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STEVE JOBS (PB): THE EXCLUSIVE BIOGRAPHY Paperback – 11 February 2015
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- Print length592 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAbacus
- Publication date11 February 2015
- Dimensions12.8 x 3.8 x 19.5 cm
- ISBN-109780349140438
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Product details
- ASIN : 034914043X
- Publisher : Abacus; 2015th edition (11 February 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 592 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780349140438
- Item Weight : 790 g
- Dimensions : 12.8 x 3.8 x 19.5 cm
- Country of Origin : United Kingdom
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,675 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Walter Isaacson is writing a biography of Elon Musk. He is the author of The Code Breaker: Jennifer Doudna, Gene Editing, and the Future of the Human Race; Leonardo da Vinci; Steve Jobs; Einstein: His Life and Universe; Benjamin Franklin: An American Life; The Innovators: How a Group of Hackers, Geniuses, and Geeks Created the Digital Revolution; and Kissinger: A Biography. He is also the coauthor of The Wise Men: Six Friends and the World They Made. He is a Professor of History at Tulane, has been CEO of the Aspen Institute, chairman of CNN, and editor of Time magazine.
Customer reviews

Reviewed in India on 15 March 2023
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Top reviews
Top reviews from India
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But,
The pages are yellowish although it's a original copy! The pages are thin. The publisher should not do cost cutting with this book least. User friendly is what Steve taught the world. [Hachette] India is poor not Indians!

Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 15 March 2023
But,
The pages are yellowish although it's a original copy! The pages are thin. The publisher should not do cost cutting with this book least. User friendly is what Steve taught the world. [Hachette] India is poor not Indians!

This is one of the best biography I've read yet. The writing style of author keeps reader spellbound like a movie, although its almost 600 pages long but never bores. Every facets of Steve Jobs life was detailed in this biography. A great book by author and a must read for anyone interested in technology, history, biography, leadership.
Now, about Steve Jobs, he was the Villain and Hero of his own story. A not so great or humble human being, who didn't accept his daughter for a long time, bashes his colleagues / subordinates / zero appetite to respect other's opinion or emotions or feelings. On the other hand, he was a great leader, business innovator who built great companies from scratch and definitely raised from ashes (Apple & Pixar).
How, under his leadership, Apple built first iPod, multi touchscreen phone, then Tablet and paved a way for other companies to follow. The way he built an integrated Apple ecosystem which is still very relevant even today and everybody aspire to use its product once in a while. Even the might of Android developed by Google or Microsoft were not able to leave Apple behind in the tech race. Steve Jobs dream to create a Company which will change the world and put a dent in the Universe is still at work and moving ahead undeterred.
My major takeaways
1) he was rebel and control freak by heart.
2)he was against hackers
3) believed in end to end integration (less scope for third party guys to crack)
4)he considered himself a pirate against big brother IBM when he started ,watch 1984 ad
But in the end apple became one and started controlling all aspects of the user and locking the customer with iTunes and iCloud account ( sunk cost effect, and almost impossible to migrate)
5)his animation company Pixar was so good that he ended up becoming the largest shareholder with 7% stake in Disney when they bought Pixar ( his negotiation skills were that good)
6) his wife made sure that even his coffin was designed by the same guys at apple and had no screws in them .
7)His last words were 'oh wow' seeing his complete family just before going unconscious forever.
He was an institution by himself!
My last takeaway
Will be cautious to buy any apple product as I know will never be able to come out of that ecosystem forever ♾️.
The writer has done the work that hooked the reader and encouraged them repeat the book many times.
Top reviews from other countries

A surprising man for a surprising time.

Snippets:
Believed first and foremost in making great things before making money. Pretend to be completely in control and people will assume that you are. The goal of starting a company is to make something you believe in and that will last, not to get rich. Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication - "less but better". To be truly simple, you have to go really deep. Design must reflect a product's essence. Good execution is as important as a great idea. A-players like to work together, not tolerate B-players. You can't afford to tolerate the B-players. Even the aspects that remain hidden should be done beautifully - a great carpenter isn't going to use lousy wood for the back of a cabinet just because it isn't seen (how many CEO's behave like that as opposed to finding cost-cuts?). Don't accept "no" for an answer, even if it means adopting a "reality distortion field". Deciding what not to do is as important as deciding what to do. People who know what they're talking about don't need PowerPoint. If something isn't right, you can't just ignore it and say "we'll fix it later" - that's what other companies do! Motivations really matter - if you don't love music, don't create a music product. The best way to begin a speech is to say "let me tell you a story", because nobody wants a lecture. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way to avoid the trap of thinking that you have something to lose: memento mori. "Here's to the crazy ones".

Like he did with Franklin and Einstein, Isaacson has done a masterful job of weaving the myriad, intertwining threads of a lifetime into a cohesive and coherent narrative. I can only begin to fathom the colossal amount of work that went into organising the contents of 40+ interviews into robust prose such as this.
Steve Jobs was a complicated, conflicted, genius, he was an abusive, unpredictable, visionary pioneer. Narcissistic and egotistical, but also determined and passionate about moving humanity forward. In brief, Jobs was a lot of things.
Prior to my reading this book, I did not fully grasp the degree to which Jobs and his company revolutionised so many industries, ranging from personal computers to music to tablets and software.
Coming out of this book, I'm still uncertain as to whether I should view Steve as flawed hero or a likeable villain -- but perhaps the hallmark of a truly great biography is that it conveys the true depth of every individual, one which surpasses unidimensional categories and value judgements.
Massive, massive recommend from me!

After reading this book, I am full of admiration for the genius of this man and the incredible legacy he has left behind for us all. I was fortunate, in that we chose it for our Self Development bookclub, and were therefore able to stretch it over 5 sessions. It allowed us to do justice to the book.

What shines through is Jobs’ unique personality which enabled him to achieve great things, namely ground breaking digital products combined with ground breaking designs with an emphasis on purity and simplicity. Uniquely Jobs worked at the interface of art and technology.
Oh, and did I fail to mention that he also, and at the same time! developed a world-class animation film company that slapped Disney around the face.
Now of course Jobs did not achieve all of these single-handedly he made great partnerships and then selected A players to be on his team. Jobs’ uniqueness is the way that he brought out the best of people’s abilities; he regularly made them go further than they thought they as people could go and that it was possible to go period. How he did this is not particularly pretty with a combination of staring, timed silences and simply telling somebody that what they had produced what s**t and that they could do a whole load better. Jobs’ world was black or white, something was either great or s**t and his opinion on a person or their work could vacillate between the two within the space of one working day! He said it like it was and regarded it as his job to do this.
He must have been a boss from hell but yet so great was his enthusiasm and so great was the product that was being developed that people stepped up to the plate to deliver. Their job satisfaction was in the delivery and getting that final ounce of praise, even if on occasion Jobs’ took all of the credit.
He was also a charismatic and fearless negotiator who would charm and bully the necessary people to get the best deal.
By him not shilly-shallying around and taking people’s feelings into account and being fearless he was able to achieve greatness.
Jobs’ attention to finite detail and laser-like focus was such that he would not baulk from going to a major re-design, just weeks away from the launch of a product. Design meant everything to him.
His laser-like focus enabled him to block out of his life things that he did not want to deal with. Most notably this occurred in his personal life when he was deciding whether to marry Laurenne Powel, or, most dramatically his own health. We’ll never know whether if Jobs had had the surgery on his pancreas when his doctors first advised him to have it, he would still be here continuing to develop great products.
The last one hundred pages left me with a heavy heart. It is within these pages that Jobs’ battle with cancer is recounted. I found myself willing him to beat the cancer, whilst knowing that he was already dead. His passing is a great loss because of the uniqueness that I have described above, namely the dove-tailing of art and technology.
So even if you’re a non-techy you will still enjoy this book. I highly commend it to you.