With the recent passing of Apple co-founder and legend Steve Jobs, books have been flying off the shelves about the tech genius’s life and rise to the top. While we are all deeply saddened by the death of Jobs, it’s also a good reason to celebrate the life and work of a man who changed the way we all see technology, whether you’re an Apple geek or not. We’ve rounded up some of our Digital Trends picks in books and movies that will give you a more in-depth look at the inner workings of the former Apple CEO and how he influenced the tech world.
For most of Jobs’ life and time with Apple, the man behind the iPod and iPhone has remained intensely private, which is perhaps part of why the world is so intrigued by him. In a surprising move to many, Jobs asked Isaacson to be his biographer before his first surgery in his battle against pancreatic cancer. When asked why he would finally open up to a biographer after all these years, Jobs remarked that he wanted his four children to be able to better know and understand him. In this book, the only authorized biography of Steve Jobs, Isaacson recounts over forty interviews he had with Jobs over two years as well as many conversations with friends, family, colleagues, and adversaries. The book is said to tell an honest tale of a man who could infuriate people with his drive and perfectionism, but who also took Apple to new heights of success.
The Steve Jobs Way: iLeadership for a New Generation by Jay Elliot
The leadership style of Steve Jobs during his time at Apple has been both critiqued and praised by countless adversaries and insiders alike. The man behind iLife was said to have a hand in everything, micro-managing every project until it endlessly frustrated his employees. He reportedly (and not surprisingly) would not accept anything less than perfection, which may be the reason that his leadership skyrocketed Apple to the top of the heap, landing as one of the most valuable companies in the world. In this book, Jay Elliot, who worked closely with Jobs as Senior Vice President of Apple, examines the leadership techniques that made Jobs and Apple so successful. Elliot also uses the book to show how such techniques can be used in any company to spur growth and breakthroughs.
TIME Steve Jobs: The Genius Who Changed Our World by Time Magazine
This yet-to-be-released book takes a look back at the history of Jobs and his time with Apple, pulling together past articles from the reputable magazine as well as newly-written articles from well-known Time writers like Lev Grossman, Richard Corliss, Harry McCracken and James Poniewozik. This book will no doubt take a journalistic approach to the biography of jobs, with articles chronicling his years as a college drop-out all the way up to his unprecedented success and unfortunate passing.
This 1999 film takes a dramatized approach at telling the story of the rise of both the Apple computer and Microsoft in the golden age of the SiliconValley. Based on a book by by Paul Freiberger and Michael Swaine, the film documents the intertwined past of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates as they struggle to create successful companies and visions, with different ideas behind them.
Last night, the Discovery Channel premiered a documentary piece on Steve Jobs hosted and narrated by MythBuster’s Adam Savage and Jamie Hyneman. The hour-long episode documents the life and work of Steve Jobs (no surprise here) and also talks to various friends and colleagues, including friend and Apple employee Daniel Kottke, Apple engineer John Draper, reporter Tom Brokaw, Joe Nocera from The New York Times, and musicians Pete Wentz and Stevie Wonder. While you can’t purchase the episode for online viewing, click here to see when it will air in your area.



We don’t care about Steve.
oh idk how abt giving some credit to this guy named Dennis Ritchie creator of C language and unix…the guy dies and gets ignored and this guy who made some over expensive phone is treated as if hes a saint…so annoying
ouch! Ok, more Android news coming up!
stfu about him already. so close to unsubscribing from tthis page.
He was not the second coming of Jesus, he was not Gandhi, and he did not cure some worldwide illness: He sold phones. Stop making him a saint. He was nice, his death was sad, and he was a leader in his industry but he is not worth the pedestal everyone of you fanboys are putting him on.
haha We are kidding folks. Upgrading servers today which is why the site is down.
haha We are kidding folks. Upgrading servers today which is why the site is down.
Oh DT, you know I’m one of your biggest fans – I’m just not a huge fan of Mr. Jobs as a person.
Besides, from my other 50,000 post to this page, you know I’m just not an Apple fan in general so I’m just calling it as I see it.
no need shutting it down….just stop publishing too much abt this guy
We feel so bad because of Chris that we are shutting down the site. Look at what you made us do….
Chris: Couldn’t have said it better myself.
I’m sorry DT, but I have to agree with the masses here.
Steve Jobs wasn’t anything but a smart business man and a master of marketing: he took ideas that already existed and made them available to the masses at a over-inflated price but people bought into them. Why? Because he could sell you a Toyota, charge you the price of a BMW and make you feel like you bought a Ferrari. Nothing, I repeat, NOTHING Apple has created was the best in its class, nor revolutionary. You want to see revolutionary? Check out Xerox.
@Hannah: No, Steve Jobs was not nice, in fact he was pretty much the epitome of a condescending son of a bitch. Read on how he treated his employees, read how he cut Apple’s philanthropy program in ’97 and never reinstated it, read how he lied in a court document to cut ties to his daughter; just about everything you read about this man will make you hate him.
What’s frustrating is that history, for whatever reason,will mark him as a God. When Gates dies, he’ll get a small write up and that will be that: no talk about creating Microsoft which dwarf(ed) Apple, no talk about the billions upon billions he’s given to charitable foundations, no anything and he was much more of a remarkable person.
or how about the people who created linux or ubuntu, all android phones use a linux version,besides this guy made the apple system mainly for use with propietary hardware that you had to buy from apple, so if you needed hard drives you had to pay through the nose for a 50 pin ide drive.