Steve Jobs 60 Minutes Full Interview 2011 Ram

Friday, 11 June 2021

CBS has released the full 60 Minutes interview with Steve Jobs biographer Walter Isaacson, featuring excerpts from the book released today, along with recorded content from sessions with Jobs that have never before been heard. In the video – which you can find after the cut – Isaacson describes Jobs warts and all: "He's not warm and fuzzy" the writer observes, but was a man who, in his own words, wanted to "be with people who demand perfection. " The interview covers everything from Jobs' childhood and how he dealt with news that he was adopted, his job at Atari – and his questionable personal hygiene – and through to the formative days of Apple, setting up the company with Steve Wozniak. " He could drive himself by magical thinking" Isaacson observes. "By believing something that the rest of us couldn't possibly believe, and sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. " Jobs' life included notable examples of both extremes. He was well known for demanding excellence from Apple staff while CEO at the company, an approach which Isaacson describes as having "made great products, but it didn't make for a great management style"; on the flip side, Jobs delayed surgery on the cancer that went on to end his life by nine months, believing that holistic therapies would save him.

Steve Jobs's Biographer on "60 Minutes": The Highlights

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He says that when Jobs worked at game-maker Atari they had to put him on the night shift because he walked around barefoot and never bathed, and so employees didn't want to work with him. Jobs took a seven-month leave from Atari to travel through India. His encounters there and with Zen Buddhism "really informed his design sense, " says Isaacson. "That notion that simplicity is the ultimate sophistication [came from that trip]. " When Jobs returned, he began making a primitive computer for hobbyists in the garage of his parents with Steve Wozniak, Apple's other founder. They started with $1, 300. By the time Jobs was 25 Apple was worth "maybe 50 million dollars, " Jobs said in a taped recording with Isaacson. "I knew I never had to worry about money again. " Jobs also had a natural disregard for authority, and felt that normal rules didn't apply to him, Isaacson explains. One manifestation of that principle was visible in a Mercedes sports coupe he owned, which he refused to put a license plate on.

Part 1: Part 2: Steve Jobs Family Photo Album: What did Steve Jobs say about his rivals: This video is no longer available. [via CBS]

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