Why choose another, choose this The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." (A Steve Jobs Biography) (by Hyperink) :
Customer Review for this product :
Interesting look at Steve Jobs life -
Outstanding look at this business and tech legend. Some of the comparisons and analogies really made me think. Appreciated the brisk, candid, no-fluff look at his life and death without a rehashing of all the things we've heard a million times about him already.
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More Detailed Product Description
*****GIFT A COPY OF THIS HYPERINK BOOK TO 5 FRIENDS!*****
We're offering a special bonus to Hyperink customers who purchase The Life & Death of Steve Jobs: One More Thing...
You can send up to 5 bonus copies to your friends and family. Full redemption details are inside the book, so check it out today!
Thanks,
The Hyperink Team
**********************************************************************************
It is perhaps no great exaggeration to presume that the number of times the Steve Jobs story has been told is roughly comparable to the number of iPhones that have been sold since the revolutionary Apple smartphone was first introduced in 2007. As history attests, there are few people about whom more books and articles have ever been written.
Yet for all the media coverage that Steve Jobs has attracted throughout his storied career, there's a tangible sense among the general public that we never fully knew the real man behind the legend. In The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." Michael Essany chronicles Steve Jobs's awe-inspiring accomplishments and sheds light on the little known personal details of Jobs's life.
BIO OUTLINE:
Chapter 1: More Than Meets The i
Chapter 2: For the Love of the Game
Chapter 3: Underrated After All?
Chapter 4: Steve's Three Stories
Chapter 5: Steve’s Last Days
Chapter 6: Mourning in America
Chapter 7: One More Thing…
BOOK EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER 3:
As difficult as it may be for Apple's large, borderline-rabid fanbase to admit, not everyone liked Steve Jobs.
Conversely, it’s even more difficult for Steve Jobs' critics to admit that the tech pioneer they loathe may have actually been underrated in his day.
Time and again, Steve Jobs pushed the proverbial envelope when it came to Apple’s advancements in technology. And while the consequences may have been unintended, there are myriad examples of Steve Jobs' ingenious leadership exerting influence well beyond the confines of Cupertino, California and the consumer electronics realm.
The Digital Walt Disney
It's tough to argue against the sobering reality that Steve Jobs played a major role - perhaps larger than anyone presently realizes - in the modern entertainment landscape.
"Steve Jobs has been compared to multiple business icons—Thomas Edison and Henry Ford to name a few—but the best comparison may be to Walt Disney," says journalist Larry Dignan of ZDNet. "There’s a solid argument to be made that Jobs was the digital version of Disney. Focus. Entertainment. Delight. Emotional attachment. Theatrical."
Of course, that's not the lone argument of a tech journalist enamored with the late Apple chief. Upon learning of Jobs' death, Pixar and Disney’s John Lasseter praised the so-called "Digital Disney" himself.
"Steve Jobs was an extraordinary visionary, our very dear friend and the guiding light of the Pixar family,” Lasseter gushed. “He saw the potential of what Pixar could be before the rest of us, and beyond what anyone ever imagined. Steve took a chance on us and believed in our crazy dream of making computer animated films; the one thing he always said was to simply ‘make it great.’ He is why Pixar turned out the way we did and his strength, integrity and love of life has made us all better people. He will forever be a part of Pixar’s DNA."
Ultimately, Dignan points out, it's not the love of animation and entertainment that made Jobs so similar to Disney. It was their seemingly identical professional mantra.
"Just make it great was Disney’s mantra," Dignan observes. "Jobs had the same focus. Anything—even the impossible at the time—was considered to make a product great. When Disney’s first Mickey Mouse cartoons didn’t sell he added synchronized sound. Magic soon followed. Jobs took that approach with his products, which combined technology, industrial design and art."
...buy the book to read more!*****GIFT A COPY OF THIS HYPERINK BOOK TO 5 FRIENDS!*****
We're offering a special bonus to Hyperink customers who purchase The Life & Death of Steve Jobs: One More Thing...
You can send up to 5 bonus copies to your friends and family. Full redemption details are inside the book, so check it out today!
Thanks,
The Hyperink Team
**********************************************************************************
It is perhaps no great exaggeration to presume that the number of times the Steve Jobs story has been told is roughly comparable to the number of iPhones that have been sold since the revolutionary Apple smartphone was first introduced in 2007. As history attests, there are few people about whom more books and articles have ever been written.
Yet for all the media coverage that Steve Jobs has attracted throughout his storied career, there's a tangible sense among the general public that we never fully knew the real man behind the legend. In The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." Michael Essany chronicles Steve Jobs's awe-inspiring accomplishments and sheds light on the little known personal details of Jobs's life.
BIO OUTLINE:
Chapter 1: More Than Meets The i
Chapter 2: For the Love of the Game
Chapter 3: Underrated After All?
Chapter 4: Steve's Three Stories
Chapter 5: Steve’s Last Days
Chapter 6: Mourning in America
Chapter 7: One More Thing…
BOOK EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER 3:
As difficult as it may be for Apple's large, borderline-rabid fanbase to admit, not everyone liked Steve Jobs.
Conversely, it’s even more difficult for Steve Jobs' critics to admit that the tech pioneer they loathe may have actually been underrated in his day.
Time and again, Steve Jobs pushed the proverbial envelope when it came to Apple’s advancements in technology. And while the consequences may have been unintended, there are myriad examples of Steve Jobs' ingenious leadership exerting influence well beyond the confines of Cupertino, California and the consumer electronics realm.
The Digital Walt Disney
It's tough to argue against the sobering reality that Steve Jobs played a major role - perhaps larger than anyone presently realizes - in the modern entertainment landscape.
"Steve Jobs has been compared to multiple business icons—Thomas Edison and Henry Ford to name a few—but the best comparison may be to Walt Disney," says journalist Larry Dignan of ZDNet. "There’s a solid argument to be made that Jobs was the digital version of Disney. Focus. Entertainment. Delight. Emotional attachment. Theatrical."
Of course, that's not the lone argument of a tech journalist enamored with the late Apple chief. Upon learning of Jobs' death, Pixar and Disney’s John Lasseter praised the so-called "Digital Disney" himself.
"Steve Jobs was an extraordinary visionary, our very dear friend and the guiding light of the Pixar family,” Lasseter gushed. “He saw the potential of what Pixar could be before the rest of us, and beyond what anyone ever imagined. Steve took a chance on us and believed in our crazy dream of making computer animated films; the one thing he always said was to simply ‘make it great.’ He is why Pixar turned out the way we did and his strength, integrity and love of life has made us all better people. He will forever be a part of Pixar’s DNA."
Ultimately, Dignan points out, it's not the love of animation and entertainment that made Jobs so similar to Disney. It was their seemingly identical professional mantra.
"Just make it great was Disney’s mantra," Dignan observes. "Jobs had the same focus. Anything—even the impossible at the time—was considered to make a product great. When Disney’s first Mickey Mouse cartoons didn’t sell he added synchronized sound. Magic soon followed. Jobs took that approach with his products, which combined technology, industrial design and art."
...buy the book to read more!
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Another Related The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." (A Steve Jobs Biography) Products :
Customer Review for this product :
Interesting look at Steve Jobs life - Outstanding look at this business and tech legend. Some of the comparisons and analogies really made me think. Appreciated the brisk, candid, no-fluff look at his life and death without a rehashing of all the things we've heard a million times about him already.
Check Best Price Here

More Detailed Product Description
*****GIFT A COPY OF THIS HYPERINK BOOK TO 5 FRIENDS!*****
We're offering a special bonus to Hyperink customers who purchase The Life & Death of Steve Jobs: One More Thing...
You can send up to 5 bonus copies to your friends and family. Full redemption details are inside the book, so check it out today!
Thanks,
The Hyperink Team
**********************************************************************************
It is perhaps no great exaggeration to presume that the number of times the Steve Jobs story has been told is roughly comparable to the number of iPhones that have been sold since the revolutionary Apple smartphone was first introduced in 2007. As history attests, there are few people about whom more books and articles have ever been written.
Yet for all the media coverage that Steve Jobs has attracted throughout his storied career, there's a tangible sense among the general public that we never fully knew the real man behind the legend. In The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." Michael Essany chronicles Steve Jobs's awe-inspiring accomplishments and sheds light on the little known personal details of Jobs's life.
BIO OUTLINE:
Chapter 1: More Than Meets The i
Chapter 2: For the Love of the Game
Chapter 3: Underrated After All?
Chapter 4: Steve's Three Stories
Chapter 5: Steve’s Last Days
Chapter 6: Mourning in America
Chapter 7: One More Thing…
BOOK EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER 3:
As difficult as it may be for Apple's large, borderline-rabid fanbase to admit, not everyone liked Steve Jobs.
Conversely, it’s even more difficult for Steve Jobs' critics to admit that the tech pioneer they loathe may have actually been underrated in his day.
Time and again, Steve Jobs pushed the proverbial envelope when it came to Apple’s advancements in technology. And while the consequences may have been unintended, there are myriad examples of Steve Jobs' ingenious leadership exerting influence well beyond the confines of Cupertino, California and the consumer electronics realm.
The Digital Walt Disney
It's tough to argue against the sobering reality that Steve Jobs played a major role - perhaps larger than anyone presently realizes - in the modern entertainment landscape.
"Steve Jobs has been compared to multiple business icons—Thomas Edison and Henry Ford to name a few—but the best comparison may be to Walt Disney," says journalist Larry Dignan of ZDNet. "There’s a solid argument to be made that Jobs was the digital version of Disney. Focus. Entertainment. Delight. Emotional attachment. Theatrical."
Of course, that's not the lone argument of a tech journalist enamored with the late Apple chief. Upon learning of Jobs' death, Pixar and Disney’s John Lasseter praised the so-called "Digital Disney" himself.
"Steve Jobs was an extraordinary visionary, our very dear friend and the guiding light of the Pixar family,” Lasseter gushed. “He saw the potential of what Pixar could be before the rest of us, and beyond what anyone ever imagined. Steve took a chance on us and believed in our crazy dream of making computer animated films; the one thing he always said was to simply ‘make it great.’ He is why Pixar turned out the way we did and his strength, integrity and love of life has made us all better people. He will forever be a part of Pixar’s DNA."
Ultimately, Dignan points out, it's not the love of animation and entertainment that made Jobs so similar to Disney. It was their seemingly identical professional mantra.
"Just make it great was Disney’s mantra," Dignan observes. "Jobs had the same focus. Anything—even the impossible at the time—was considered to make a product great. When Disney’s first Mickey Mouse cartoons didn’t sell he added synchronized sound. Magic soon followed. Jobs took that approach with his products, which combined technology, industrial design and art."
...buy the book to read more!*****GIFT A COPY OF THIS HYPERINK BOOK TO 5 FRIENDS!*****
We're offering a special bonus to Hyperink customers who purchase The Life & Death of Steve Jobs: One More Thing...
You can send up to 5 bonus copies to your friends and family. Full redemption details are inside the book, so check it out today!
Thanks,
The Hyperink Team
**********************************************************************************
It is perhaps no great exaggeration to presume that the number of times the Steve Jobs story has been told is roughly comparable to the number of iPhones that have been sold since the revolutionary Apple smartphone was first introduced in 2007. As history attests, there are few people about whom more books and articles have ever been written.
Yet for all the media coverage that Steve Jobs has attracted throughout his storied career, there's a tangible sense among the general public that we never fully knew the real man behind the legend. In The Life & Death Of Steve Jobs: "One More Thing..." Michael Essany chronicles Steve Jobs's awe-inspiring accomplishments and sheds light on the little known personal details of Jobs's life.
BIO OUTLINE:
Chapter 1: More Than Meets The i
Chapter 2: For the Love of the Game
Chapter 3: Underrated After All?
Chapter 4: Steve's Three Stories
Chapter 5: Steve’s Last Days
Chapter 6: Mourning in America
Chapter 7: One More Thing…
BOOK EXCERPT FROM CHAPTER 3:
As difficult as it may be for Apple's large, borderline-rabid fanbase to admit, not everyone liked Steve Jobs.
Conversely, it’s even more difficult for Steve Jobs' critics to admit that the tech pioneer they loathe may have actually been underrated in his day.
Time and again, Steve Jobs pushed the proverbial envelope when it came to Apple’s advancements in technology. And while the consequences may have been unintended, there are myriad examples of Steve Jobs' ingenious leadership exerting influence well beyond the confines of Cupertino, California and the consumer electronics realm.
The Digital Walt Disney
It's tough to argue against the sobering reality that Steve Jobs played a major role - perhaps larger than anyone presently realizes - in the modern entertainment landscape.
"Steve Jobs has been compared to multiple business icons—Thomas Edison and Henry Ford to name a few—but the best comparison may be to Walt Disney," says journalist Larry Dignan of ZDNet. "There’s a solid argument to be made that Jobs was the digital version of Disney. Focus. Entertainment. Delight. Emotional attachment. Theatrical."
Of course, that's not the lone argument of a tech journalist enamored with the late Apple chief. Upon learning of Jobs' death, Pixar and Disney’s John Lasseter praised the so-called "Digital Disney" himself.
"Steve Jobs was an extraordinary visionary, our very dear friend and the guiding light of the Pixar family,” Lasseter gushed. “He saw the potential of what Pixar could be before the rest of us, and beyond what anyone ever imagined. Steve took a chance on us and believed in our crazy dream of making computer animated films; the one thing he always said was to simply ‘make it great.’ He is why Pixar turned out the way we did and his strength, integrity and love of life has made us all better people. He will forever be a part of Pixar’s DNA."
Ultimately, Dignan points out, it's not the love of animation and entertainment that made Jobs so similar to Disney. It was their seemingly identical professional mantra.
"Just make it great was Disney’s mantra," Dignan observes. "Jobs had the same focus. Anything—even the impossible at the time—was considered to make a product great. When Disney’s first Mickey Mouse cartoons didn’t sell he added synchronized sound. Magic soon followed. Jobs took that approach with his products, which combined technology, industrial design and art."
...buy the book to read more!
ADVERTISEMENT
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