
    @hl3641 2 роки тому

    Hard to fine single definition on Steve Jobs, he was so many and still is

  • @Rumiluminarie
    @Rumiluminarie 3 роки тому +7

    No matter what and whether you like him or not, what he teaches us is Be YourSelf