Visualized: Apple’s celebration of Steve Jobs’ life in Cupertino

The state of California made October 16th “Steve Jobs Day,” and on October 19th, the company he co-founded with Steve Wozniak celebrated his life on campus in Cupertino. The photo here, provided by Apple, shows CEO Tim Cook addressing throngs of people who came to the memorial.

Visualized: Apple’s celebration of Steve Jobs’ life in Cupertino originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 19 Oct 2011 22:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Closing Some Stores During Wednesday Memorial Service

People gathered at the Apple Store in San Francisco to light candles and leave flowers and notes in memory of Steve Jobs. (Photo: James Merithew/Wired.com)

Apple has scheduled a company-only Wednesday memorial service for former CEO and co-founder Steve Jobs, who passed away two weeks ago. Employees at Apple’s Cupertino campus will attend in person, and various retail stores will close for at least an hour in order for employees to view a live broadcast of the service.

In an email to employees, CEO Tim Cook said that the memorial is being held “to take time to remember the incredible things Steve achieved in his life and the many ways he made our world a better place.”

The memorial will be held at an outdoor amphitheater at Apple’s headquarters, and could last from one to three hours.

Apple Stores rarely close during operating hours. Such partial closures normally occur only to accommodate major product launches.

Jobs passed away on Oct. 5 at the age of 56 due to complications relating to pancreatic cancer. Makeshift memorials were erected at Apple’s headquarters, as well as at Apple Stores around the world, to celebrate and honor the life of Apple’s longtime CEO. A private funeral was held Oct. 7, followed by a larger memorial service attended by coworkers, friends and a number of industry leaders.


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Gadget Lab Podcast: Wired Remembers Steve Jobs


          

As many of you know by now, Apple chairman of the board and co-founder Steve Jobs passed away on Wednesday at the age of 56. Instead of bringing you our usual episode of the Gadget Lab podcast, we thought it appropriate to take a moment to reflect on what Apple under Steve meant to us, and how his vision for products shaped the very way we interact with technology today.

We’ve gathered a number of Wired staff members to discuss some of our experiences with Apple’s gadgets from the past three decades, from the first Macintosh computer to the advent of the iPad. In Steve’s passing, we’re reminded just how much the products, the company and the man have become a part of our lives.

Rest in peace, Steve.

You can also get the Gadget Lab video podcast via iTunes, or the Gadget Lab audio podcast. Prefer RSS? You can subscribe to the Gadget Lab video or audio podcast feeds.

Or listen to the audio below:

Gadget Lab audio podcast #127

http://downloads.wired.com/podcasts/assets/gadgetlabaudio/GadgetLabAudio0127.mp3


Remembering Steve Jobs Across the Web

A memorial for Steve Jobs was created by Alf Watt, a communication software engineer at Apple, outside the San Francisco Apple Store on Wednesday night following the news of Jobs’ passing. Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

People of all types came out to celebrate, mourn and honor Steve Jobs after learning of his death yesterday. Some converged on local Apple Stores or flocked to Apple’s Cupertino campus, while others paid their respects online.

Several dozen Apple and Jobs fans stopped at the San Francisco Apple Store over the course of an hour Wednesday.

“We just wanted to honor Steve,” said Richard Rucci, a writer who works for a tablet magazine that will be launching on the iPad soon. Rucci’s had a long relationship with Apple products. “My first computer was an Apple IIe in 1989. We’ve always had Macs in our house.”

He and his son Michael brought several dozen tea lights and were lighting them to help create a makeshift memorial in front of the store. “It kinda shows a message for all I have to live up to,” says Michael, a 9th grader. ”He’s a really admirable person. He’s the reason behind all of the tech advances right now.”

The Fifth Avenue Apple Store in New York. Photo: John Abell

Others were kneeling on the sidewalk to write their thoughts, best wishes and favorite quotes on multi-colored sticky notes, which they placed on the glass windows at the front of the Apple Store.

Sharon Geraldine, a 19-year-old visiting from Indonesia, wrote on a Post-It: “Apple is the most awesome phone ever. Thanks Steve Jobs!” “I didn’t plan this, but I’m really glad I came,” she says. “I want to show him how thankful I am, I think he did a good job to the world.”

Others stopped by the store after finishing up their work day.

“I was thinking about going down to Cupertino,” says Tristan Harris, CEO of a San Francisco start-up. ”I worked at Apple a long time ago, but I saw on Twitter that people were coming here. I wanted to share the memory, this is really important. It feels like a member of my family just left. All the biggest things I’ve done in my career relate to the ‘change the world ethos’ of Apple. It’s a really sad day.”

Fans set up a similar memorial in front of New York’s Fifth Avenue Apple Store. Bouquets, notes, photos and apples surrounded a “Keep Thinking Different” sign.

At Apple’s campus, a number of people came to honor Steve’s passing. A shrine was created with flowers, balloons, candles, cards and posters — even a white iPad illuminated with Steve Jobs’ image on the Apple home page.

Tech blog Gizmodo started a “Where were you?” hashtag on Twitter Thursday morning for readers and writers alike to share how they found out about the news. Editor Joe Brown said, “I was walking down the street to dinner. Never made it; got the call, commandeered a stranger’s stoop.”

Former Gizmodo editor Brian Lam took the opportunity to write a detailed post revealing what really went on between himself and Steve Jobs back in 2010 when Gizmodo got a hold of a prototype iPhone 4 prior to its release. “Sometimes,” he wrote, “I wish we never found that phone at all.” The Wall Street Journal’s personal technology columnist Walt Mossberg also took the time to share his account of personal interactions between himself and Jobs, a series of phone calls from the late ’90s when Steve had recently returned to Apple.

A lone bouquet of flowers sits outside the Emeryville Apple Store after closing time Wednesday night. Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com

Many learned of Jobs’ passing on one of the very devices that Jobs created, an iPhone, iPad or MacBook. “I was reading about the iPhone 4S on my iPad 2 when I got a push notification about Steve. I could feel the loss of the legend,” Twitter user Cameron Love said.

A tribute made from the parts of a MacBook Pro. Image: Mint Foundry

Several Wired readers, like Oojal Jhutti and Mint Foundry, felt inspired to make memorial websites or videos. Others across the internet decided to watch or re-watch Steve Jobs’ inspirational 2005 Stanford commencement address, which the university made available on YouTube.

Jezebel blogger Whitney Jefferson remembered Steve with music. She created a Steve Jobs playlist using the songs she already had in iTunes that were used in Apple commercials.

Some publications, like The Atlantic, provided open forums where commenters could share their thoughts and memories, and Reddit was flooded with quotes and well wishes.

Ex-Apple designer Mike Matas uploaded a series of photos that provided a glimpse into the fun side of Steve Jobs: images of Steve playing with Photobooth in 2005.

And everyone from Bill Gates to President Obama issued public statements or took to Twitter to share their thoughts of the late, great icon. Gates said, “The world rarely sees someone who has had the profound impact Steve has had, the effects of which will be felt for many generations to come.” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said, “Steve, thank you for being a mentor and a friend.” President Barack Obama said, “The world has lost a visionary. And there may be no greater tribute to Steve’s success than the fact that much of the world learned of his passing on a device he invented.”

Steve Jobs has made a tremendous impact on both individual people and society at large. I’ll leave you with this xkcd comic. It’s called “Eternal Flame.”

Apple fans pay tribute to Steve Jobs in New York. Photo: John Abell/Wired.com


Steve Wozniak on Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs was the man most often associated with Apple, but another Steve played a big part in the formation of the company, and Mr. Wozniak has some kind words about his friend and former business partner. Well said, Woz.

Steve Wozniak on Steve Jobs originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Oct 2011 12:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Remembering Steve Jobs: we all pay tribute

As news has of the passing of Steve Jobs spread tonight, people have started showing up at Apple’s stores to pay tribute to its co-founder and former leader. We stopped by the 5th Avenue, NYC store and found this scene with many gathering to pay tribute through their thoughts, words and pictures. Outside there’s signs and flowers, downstairs the store is packed. Apple headquarters featured a bouquet covered bench, adorned with homemade signs, and an iPad. In downtown San Francisco, people lit candles and placed post-in notes on the Apple store’s windows. The images we’ve captured are in the galleries below, if you have something to share of your own then contact us via our tips form so we can include it here.

Sean Buckley, Darren Murph, Zach Honig and Myriam Joire contributed to this report.

Remembering Steve Jobs: we all pay tribute originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 23:28:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Jobs in his own words

I’ll always stay connected with Apple. I hope that throughout my life I’ll sort of have the thread of my life and the thread of Apple weave in and out of each other, like a tapestry. There may be a few years when I’m not there, but I’ll always come back

— Steve Jobs, 1985

That’s a quote from a Playboy interview Steve Jobs gave back in 1985. February of 1985, to be specific, right before Steve would be ousted from the company that he co-founded with Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne in 1976. Apple of course famously grew out of a garage, the brains of Woz, the drive of Jobs building the company over the next nine years into a powerhouse in the burgeoning home computer market.

Join us for a look back at the life of Steve Jobs.

Continue reading Steve Jobs in his own words

Steve Jobs in his own words originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Oct 2011 21:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Jobs’ Greatest Achievements

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Steve as CEO


With Steve Jobs’ passing, we have lost one of the greatest technological innovators of our time.

Jobs wasn’t just a savvy businessman, he was a visionary who made it his mission to humanize personal computing, rewriting the rules of user experience design, hardware design and software design. His actions reverberated across industry lines: He shook up the music business, dragged the wireless carriers into the boxing ring, changed the way software and hardware are sold and forever altered the language of computer interfaces. Along the way, he built Apple up into one of the most valuable corporations in the world.

Quite a run. He will be missed.

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