TidBITS#1097/10-Oct-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1097>


  Apple co-founder, former CEO, and chairman Steve Jobs has passed away
  at age 56, and although the event was not entirely unexpected, it hit
  the technology community and the outside world hard. We’re devoting
  this special issue of TidBITS entirely to Steve Jobs, starting with
  Jeff Carlson’s news coverage and a large collection of links to other
  Jobs-related content from around the Internet. We also have thoughts
  on Jobs’s legacy from TidBITS staffers Mark H. Anbinder and Rich
  Mogull, and from guest contributor Angus Wong. Finally, TidBITS
  publisher Adam Engst explores the question of why Steve Jobs’s death
  has been so unsettling for so many people. Look for your regular issue
  of TidBITS shortly.

Articles
    Steve Jobs Dead at 56
    Steve Jobs: Sharing the Joy
    Steve Jobs: Bringing Technology to the Masses
    Steve Jobs: Among the Crazy Ones
    Mourning Steve Jobs


Steve Jobs Dead at 56
---------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12539>
  68 comments

  Apple co-founder, former CEO, and chairman of the board Steve Jobs 
  passed away Wednesday, 5 October 2011 at age 56. The news was 
  released by Apple’s board of directors, whose statement reads:

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/10/05Statement-by-Apples-Board-of-Directors.html>
      
      We are deeply saddened to announce that Steve Jobs passed 
      away today.
      
      Steve’s brilliance, passion and energy were the source of 
      countless innovations that enrich and improve all of our 
      lives. The world is immeasurably better because of Steve.
      
      His greatest love was for his wife, Laurene, and his 
      family. Our hearts go out to them and to all who were touched 
      by his extraordinary gifts.

  On the same day, Apple CEO Tim Cook sent an email to the company 
  that read:

<http://www.apple.com/pr/library/2011/10/05Apple-Media-Advisory.html>
      
      Team,
      
      I have some very sad news to share with all of you. Steve 
      passed away earlier today. 
      
      Apple has lost a visionary and creative genius, and the 
      world has lost an amazing human being. Those of us who have 
      been fortunate enough to know and work with Steve have lost a 
      dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves behind a 
      company that only he could have built, and his spirit will 
      forever be the foundation of Apple.
      
      We are planning a celebration of Steve’s extraordinary 
      life for Apple employees that will take place soon. If you 
      would like to share your thoughts, memories and condolences in 
      the interim, you can simply email rememberingsteve@apple.com.
      
      No words can adequately express our sadness at Steve’s 
      death or our gratitude for the opportunity to work with him. 
      We will honor his memory by dedicating ourselves to continuing 
      the work he loved so much.
      
      Tim

  Jobs’s family also released a statement:

<http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Statement-by-Steve-Jobs-bw-3903835262.html>
      
      Steve died peacefully today surrounded by his family.
      
      In his public life, Steve was known as a visionary; in his 
      private life, he cherished his family. We are thankful to the 
      many people who have shared their wishes and prayers during 
      the last year of Steve’s illness; a website will be provided 
      for those who wish to offer tributes and memories.
      
      We are grateful for the support and kindness of those who 
      share our feelings for Steve. We know many of you will mourn 
      with us, and we ask that you respect our privacy during our 
      time of grief.

  When Jobs resigned from the CEO position back in August, we 
  collected a series of reflections which are no less apt now (see 
  “Steve Jobs Resigns: Reactions and Remembrances,” 25 August 
  2011).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12446>

  Apple has set up a Remembering Steve Jobs page, with a link to an 
  email address for people to share their memories and condolences.

<http://www.apple.com/stevejobs/>

  It’s a massive understatement to say that Jobs profoundly affected 
  all of our lives. It is perhaps most telling that many of us learned 
  of his death via a device — a Mac, an iPhone, an iPad, or an iPod 
  touch — whose creation was made possible in part through his work 
  at Apple.

  Our most heartfelt condolences to his family and friends.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-10/Steve-Jobs-dies.png>


**Global Reaction** -- After writing about Apple and Jobs for years, 
  we at TidBITS certainly appreciate his legacy. However, we’re 
  still surprised at the outpouring of sentiment following Jobs’s 
  passing. Columnists, CEOs, and heads of state have written 
  statements or remembrances, and Apple retail stores became impromptu 
  shrines as thousands of people sought to pay their respects.

  Here are links to some of these expressions of grief and respect 
  that we’ve collected in the comments section of this article on 
  our Web site. I know the number of items is daunting, but they’re 
  worth it.

* President Obama on the passing of Steve Jobs.

<http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2011/10/05/president-obama-passing-steve-jobs-he-changed-way-each-us-sees-world>

* Bill Gates’s comment.

<http://www.thegatesnotes.com/Personal/Steve-Jobs>

* Steve Ballmer’s statement.

<http://www.microsoft.com/Presspass/press/2011/oct11/10-05statement.mspx>

* Steve Wozniak on Steve Jobs.

<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-15198013>

* Another video of Steve Wozniak talking about Steve Jobs. Be sure to 
  watch the final few seconds.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/wozniak-remembers-steve-jobs/2011/10/06/gIQAAINvPL_video.html>

* xkcd’s take… be sure to hover over the comic for the tooltip.

<http://www.xkcd.com/961/>

* Steven Levy’s obituary of Steve Jobs in Wired.

<http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/10/jobs/all/1>

* BoingBoing’s retro homage to Steve Jobs.

<http://boingboing.net/2011/10/05/steve-jobs-has-died.html>

* Tom Standage’s obituary of Steve Jobs in The Economist.

<http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2011/10/obituary>

* Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal on “The Steve Jobs I 
  Knew.”

<http://allthingsd.com/20111005/the-steve-jobs-i-knew/>

* Reports and photos from the Apple campus by Robert Scoble.

<http://scobleizer.com/2011/10/06/my-apology-to-tim-cook-and-remembering-steve-jobs/>

* Nice thoughts about Steve Jobs from Dan Moren of Macworld.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162831/2011/10/steve_jobs_is_gone_but_his_impact_will_live_on.html>

* Jeff Carlson’s article for the Seattle Times, “We all interacted 
  with Steve Jobs, every day”

<http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2016439511_ptmaccjobs08.html>

* John Gruber’s keen eye.

<http://daringfireball.net/2011/10/universe_dented_grass_underfoot>

* Ethernet inventor Bob Metcalfe’s memories of Steve Jobs.

<http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-20116378-37/bob-metcalfe-recalls-steve-jobs-cold-call/>

* John Siracusa remembers Steve Jobs.

<http://arstechnica.com/staff/fatbits/2011/10/steve-jobs-a-personal-remembrance.ars>

* Our friend Jason Snell of Macworld, on putting a dent in the 
  universe.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162827/2011/10/steve_jobs_making_a_dent_in_the_universe.html>

* Tributes to Steve Jobs from developers, collected by Macworld.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162830/2011/10/steve_jobs_developers_politicians_ceos_and_celebrities_pay_tribute.html>

* Guy Kawasaki turns a keynote into an hour-long talk about Steve Jobs 
  and Apple.

<http://www.vimeo.com/30115815>

* Here’s a version of “The Crazy Ones” that never aired, 
  narrated by Steve Jobs.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rwsuXHA7RA>

* A very few touching words from Scott Adams (Dilbert).

<http://dilbert.com/blog/entry/1955__2011/>

* iOS’s autocorrect fails, weeping.

<http://yfrog.com/h8spqpknj>

* Apple Stores turned into impromptu memorials (Macworld).

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162828/2011/10/mourners_flock_to_apple_stores_to_pay_tribute_to_jobs.html>

* John Markoff’s obituary of Steve Jobs in The New York Times.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/business/steve-jobs-of-apple-dies-at-56.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all>

* Nice piece from Lex Friedman about why the death of someone most 
  people have never met feels so sad.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162833/2011/10/why_steve_jobss_death_feels_so_sad.html>

* Nice words from David Pogue.

<http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/06/steve-jobs-imitated-never-duplicated/>

* Interesting take on Jobs’s attitude toward the past. Let it go.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/steve-jobs-and-the-idea-of-letting-go/2011/10/05/gIQAWxNqOL_print.html>

* Links to wonderfully imaginative portraits of Steve Jobs.

<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/rip-steve-jobs-the-artful-apple-founder-is-the-subject-of-these-5-moving-portraits/2011/10/06/gIQAMGUYPL_blog.html>

* Jon Stewart sums up how many of us feel. “We weren’t done with 
  you!”

<http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/thu-october-6-2011/moment-of-zen---steve-jobs--commencement-speech>

* In this time of sorrow, Stephen Colbert’s humor is tremendously 
  welcome.

<http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/399182/october-06-2011/tribute-to-steve-jobs>

* Adam and Tonya contributed stories about Steve Jobs to Shawn 
  King’s collection for Your Mac Life’s “In Memoriam” show. I 
  really recommend listening to it. You can also get the audio 
  directly here.

<http://yourmaclifeshow.com/inthenews/2011/10/07/memoriam-steve-jobs>
<http://yourmaclifeshow.com/QT/In_Memoriam.mp3>

* Don’t miss Steve Jobs’s outstanding commencement address at 
  Stanford University in 2005

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc>

* A Steve Jobs tribute crossword puzzle.

<http://allthingsd.com/20111006/new-york-times-crossword-honors-steve-jobs-with-puzzle-written-by-quora-engineer/>

* Macworld’s look back at Steve’s accomplishments.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162763/2011/10/>

* Dan Frakes on how Steve Jobs humanized technology.

<http://www.macworld.com/article/162843/2011/10/opinion_jobs_humanized_technology_made_the_magical_common.html>

* The New York Times on how Jobs put passion into products.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/08/business/how-steve-jobs-infused-passion-into-a-commodity.html>

* Randall Stross compares Steve Jobs and Thomas Edison.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/09/business/an-analogy-of-thomas-edison-and-steve-jobs.html>

* It’s good to remember that Jobs was also a tyrant.

<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/07/technology/steve-jobs-defended-his-work-with-a-barbed-tongue.html>

* The Onion comes right out and says it.

<http://www.theonion.com/articles/last-american-who-knew-what-the-fuck-he-was-doing,26268/>

* A nice comparison of Steve Jobs and Frank Lloyd Wright from our 
  friend Adam Khan.

<http://www.adamkhan.net/parries/the-mouse-and-the-cantilever>

* Adam talks about Jobs with host Gene Steinberg on the Tech Night Owl 
  Live.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-october-8-2011-peter-cohen-adam-engst-and-daniel-eran-dilger/>


  ----
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Steve Jobs: Sharing the Joy
---------------------------
  by Rich Mogull <rich@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12550>
  2 comments

  The evening that news of Steve Jobs dying broke, my wife and I were 
  at a kid-friendly restaurant with our young daughters. It’s the 
  sort of place with lots of colors and a balloon on the way out, but 
  I was distracted from the family fun, instead following the 
  world’s collective grief by checking Twitter constantly until my 
  battery drained. 

  Like nearly all of you reading this, I never met Steve Jobs. Unlike 
  most of you, I was fortunate enough to attend his last Macworld Expo 
  keynote and experience his vaunted Reality Distortion Field up close 
  and personal. In 2008, I walked in carrying a BlackBerry. I went 
  home with an iPhone. Say what you will about the RDF, but I never 
  regretted that decision. 

  My love of technology started with Apple and, to a lesser degree, 
  Commodore. But for many years I never owned anything designed by 
  Apple, relying instead on borrowed time in school or during visits 
  to friend’s homes. I didn’t buy my first Mac until 2005, when I 
  succumbed to the halo effect generated by the beauty of my first 
  iPod. Today there are six Macs in my house, a couple of iPads, a few 
  iPhones, and various other Apple products. Including, still, that 
  first iPod I can’t seem to let go.

  It doesn’t matter if you love Apple or hate Apple – nearly 
  everything we do in technology today is influenced by the work of 
  the teams Steve led. Every computer, every modern phone, and every 
  music player is influenced more by Apple designs than by any other 
  single source. Even the CG animated cartoons my daughters loves so 
  much wouldn’t be the same without Pixar’s work.

  My mind was more focused on Jobs than my family as we finished our 
  meal and started to leave. Carrying my one-year-old, I passed the 
  hostess desk, grabbed a helium balloon and slipped the ribbon around 
  her wrist. As we crossed into the parking lot, she started giggling 
  and batting at the balloon, a look of sheer happiness in her eyes.

  Smiling down at her, I thought to myself that, as a grown-up, I 
  rarely experience such childlike joy from an object, no matter how 
  simple or complex, cheap or expensive. 

  And then, influenced by the day’s events, I remembered how, for 
  months, I’d stare at the Retina Display on my iPhone 4. Or the 
  cool light emanating from my first iPod. Or how, two models and 
  nearly two years later, I’m rarely without an iPad nearby.

  Not all Apple products bring back my feelings of childhood wonder. 
  But if something with a screen and a processor does, the odds are it 
  was designed in Cupertino. 

  Steve Jobs left us many gifts, but this is the one I think I’ll 
  remember the most. For him it wasn’t enough merely to drive a new 
  technology into our lives; he also wanted us to share in his joy of 
  creation.

  His death hit me harder than I expected. I know this isn’t the end 
  of Apple, or the end of great products. But the entire technology 
  world just lost the one person climbing the hills in front of us, 
  breaking the trail, and enthusiastically turning back to wave and 
  shout “Follow me!” 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12550#comments>
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Steve Jobs: Bringing Technology to the Masses
---------------------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12549>

  The last few days have been a whirlwind — of tributes, of 
  thoughts, of emotions — and I’ve started writing this, in my 
  head, a dozen times. As a part-time journalist who has covered Apple 
  and the Mac industry for over two decades, I suppose I could feel 
  “entitled” to write a remembrance on the occasion of Steve 
  Jobs’s death. I’ve even been within a few feet of the man, first 
  when he visited the Cornell University campus to show off his new 
  NeXT computer and again at various Macworld Expos and WWDCs. But on 
  reflection, I’ve realized just how pervasive Steve Jobs and his 
  works have been in my life.

  Unlike some of the folks whose thoughts I’ve read lately, my first 
  computer wasn’t an Apple — it was an Atari 400. Before long, 
  though, I was using Apple ]s at school, at friends’ houses, and at 
  camp. I played, I wrote, I programmed, and I fiddled.

  My own first Apple product was a 512K Macintosh, purchased freshman 
  year at Cornell when I learned my computer science classes would 
  require programming a Mac. I didn’t remain a computer science 
  major for long, but what was unquestionably the turning point in my 
  life came that winter when a Cornell professor asked me a question 
  one day.

  “Can you program the Mac?”

  Now, I’m not really a programmer. But even in 1986, programming 
  the Mac to do great things was so rational, so easy, that I could 
  fake it pretty well! 

  Before long, I’d gone from programming to Mac-focused technical 
  support, and while the details change every few years, my whole 
  career has been about helping people make the most of the world 
  around them using technology. It didn’t take me long to realize 
  after Steve Jobs’s death: so was his.

  Right from the beginning, when the Apple [ and the first Macintosh.)

  Over the last few days, we’ve certainly heard from the detractors, 
  who feel Jobs and Apple have corrupted or irreparably damaged any 
  number of industries, though most have been respectfully muted in 
  their criticisms. But music industry insiders who hate the drop-off 
  in compact disc sales are balanced by industry players and 
  performers who love being able to sell 99-cent songs with little 
  overhead. Photo labs struggling in the wake of film’s decline are 
  making money as digital photographers order prints from iPhoto. 
  Software developers grumbling about the increasing control Apple 
  wants over the developer ecosystem are balanced by those discovering 
  an unexpected source of considerable revenue. Magazine publishers 
  who wish subscriber revenue weren’t cannibalized by Web site 
  freeloaders are just beginning to appreciate a new paying audience 
  on the iPad.

  The common theme here is that Apple, under the renewed stewardship 
  of a Steve Jobs who returned from NeXT and Pixar with hard-won 
  wisdom and drive, has been successful while simultaneously helping 
  consumers do great things with content and helping an impressive 
  variety of industries profit from it.

  Will the grumbling continue? Of course, and while some is certainly 
  warranted, we also must appreciate that every sea change claims 
  victims, whether it’s farriers suffering as horses were replaced 
  by cars, lamp oil companies losing out as everyone moved to electric 
  lighting, or, soon, cellular carriers watching text-message revenues 
  decline as iMessage helps us bypass artificially expensive SMS text 
  messages.

  What will Apple accomplish next? We can just barely begin to imagine 
  the evolutionary items in the pipeline that Steve Jobs himself had a 
  hand in, never mind the revolutionary ones that will arise from the 
  environment he fostered.

  Steve Jobs didn’t invent the computer, the Internet, or the mobile 
  phone. He just helped make them worth using. What’s next? We’ll 
  see.


  ----
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Steve Jobs: Among the Crazy Ones
--------------------------------
  by Angus Wong <atkw@anguswong.net>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12548>

  Let’s look at three stories today.

  No big deal. Just three stories.

  The first story is that of the personal computer.

  Not to diminish the many contributions from others, but it’s 
  entirely possible to imagine that, without Steve Jobs, “personal 
  computers” might never have entered the mainstream. HP dismissed 
  the idea outright, and IBM took a relative eternity to participate 
  after seeing the promise in the market that Jobs helped create. 
  Without personal computers, the Internet as we know it might be 
  unrecognizably restricted to soldiers and scholars, and who knows 
  what inspiration Tim Berners-Lee might have lacked had he not been 
  working on a NeXT machine at CERN.

  The second story is about users.

  Like Prometheus, Steve Jobs brought technology to the great unwashed 
  masses, to “the rest of us.” Freeing great ideas from incubation 
  in ivory towers and the unlit dens of hobbyists alike, Jobs was the 
  harbinger of the future. Graphical user interfaces, USB, wireless 
  connectivity, user-generated HD content, touchscreens, app stores. 
  He brought to the wider world leading edge innovations in almost 
  every iteration of Apple’s products. And he did so with 
  impatience, with certitude, via transitions that were made with a 
  firm gaze fixed on our shared future, not with a hesitant eye 
  glancing backward to compatibility.

  The third story is about connections.

  Steve Jobs connected us. He gave disparate people a common language 
  of movement and motion. Geeks and gurus. Techies and typographers. 
  He fused together the sheer power of raw computation with entrancing 
  beauty, forming a team that produced images that bring joy to 
  children, while reminding adults of the big picture. He transformed 
  how we experience music, movies, and books, and how we keep in touch 
  as we roam through a hungry, foolish world.

  I reminisce about more than three decades of using technologies 
  gestated by Steve Jobs as I type this article in Pages, on my 
  MacBook Pro, on my birthday. It has been a grand, electrifying road 
  trip, but now we’ve lost one of our most prescient drivers.

  Where were you when you heard the news? For me, it was a beautiful 
  day in Hawaii, a place Jobs enjoyed visiting. The sun was bright and 
  the clouds were light. It was strange to be told that something was 
  amiss in the universe, and yet, like millions of others, I first 
  received word of his passing via a news alert on my iPad.

  Jobs might be amused to know that, even in his passing on, he 
  generated tremendous goodwill and awareness for Apple. And, maybe 
  underscoring the point of his Stanford speech just a tiny bit more, 
  he has skated to where the puck ultimately will be for all of us.

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc>

  I came across this unaired version of Apple’s “Here’s to the 
  Crazy Ones” ad, narrated by Jobs, which unwittingly eulogizes him 
  in the kind of poignant, poetic way he probably would have initially 
  hated, but ultimately approved of. “Because the people who are 
  crazy enough to think they can change the world… are the ones who 
  do.”

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8rwsuXHA7RA>

  Glorify or vilify him, Steve Jobs was, and always will be, obviously 
  and irreplaceably, insanely great.


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Mourning Steve Jobs
-------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12546>
  2 comments

  In 1997, our friend Cary Lu, one of the pre-eminent Macintosh 
  writers of the 1980s and 1990s, died of cancer (see “Cary Lu 
  Remembered,” 29 September 1997). During his last few months, in 
  which we spent more time with Cary than when he was healthy, he 
  commented that some people reacted to his impending death by pulling 
  away, whereas others became closer. The same was true in the 
  immediate aftermath, with several of us collaborating to finish 
  Cary’s final book (see “The Race for Bandwidth,” 21 September 
  1998).

<http://tidbits.com/article/4169>
<http://tidbits.com/article/5099>

  With Steve Jobs passing away this past week (see “Steve Jobs Dead 
  at 56,” 5 October 2011), I found myself thinking of Cary’s 
  death, trying to figure out just what it was I did feel. It wasn’t 
  exactly sadness, because unlike Cary, Jobs wasn’t a personal 
  friend, and I was no more aware of his physical condition than 
  anyone else. I met Jobs only twice, once in the late 1980s at the 
  opening of the first public room of NeXT machines at Cornell 
  University when Tonya and I were undergraduate student supervisors 
  of the computer rooms, and once again briefly on the floor of 
  Macworld Expo when he was walking around with my friend Jeff Robbin, 
  whose SoundJam had been purchased by Apple as the basis for iTunes. 
  I don’t think I spoke to Jobs the first time, and if I said 
  anything on the second occasion, it was a simple thank you.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12539>

  So sadness isn’t the right emotion — I didn’t know Steve Jobs, 
  and he didn’t know me. I have no idea if he even ever saw TidBITS, 
  though it’s possible, since we do count other high-ranking Apple 
  executives among our readers. 

  And yet, after the rush to post our coverage of Jobs’s death on 
  Wednesday night, I had trouble accomplishing anything productive on 
  Thursday and Friday, an experience shared by numerous others who 
  have spent years orbiting Apple. While I couldn’t bring myself to 
  write anything then, I couldn’t resist reading every article about 
  Jobs I saw shared on Twitter, and I found myself wanting to collect 
  and curate them, as if by bringing together the most eloquent and 
  interesting articles I could somehow fill the void in my life that 
  had opened up. You can see my efforts in the comments on our 
  coverage.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12539#comments>

  Ironically, it was a Windows-using friend from college who made me 
  realize why the loss of Jobs was so... unsettling. It was telling 
  that such a friend, with whom we exchange email only a few times a 
  year and see once a year at most, thought the event significant 
  enough to send us a note of condolence. And in further discussion, 
  he pointed out that Jobs and Apple were front and center in the 
  computer revolution of the 1980s, such that he was an iconic figure 
  for everyone who came to computers during that decade, regardless of 
  whether they used Macs. Our generation wasn’t alone — while the 
  founding of Apple was a pivotal moment in the computer revolution 
  for the geeks of the 1980s, Jobs’s return to Apple in 1996 and 
  Apple’s subsequent success with the Mac, iPod, iPhone, and iPad 
  meant that Apple was, if anything, more prominent in the lives of 
  many millions of people coming of age over the last 15 years. 

  It’s not that any of us really knew him, or even felt that we did, 
  it’s that he was always there, always coming out with the next big 
  thing, always offering a reliable touchstone for design and 
  innovation.

  That feeling was echoed by another friend, who reminded us that 
  Tonya and I were the first people she knew who she met at Macworld 
  Boston in 1995 after hearing that Jerry Garcia of the Grateful Dead 
  died. We asked, merely by way of making conversation, how she was 
  doing and she replied, “I don’t know yet. I just heard Jerry 
  Garcia died, and I’m a deadhead.” In her email to us the day 
  after Jobs died, she said the feeling was exactly the same, that 
  life had just changed and while it was hard to see how, it was, and 
  always would be, different in some way.

  None of this is to imply that I have any fear for the future of 
  Apple, Inc. I have too much respect for the abilities of the people 
  who work at Apple to think the company will change in any 
  significant way in the foreseeable future. We’ve been through 
  those arguments before, when Jobs took medical leaves of absence, 
  and when he resigned from the CEO post, and there’s no reason to 
  believe that Apple’s overall direction will change this time.

  But the fact remains that Steve Jobs is gone, and regardless of how 
  well he has inculcated his way of thinking and working into Apple, 
  the technology industry has lost a much-needed part of its soul. At 
  the risk of sounding even geekier than I actually am, Steve Jobs’s 
  death truly is a disturbance in the Force. That’s why so many of 
  us have felt aimless and unfocused since, and if you’re feeling a 
  similar sense of loss, just know that you’re not alone and that it 
  will slowly become the new normal. 

  After two days of being unable to work effectively at the Mac, I 
  spent Saturday outside in the autumn sunshine with Tonya and 
  Tristan. We shook hundreds of pounds of apples out of our trees, 
  went over to a neighbor’s house, and pressed cider for the rest of 
  the afternoon. I won’t pretend that I’m fully engaged yet, but 
  working with the fruit of our land, preparing food for the upcoming 
  winter, was a good reminder that loss — that feeling of emptiness 
  as something comes to an end — is an essential part of the cycle 
  of life. 


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