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Inside Steve's Brain, Expanded Edition

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One of USA Today's Best Business Books of 2008-now updated with a new chapter

It's hard to believe that one man revolutionized computers in the 1970s and '80s (with the Apple II and the Mac), animated movies in the 1990s (with Pixar), and digital music in the 2000s (with the iPod and iTunes). No wonder some people worship Steve Jobs like a god. On the other hand, stories of his epic tantrums and general bad behavior are legendary.

Inside Steve's Brain cuts through the cult of personality that surrounds Jobs to unearth the secrets to his unbelievable results. So what's really inside Steve's brain? According to Leander Kahney, who has covered Jobs since the early 1990s, it's a fascinating bundle of contradictions.

This expanded edition includes a new chapter on Jobs's very public health crisis and the debate about Apple's future.

320 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2008

228 people are currently reading
8480 people want to read

About the author

Leander Kahney

22 books134 followers
Leander Kahney is managing editor, formerly a senior reporter at Wired News, the online sister publication of Wired. He is the author of The Cult of Mac , Cult of iPod and Inside Steve's Brain. Kahney is best known for his popular blog, Cult of Mac (The Cult of Mac Blog). As a prominent writer on Apple- and Mac-related topics, Kahney was once theorized (incorrectly) to be the identity of Fake Steve Jobs.

Leander has worked for many other publications, including: MacWeek, as a senior reporter, Scientific American, The Observer and The Guardian in London. Working as a newspaper reporter in the UK, he covered amongst other things, the war in former Yugoslavia.

According to Gawker.com, Leander Kahney has been laid off from Wired.COM.

He is currently living in San Francisco, California and is a father of four.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 214 reviews
Profile Image for Tim.
Author 74 books2,678 followers
August 31, 2008
While there's not much new here for someone who's followed Apple for years, Leander does a great job of pulling it all together. This is a book I want to make sure lots of people in my company read. It's a compelling portrait of a man who is, by all accounts, extremely difficult. But he is also a great, recurring genius. Understanding what makes him tick is valuable for anyone in business.

The key takeaway that I want my employees to read the book for is the idea that marketing isn't something you add to the product; it's an inherent part of it. "Character is destiny," as Heraclitus said. Apple has delivered remarkable products because Steve understands this in his bones.

There are other great business insights too - the importance of getting it right, even if you have to start over. (The story of how the Apple stores were redesigned at a cost of millions after everyone in the organization was ready to roll with the original design is alone worth the cost of the book. So often, people are reluctant to make changes late in a process. Yet often, it isn't till what is normally considered "too late" that it becomes clear what will make the difference between good enough and great.

I can think of many times when I've insisted on last minute changes, and others when I've let myself be dissuaded. I've never regretted the former; I've almost always regretted the latter.

Reading Steve's story reminds me to be more unreasonable in the pursuit of excellence. This is a great reminder for anyone in business.
Profile Image for Jr Bacdayan.
215 reviews2,001 followers
April 21, 2013
This part (supposed) biography, part (again supposed) leadership guide, is a hollow metal pitcher. You're duped by the weight of it, thinking that it's full. But there's nothing to be gained no matter how much you try pouring something out. If anything, it's full of itself. It reflects Steve Jobs' image, but that of a distorted one. You see, the negative outweigh the positive so much in this book, that you'd end up wishing you hadn't read it. Firstly, the biography part was too praising. It was too full of opinion to be considered a decent biography. Basically, Steve was portrayed as Superman. I understand that he was really gifted, but the tone set was that of a disillusioned yapping dog heedlessly drooling over its perceived omnipotent variation of its master. If that wasn't bad enough, the leadership points it stressed out were really absurd. Honestly, I was really disgusted by it. The principles/guidelines at the end of every chapter were based on Jobs' reaction to certain events or problems aforementioned. If he was moody, it was like: Be moody, but in a good way. Shallow, shallow, shallow. Full of hollow hypotheses. Don't read this book. You'll end up getting pissed at the "oh so obvious" principles. Leander supposes that his readers are stupid, he rubs it in your face. Big mistake. There's a reason why decent people avoid self-helps and be-like-this books.

Here's the gist: Steve's the perfect man, everyone should think and be like him.

There are lots of purely biographical books about Steve Jobs out there. If you're ever interested, choose from them. Don't make the same mistake I did.

Profile Image for Sheila.
79 reviews
July 26, 2013
I find this book very informative in that it details how a visionary created something great that it distinguishes not only Apple and Pixar from other tech companies, but also Steve Jobs from other CEOs or C-level executives who walked this earth and who can only claim that they run a company. Steve Jobs didn't just run a company, that's plain to see. He produced hit after hit of high-tech consumer products as the author and tech writer Leander Kahney explains in this 9-chapter, almost 300-page, very handy book.

So what does the reader expect to know from this sort-of-biography / business book?

Don't expect to read things like What Steve Jobs did is textbook management skill in that he used the organization to create something of value. Kahney is a blogger and a former reporter for Wired magazine so you'll find the writing both factual and anecdotal. Just don't expect Harvard Business Review type of analysis, which I know some followers of successful companies are wont to read. But Kahney uses concepts like vertical integration, innovation, control, etc. to explain the business decisions made by Jobs so that should attract even the most adept of business practitioners.

This chapter title should give you a clue of Kahney's tone in writing: Elitism:Hire Only A Players, Fire the Bozos.

So what was Steve Jobs thinking inside his brain that made him legendary?

Not money. That was the result of months, years of prototyping that his top designer, Jonathan Ive, and his other managers performed. Not competition. He wasn't concerned about company rankings or market share. Again, those are results. What was inside his brain is this vision of having the best customer experience with him as the test market. If he thought that a competitor gadget or any high-tech appliance, say, a washing machine, is too inferior both in appearance and functionality or too complicated to use, he wanted, he obsessed about improving them.

That was his mission. He improved the way we use our everyday tools, communication---connecting being the most important and human.

You'll find anecdotes galore here, placed in between Kahney's piecing through of the puzzle that is Steve, manager of people and talents and inventor of simple and elegant communication and music tools.

And yes, he was a despot. Yes, he was a perfectionist. I'm not really shocked. Though I'm sure I'll be the first person out of the door if I should work for someone as demanding like Steve. But that's my choice. The employees of Apple made their choice and now they're enjoying their Italian cars and other such luxuries.

Thank you Steve.

I look now at my long dead Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, bought in Singapore before the first iPhone was launched. I've since replaced it with an iPod Nano so that I can still listen secretly to my parents' music when I'm feeling nostalgic. I wouldn't be caught dead listening to Elvis in public (from where I came, it's acceptable for people to turn on their radio really loud especially on weekends).

But with 1,000 songs in my pocket, at least I can have that private, secret experience.

Thank you Steve.

One more thing: Steve Jobs once said after taking the helm of the company in 1997 that he had second thoughts about getting involved for the second time. I like reading that little known fact, that moment of doubt. It made Steve human, at least to me.
Profile Image for حسين المتروك.
Author 5 books622 followers
March 28, 2015
الكتاب مُلهم، فهذا الرجل لديه الكثير من الجنون ..
رغم كُل شيء إلا أنّه تمكن من التركيز على جوانب مُحدّدة وانطلق ..

الصوتيات، الفيديو، الكتاب.
حاولت تطوير هذه الأمور، وانطلق نحو المجد ..

ستيف جوبز، شخصية مُلهمة غريبة، وهذه الرحلة تُعطي الكثير ..
Profile Image for Phoenix  Perpetuale.
234 reviews72 followers
January 5, 2019
I find this book very motivating. When I red it, something happened inside me. Something changed. Something positive.
Profile Image for Tariq A.
232 reviews73 followers
November 13, 2011
لم أتعوّد أن أقرأ كتابا بهذا التوثيق الدقيق، فهو في نهاية كل معلومة يُضيف رقمًا يدل على مصدرها، وفي نهاية الكتاب فصل كامل للمراجع يُمكنك من خلاله
معرفة مصدر كل معلومة بشكل مفصّل
الكتاب رائع، يكشف معلومات جديدة، ويتعمق في شخصية ستيف وطبيعة عمله، حتى يُصبح واضحا للقارئ،
وأظنّ أن أكثر الناس لايعرف حقيقة ستيف وطبيعة عمله الفعلية، فهو ليس بمبرمج، ولا مُصمم، إنه شخص دقيق يمتلك رؤية فنية وجمالية

الترجمة سيئة، وربما تمت الاستعانة ببرنامج ترجمة الكتروني
وهذا سبب الترجمة الحرفية لبعض مصطلحات التقنية التي تحتاج لترجمة مفهوم
Profile Image for Sean.
20 reviews3 followers
April 29, 2008
Nothing really new here --much of the material is based on already published sources. But still, it's a nice compilation of how Steve Jobs built (and rebuilt) Apple, and some of his interesting ideas about product development and management.

Loved the deet about the Jobs family taking 2 weeks to purchase a washing machine and dryer (got to keep those black turtle necks clean), as they had dinner-time discussions on design, function, and eco-friendliness of the various products.

Also was reminded that Jobs is not without error in his judgement. While all the young world was getting into digital music as the turn of the century, Jobs thought the killer app was going to be digital video. Took him awhile to figure out music was at the center of the digital hub. iTunes and iPod followed shortly thereafter.
Profile Image for Rohit Duggal.
12 reviews1 follower
April 2, 2015

Inside Steve's Brain
Steve Jobs has turned his personality traits into a business philosophy. Here’s how he does it.

It’s hard to believe that one man revolutionized computers in the 1970s and ’80s (with the Apple II and the Mac), animated movies in the 1990s (with Pixar), and digital music in the 2000s (with the iPod and iTunes). No wonder some people worship him like a god. On the other hand, stories of his epic tantrums and general bad behavior are legendary.

Inside Steve’s Brain cuts through the cult of personality that surrounds Jobs to unearth the secrets to his unbelievable results. It reveals the real Steve Jobs—not his heart or his famous temper, but his mind. So what’s really inside Steve’s brain? According to Leander Kahney, who has covered Jobs since the early 1990s, it’s a fascinating bundle of contradictions.

Jobs is an elitist who thinks most people are bozos—but he makes gadgets so easy to use, a bozo can master them.

He’s a mercurial obsessive with a filthy temper—but he forges deep partnerships with creative geniuses like Steve Wozniak, Jonathan Ive, and John Lasseter.

He’s a Buddhist and anti-materialist—but he produces mass-market products in Asian factories, and he promotes them with absolute mastery of the crassest medium, advertising.

In short, Jobs has embraced the traits that some consider flaws—narcissism, perfectionism, the desire for total control—to lead Apple and Pixar to triumph against steep odds. And in the process, he has become a self-made billionaire.

In Inside Steve’s Brain, Kahney distills the principles that guide Jobs as he launches killer products, attracts fanatically loyal customers, and manages some of the world’s most powerful brands.

The result is this unique book about Steve Jobs that is part biography and part leadership guide, and impossible to put down. It gives you a peek inside Steve’s brain, and might even teach you something about how to build your own culture of innovation.
Profile Image for Bakari.
Author 2 books54 followers
September 11, 2010
"Inside Steve's Brain" is much more about Apple than it is about Steve Jobs. I don’t remember the book including any personal interviews with Jobs, nor does the writer provide any behind-the-scene knowledge about how Jobs me makes decisions concerning his company. This is a useful book if you want to find out more about Apple in general, but it won't give you much insight about Jobs the man.
Profile Image for Diogo Miguel.
44 reviews4 followers
September 7, 2022
Solid book. Some parts were very interesting. Not a lifechanging book. If you're someome into techonology and product developmemt I would definitly reccomend you to read it. Good book but nothing I would read again, therefore 3 stars.
Profile Image for Linsey.
148 reviews
May 16, 2022
Just a report on a privileged man who was an abusive boss but also the person behind Apple. He displayed the behaviour that is only accepted from rich white men
Profile Image for Živilė.
31 reviews7 followers
November 15, 2019
Nusprendžiau visus detektyvus padėti į šalį ir paskaityti kažką šiek tiek kitokio. Nežinau ar dėl to, kad ši knyga išleista pakankamai seniai ar dėl to, jos viskas buvo kartojama begalę kartų visoje knygoje ar dėl to, kad nebuvo jokios logiškos ir tikslios laiko tekmės, bet labai sunkiai ir lėtai man ši knyga skaitės.
Profile Image for Diana Arm.
31 reviews
August 5, 2020
Pagaliau pabaigiau skaityti! Kažkodėl skaitėsi sunkiai, bet nepasakyčiau kad neįdomiai, daug įdomių įdėjų, faktų iš “Apple” gyvenimo. Bet manau, jeigu kažkas nuo pat pradžiu seka “Apple”naujienas ir žiūrėjo dokumentinį filmą šita tema, tai šitą knygą būtų nenaudinga skaityti.
Profile Image for Clorush.
41 reviews8 followers
July 25, 2013
I started using iTunes in 2011 for downloading podcasts by several pastors of USA (Joel Osteen and Erwin McManus to name some) and thinking that I owe a lot to Apple, the company that made iTunes, I decided to read Inside Apple and this book, so that I may learn a thing or two concerning the man who made Apple achieve something so significant. I'm aware of Apple due to its reputation, and since I'm a student of Information System, I want to know what impact they actually have made on the Digital Age.

Reading this book was a great experience, partly because I felt like I have read something like it before (Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell,) and now that I think of it, this exploration of the man Steve Jobs and his company Apple confirmed what Gladwell has said in the Outliers, that the time when you were born matters a great deal in achieving success. Jobs' total control philosophy failed with Apple II, but it succeeded when he launched iPod. His values of design, marketing, and ease of use were unpopular at the years of early PC growth, when the main buyers of computers were geeks and corporations. Yet now, with the rise of the digital lifestyle era, things were different.

One thing that I know about Human-Computer Interaction, is that this group of human beings that we labeled as "user" is made up of all kinds of people. Some users are geeks, and they'd love to tweak their hardwares and softwares, adding this software and that graphic cards, and of course that chip and this motherboard (During the first two weeks after I bought my Samsung Galaxy Tab, I rooted the device and installed various custom ROMs and Kernels, until I decided to restore my original version of Android. Those ROMs and Kernels are confusing and unstable.) Some Users are just.. well, "normal" people. This group of user is not interested in rooting their Android devices or jailbreaking their iPhone. They just bought the device because of what it can do, like editing videos and photos, sharing their things in social media like Facebook and Twitter. Clearly, when I said they are not interested in rooting or jailbreaking, that also means they are not going to like it when their devices crash and freeze. My Tab suffered a few bugs when I rooted it, but I'm interested in computers and tablets.

Now the question is this: if a tech company decided to create a computer that would be a must-have for every single human being alive on this planet, what values must the company embedded inside the computer?

Variations of choices or stability and reliability?

This is an important question in understanding why Apple is so influential and successful in what it does. It created several products that fits the need of the people as "normal" users. People who don't really care what type of graphic cards the device has, as long as it works and they get what they want. People who just want to use computers for productivity's sake, not for tweaking and learning about all the different hardwares and softwares, and all the list of names of computers like Asus A43E , Asus A43C and Asus A43A. WHATEVER!

Computers were an integral part of life nowadays, and if people need to learn all these different names, types, and specs of computers BEFORE they could decide which one to buy, then, instead of enhancing productivity and making things simple, the IT would reduce human's productivity. It seems pretty obvious and taken for granted now, with the emergence of Android and Windows 8, and the still-in-development operating systems like Chrome and Firefox. But we have to remember these new OSes are emulations of iOS. They were possible because somebody showed that it is possible.

I think that's an important lesson in understanding how these small, rectangular things that we described best as "computer" interacts with humans. In small and subtle ways, computers changed the way we live and the way we do things little by little, yet those changes are not without explanations. There are people out there who do these research and explorations to simplify a computer, because creating a good, simple, and easy-to-use devices like iPhone and Mac is not effortless. It is created diligently and carefully by a team of dedicated people who would have a meeting at 9pm to 1am discussing their progress.

But then, how to know what these normal users want out of a computer? You can't go around and ask people what they want out of a computer when all they ever experienced with a computer are freezes, complicated instructions and data-lost. You will need a mind that could comprehend what the "normal" users would like best in a computer, and that is another thing that Steve Jobs has in his brain.

Steve was an Outlier indeed, and as with all Outliers, there is a profound, almost unbelievable story of how one achieve significant success and--sometimes--change the world.
Profile Image for Bojan Tunguz.
407 reviews191 followers
June 25, 2011
There have been plenty of books that tell the story of Apple Computers' origins and the early days, and as correctly pointed out by some other reviewers there has been a lot of press about Steve Jobs and Apple over the years. However, I find it useful and interesting to have many of those stories collected in a single book, especially if it mostly deals with Apple's recent resurgence. Steve Jobs, somewhat predictably, does not feature too prominently in this book. This may be surprising considering that the book's title promises to deal with nothing less than Steve's brain. However, Steve Jobs is notoriously private person and his interaction with the media is very limited. There have been very few interviews that he gave over the years, and those that he did give reveal very little about his own personal life, musings or misgivings. Most of what we know about him comes from people who had closely observed him work, mostly his current and former employees. One such employee is Jonathan Ive, the designer that is the great driving forces behind recent surge of Apple success. He is the designer behind iPod, iMac and a host of other products. The book is very good at documenting how some of these products came about, but it still doesn't reveal too much as much of it remains in the realm of industrial secrets. Each chapter ends with a few bullet-pointed "lessons" that we are supposed to take away from the way that Steve Jobs approaches design and business decisions. Most of these are rather trite and are reminiscent of the self-help manuals. They also detract from the main narrative of the book, but fortunately they are very short and don't really affect the overall message.

To conclude, this is an interesting look at Steve Jobs and Apple, especially over the last ten years or so. If you are not a die-hard Mac fanatic who follows each and every Mac-related story that comes out in the press you will learn a lot about these topics. Even if you are a walking Mac encyclopedia, it might still be fun to read a book that documents much of the recent Mac lore in an accessible and self-contained form.
Profile Image for Henri Hämäläinen.
110 reviews9 followers
September 26, 2011
I have to start with the negative side of the book. It promises in the name that it would be "inside Steve's brain" and would really tell why Steve Jobs behaves as he does, what are his motives and driving forces. Unfortunately this is not what the book really is about. Book really is an entertaining and excellent one, but it doesn't really fulfill it's promise from the name. I expected it to be different than it was, but when I got over the disappointment, I realised there's lot of good in this book.

If you admire Apple products, like most of us do, this is the book that tells more about how Apple creates it's products. It tells about excellent people and their processes to create these innovative and cool looking products of theirs. It could almost work as a bible for those who believe that Apple's way of building products is the best and only way. It really gives lot of food for thought about importance of design, product thinking, innovation and clear focus, when creating products
Profile Image for Nathan.
Author 5 books134 followers
October 31, 2011
Kahney's writing style is a little clunky, and insights were difficult to come by. I read this before Isaacson's book, and was surprised how many of the stories in Kahney's book are reprised in Isaacson's. There was more personal stuff in Isaacson's (naturally, he was given family access and Jobs's blessing), but both rely heavily on early Apple and Macintosh stories. The most obviously reproduced bit was the iMac launch keynote rehearsal where Jobs wanted the lights adjusted just so the iMac would really shine when it was unveiled. Both books use almost exactly the same language for exactly the same event (down to details like Jobs flopping his legs over the top of the seat in front of him), presumably because (as for so much else) they used the same source.

I strongly do not recommend binging on Jobs biographies. As this one ends before the iPad, it is incomplete. You might as well drink a lot of coffee and wade through Isaacson's book, because it is largely a superset of Kahney's.
Profile Image for Fernanda La Salye.
35 reviews9 followers
July 13, 2010
É difícil acreditar que um homem revolucionou os computadores nos anos 1970 e 1980, o cinema de animação e a música digital nos anos 1990. Por outro lado, são lendárias as histórias de seus repentinos acessos de raiva, revelando o verdadeiro Steve Jobs. Então, o que há, realmente, dentro do cérebro de Steve? Segundo Leander Kahney, é um fascinante feixe de contradições.

O autor destila os princípios que guiam Jobs ao lançar produtos arrasadores, ao atrair compradores fanaticamente fiéis e ao administrar algumas das marcas mais poderosas do mundo. O resultado é este livro singular sobre Steve Jobs que é, ao mesmo tempo, uma biografia e um guia de liderança, impossível de largar.
Profile Image for Herve.
93 reviews244 followers
September 21, 2011
The book by Leander Kahney is interesting as it shows how Steve Jobs is unique in the high-tech world. Let me just mention a single example: “But unlike a lot of people in product marketing those days who would go out and do customer testing, asking people what they wanted, Steve didn’t believe in that. He said ‘How can I possibly ask someone what a graphics-based computer ought to be when they have no idea what a graphics-based computer is? No one has ever seen one before’.” …and… “Like Henry Ford once said: ‘If I’d asked my customers what they wanted, they’d have said a faster horse’. ” (pages 63-64).

If you like this, you’ll enjoy the book. Thanks to Jacques for recommending it.
27 reviews
Read
April 9, 2010
The book i read was inside man the script this is not it because it was close to it. the inside man was about a bank robbery with the four robber in an van dressed in genator suit acting like they are cleaning the bank but really they are robbing the place.

i could make a text to world connection because all the time people rob people in the bank or people.

i gave this book a five star because i liked the movie and i like how the robbers was smart how they dress to trick the people in the bank.
Profile Image for Narinder  Bhatia.
83 reviews
February 4, 2016
Being an ardent fan of Steve Jobs prompted me to pick up the book (ironically i am not a user of Apple products !). Frankly sharing i had high expectations from the book but it clearly fell very short of those. There are flashes of Job's genius touched upon/ highlighted in the book but it's more of a history of the evolution of Apple products and of the digital consumerism as well. The only silver lining are the learnings described towards the end of the chapters.
Profile Image for Luciano Palma.
Author 1 book15 followers
July 8, 2010
Uma boa biografia que reflete a impressionante capacidade de inovação deste gênio que definitivamente entrou para a história com seu espírito revolucionário.
Leitura que vale a pena, para perceber que mesmo admirando um ícone, você pode descobrir características dele com as quais você não concorda. E viva a diferença! :)
O ponto mais fraco é a tradução. Esta deixa bastante a desejar.
14 reviews1 follower
January 6, 2019
Uma releitura do estilo folhear e reter as principais lições. Neste momento da minha vida, são:
1) Foco significa dizer NÃO.
2) Mantenha o foco. Não dê margem ao excesso de funções.
3) CONCENTRE-SE NAQUILO QUE VOCÊ É BOM. DELEGUE TODO O RESTO!
Se eu conseguir aplicar estes 3 conceitos na minha vida, valeu muito a leitura.
Profile Image for Mohammed Alhamad.
44 reviews5 followers
January 14, 2011
من اراد أن يفهم استراتيجية ابل وكيف سيطرت على الساحة فليقرأ هذا الكتاب
ستيف جوبز = ابل
ابل = ستيف جوبز
Profile Image for Mauro.
57 reviews3 followers
January 23, 2011
Articolone agiografico. Qualche aneddoto interessante (full disclaimer: biografie di imprenditori viventi non è un genere che frequento, quindi il mio giudizio può essere non equilibrato!)
Profile Image for Loy Machedo.
233 reviews214 followers
December 15, 2011
"I was blown away by this book. Loved it and couldn't put it down!"
Profile Image for Paul.
2,216 reviews
August 9, 2016
An interesting, now historical, trawl through the mind of Steve Jobs. Has lots of points about the business tips that you could get from Jobs, but occasionally contradicted himself.
3 reviews
April 8, 2014
Una interesante visión de la obra de Steve Jobs. Está algo incompleta porque sólo cubre hasta la aparición del iPhone, y hecha años antes de su muerte, pero es disfrutable de todas formas.
Profile Image for Martin Danko.
70 reviews7 followers
July 22, 2015
Odporucam pre lahke nazretie do kotlika, ktory pod Jobsovym vedenim zacal varit ten zakaznicky najchutnejsi technologicky gulas sucasnej doby.
Profile Image for Renato Renato.
94 reviews
May 3, 2025
This one had been seating on my bookshelf since 2010 ! Yes, 15 years ! Somehow, reading this now made all the sense to me!! I believe it is the time gap that helps to render this book's content more pronounced ! Anyways, to start, I have never been an Apple enthusiast. Had an iPod shuffle once, never a Mac, never an iPhone ! I actually always found it a little funny that people would line up outside Apple Stores, waiting for it to open to buy a new gadget as if they would not be able to do so later on.... Fact is, being an enthusiast or not, no one can deny the impact this man, Steve Jobs, has had in Apple and in the tech business as a whole and I guess we can say he impacted pop culture as well, right?! I think so.

Well, this book is not a biography, which is great in my view ! It portrays, in a very engaging way, Jobs' business trajectory, ideas, his interaction with other brilliant minds around him, and how it shaped much of which we now take for granted in our day to day dealing with tech. It brings backstage stories about groundbreaking Apple products and Apple's creative process and how competitors and the overall market reacted to Jobs. It's a fluid read, not heavy on tech jargon, it actually just brings enough of it, in the right level not to scary a layman. The book is 'easy to use', just like Jobs wanted his products to be!

Not sure if I should praise the author for writing such an exciting book, that could easily be mistaken with a biography just by looking to its cover, or if it's Jobs' genius that makes anyone writing about him and Apple sound like a Dan Brown ! Anyways, to me it was a very enjoyable reading ! I liked the whole book but I figured it would be a great one when finishing chapter 3 that covered Apple's design, no doubt my favorite chapter.
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