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Category: Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs turning over in his grave? Look-alike touts rival Android

Fake_steve_jobs

Steve Jobs likeness continues to pop up in the most unlikely places. He's been immortalized as a bronze statue in an office park in Hungary, his image was painstakingly recreated in what might be the world's most detailed action figure, and now a Taiwanese commercial making its way around the Internet depicts the recently deceased Apple visionary as a shill for an Android-based tablet called Action Pad.

Oh, the irony!

The man playing Jobs in the commercial is Taiwanese comedian and impersonator Ah-Ken, according to a report in Reuters. The commercial never explicitly uses Jobs name, but Ah-Ken is dressed in Jobs trademark black turtleneck and blue jeans, his hair is a silvery grey, and he's wearing glasses. He's standing on a stage meant to mimic those that Jobs paced across during major Apple announcements and speaking excitedly to an applauding audience. One thing he has that Jobs never had: a halo and wings.

At the end of his talk he says, "Thank God I can play another pad."

Jobs of course hated Android with his whole being. His biographer Walter Isaacson writes that he never saw Jobs as angry as when he was talking about a lawsuit Apple had filed against Android.

After telling Isaacson that he considered Google's Android to be a wholesale ripoff of the iPhone, he said:

"I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong. I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this. They are scared to death, because they know they are guilty."

Maybe things change in the afterlife?

Action Electronics, the company that makes the Action Pad along with other electronic gadgets, sees no problem with the advertisement. "Steve Jobs always promoted things that were good for people, Apple products, so his image can also promote other things that are good," a spokeswoman told Reuters. "It's just an impersonator, not Jobs," she said.

The reaction on YouTube has been mixed with commenters vacillating between disgust and amusement, but the video itself is rapidly racking up views.

 

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Image: Screen grab from a Taiwanese commercial for Action Pad that depicts Steve Jobs as a shill for the Android-based tablet. Credit: YouTube

Thomas Edison, Steve Jobs top young adult list of greatest innovators

Lemelson-MIT-Invention-Inde
Alexander Graham Bell. Thomas Edison. Marie Curie. Steve Jobs. Which of these people would you consider the greatest innovator of all time?

A few weeks ago the Lemelson-MIT Program put a similar question to 1,000 young adults ages 16 to 25, and stodgy old purists can breathe a sigh of relief. Thomas Edison trumped everyone.

"Though part of the 'Apple Generation,' many young Americans surprisingly chose Thomas Edison (52%), as the greatest innovator of all time, demonstrating that education around the history of invention exists in today's curriculum," the organization wrote in a statement on its annual Lemelson-MIT Invention Index.

Still, nearly a quarter of respondents identified Steve Jobs as their first pick for greatest innovator, beating that old stalwart Alexander Graham Bell, who received just 10% of the votes.

Mark Zuckerberg made the list, although only 3% of respondents identified the Facebook founder as the world's greatest innovator. He tied with Amelia Earhart.

Bill Gates, however, was notably missing.

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Image credit: From the Lemelson-MIT Program.

Apple's iBooks 2, iBooks Author: Bids to own publishing's future

Apple's new iBooks 2, iBooks Author and iTunes U apps are moves to capture the future of education and self-publishing

NEWS ANALYSIS: Alongside Apple stating that iBooks 2 and textbooks on the iPad would reinvent the textbook as we know it, the iPad-maker announced Thursday that it would also attempt to reinvent book-making by way of an app called iBooks Author.

The Apple-developed app, available as a free download from the Mac App Store, (ideally) makes it easy to make books for the iPad. But together, iBooks 2 and iBooks Author are moves to capture the future of education and self-publishing, and to continue to build on the success Apple had under the late Steve Jobs.

If you've ever used Apple's Keynote or Pages (or Microsoft's PowerPoint or Word) apps, then you should be able to hit the ground running in iBooks Author. There are templates for different types of book layouts, and adding the interactive 3-D models, photos, videos and diagrams that Apple demoed iBooks 2 textbooks on Thursday is as easy as clicking and dragging a built-in widget -- provided you've already produced the video, photos, diagrams and models you want to use.

Apple has even built into iBook Author HTML5 and Javascript support for programmers looking to take their books beyond what the app can do itself; multi-touch interactions for pinch and zoom views of photos and swiping gestures are also included.

Want to see what your book looks like before you publish it to iBooks? Just connect your Mac to an iPad by way of a USB cable and you can preview the book on the tablet.

The aim of the iBooks Author app is to make it easy to get these impressive multimedia elements, as well as questionnaires and other educational materials, into a page of text and published as a book on the iPad as easy as possible -- whether you're a self-publisher looking to write your first book, a teacher whipping up something quick for a special class, or a publishing powerhouse like the textbook trifecta of McGraw-Hill, Pearson and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Before his death, Jobs told biographer Walter Isaacson that he believed Apple could disrupt the $8-billion-a-year textbook industry. Jobs said in Isaacson's book, titled simply "Steve Jobs," that the iPad was the tool to make transformation in the textbook business a reality.

According to the book, Jobs' idea "was to hire great textbook writers to create digital versions, and make them a feature of the iPad. In addition, he held meetings with the major publishers, such as Pearson Education, about partnering with Apple."

Jobs told Isaacson "the process by which states certify textbooks is corrupt ... but if we can make the textbooks free, and they come with the iPad, then they don't have to be certified. The crappy economy at the state level will last for a decade, and we can give them an opportunity to circumvent that whole process and save money."

In announcing the iBooks 2 and iBooks Author products, Apple is beginning to bring a piece of Jobs' long-term vision to fruition. The company also noted Thursday that there are currently about 1.5 million iPads being used in schools and more than 20,000 education apps sitting in its iOS App Store.

But make no mistake, iBooks 2 and iBooks Author aren't just about textbooks. The two new apps are working together to entice students, teachers, educational institutions to embrace and buy the iPad in bigger numbers than they already have.

On Thursday, in announcing the new products, Apple made no mention of new discounts on iPads for students or schools -- though Apple has offered such discounts in the past on Macs and even created special versions of the iMac for schools. Apple even built the now-defunct eMac line specifically to sell to schools.

Apple wants us to ditch the paperback and hardcover textbooks in favor of an iPad and digital downloads, that much is obvious. But the company also wants the iPad and Macs to become to go-to devices for educational institutions and publishing houses.

Although Apple's iTunes is the world's most popular online music storefront, Amazon is the world's largest seller of e-books. By adding a level of interactivity to books that Amazon and others simply can't match, and by making it easier to publish a book and sell it in the iBooks app directly from iBooks Author, Apple has made a move to challenge Amazon and its Kindle e-reader and Kindle Touch tablet as the preferred platform for self-publishers and digital textbooks.

In a statement announcing iBooks 2 and iBooks Author, Apple said as much (without naming Amazon and other e-book rivals such as Google and Barnes & Noble).

"iBooks Author is also available today as a free download from the Mac App Store and lets anyone with a Mac create stunning iBooks textbooks, cookbooks, history books, picture books and more, and publish them to Apple's iBookstore," Apple said.

The apps are also a challenge to Adobe, a company Apple has been known to partner with and feud with from time to time. Adobe's Creative Suite, Digital Publishing Suite and Touch Apps, available on both Windows PCs and Macs, are some of the most popular tools used by publishing houses and self-publishers looking to create a book, whether an e-book or a book before it heads to print.

Though capable of producing many different types of content for a broader range of devices, Adobe's software can cost thousands of dollars, while Apple's iBooks Author app is free.

Apple on Thursday also released an iTunes U app, which allows teachers from kindergarten to the university level to stream video of their lectures and post class notes, handouts, reading lists, etc., all within the app.

Previously, iTunes U was a podcasting service for college professors who wanted to put up video or audio of their lectures. Now it is one more reason for a teacher to consider an iPad and a Mac as tools to reach students at any grade level. And like iBooks Author, the app is free.

In my opinion, Apple is one of the best companies out there at providing lower-cost products that pull consumers into an ecosystem of apps and gadgets. It's one of the reason the company has so many cult-like followers.

For many Apple fans, their first purchase was an iPod or iPhone. With those purchases comes buying apps, music, movies and TV shows from iTunes. And for many, later comes a MacBook or an iMac computer. This strategy is repeating itself with iBooks 2 and iBooks Author.

First, get students and teachers to use more iPads in school by offering affordable and engaging digital textbooks. With iBook textbooks capped at a price of $14.99, I have to wonder whether or not textbooks will become shorter and more narrow, and thus students and teachers we'll have to buy more of them. Second, make it easy for anybody to produce their own iBooks (textbooks or otherwise) and then sell those books in the iBooks app, luring in aspiring authors. When those students, teachers and authors go to download music or a movie, set up a cloud storage service or buy a laptop, a phone, a new tablet -- maybe someday a TV -- what brand will be at the top of minds? Apple.

iBooks, iBooks Author and iTunes U, together are a move to fend off Google, Amazon, Adobe and other competitors in determining the future of education, publishing and book reading. Together, the launch of these apps is an attempt to not only maintain but also expand Apple's current success into the company's post-Jobs future.

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Nathan Olivarez-Giles on Google+

Twitter.com/nateog

Photo: Apple's iBook Author app on an iMac, and an iBook and an iPad. Credit: Apple

Steve Jobs doll withdrawn after objections by his family, Apple

Steve Jobs doll

An eerily lifelike Steve Jobs doll will not be sold because the company behind the product received "immense pressure" from Apple's lawyers and the late CEO's family to not sell the figurine.

"We understand that this decision will cause many of the fans disappointment, but please forgive us as there is no other alternative unless to have the blessing from Steve Jobs family," In Icons said in a rambling statement on its website, which features quotes from Jobs and numerous images of the doll prototype. "We will aim to have full refund to the fans who have pre-ordered."

In Icons had been taking pre-orders of the 12-inch doll, which cost $100 and came with "one realistic head sculpt and two pairs of glasses," "one highly articulate body and three pairs of hands," one black turtleneck, one pair of blue jeans and two apples -- one with a bite taken out of it. 

The company had planned to start shipping the dolls in February and said on its website that it was running out of stock. 

In the statement announcing the company's decision to not offer the doll, In Icons said the figurine was adjusted "countless times" to achieve the Apple visionary's likeness. The company said making the doll was a tribute to Jobs.

"Regardless of the pressure, I am still Steve's fan, I fully respect Steve and his family, and it is definitely not my wish or intention that they be upset," said the statement, which was signed "inicons.com." "Though we still believe that we have not overstepped any legal boundaries, we have decided to completely stop the offer, production and sale of the Steve Jobs figurine out of our heartfelt sensitivity to the feelings of the Jobs family." 

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Image: A screenshot showing In Icons' Steve Jobs doll. Credit: In Icons

On the iPhone's fifth birthday, a look back at an icon's debut

Fifth-anniversary-of-the-ip

Five years ago, on Jan. 9th 2007, Steve Jobs introduced the world to the iPhone.

He didn't start talking about the phone right away. Instead, he spent the first 20 minutes teasing the crowd with stories about the iPod nano, the success of iTunes and the number of movies and television shows downloaded on Apple TV -- building anticipation.

He ragged on Microsoft's recently released Zune, which he joyfully told his audience had only snagged 2% of the market for MP3 players.

Then, as Engadget live blogged at the time, he said "Ahem."

And finally, he gave the people what they wanted.

Jobs described the phone as three products in one -- an iPod player, a mobile phone and an Internet communications device.

He gloated about how the new phone eschewed both a keypad and a stylus and took advantage of the "best pointing device in the world -- our fingers."

"We have invented a new technology called multi-touch," he said. "It works like magic, you don't need a stylus, far more accurate than any interface ever shipped, it ignores touches, multi-finger gestures, and BOY have we patented it!"

Then he took his enthusiastic audience through the phone's functionality -- its compatibility with iTunes, the weather app, the Google maps, the ease of making a phone call right from one's contact list.

Ever the showman, Jobs demonstrated that last bit by making a live call to Phil Schiller on stage.

The iPhone wouldn't be shipped to stores for six more months, but those who were there were smitten.

"They may have created a new category," Tim Bajarin, president of consulting firm Creative Strategies, told the Los Angeles Times the day of the event. "Instead of smartphone, how about 'brilliant' phone? This redefines what a cellphone looks like."

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Photo: Steve Jobs introduces the Apple iPhone during his keynote address at MacWorld Conference & Expo in San Francisco on Jan. 9, 2007. Credit: Paul Sakuma / Associated Press

Steve Jobs action figure is advertised; will Apple respond?

Steve Jobs action figure

A Steve Jobs action figure? Just what you've always wanted!

Just three months after the death of Apple Inc. founder Steve Jobs, a company called In Icons has put images of a prototype Steve Jobs action figure on its website and the Internet is going crazy.

No one is surprised that the company thinks it can sell a 12-inch-high collectible action figure of Jobs for the proposed price of $99.

That's inevitable.

Rather, it's the borderline disturbing level of detail that the company has put in the figure that is freaking everyone out. The prototype includes the pores on Jobs' forehead, the subtle wrinkles under his eyes, even the veins on his hand.

The prototype also includes two extra pair of hands in case you lose the first pair, which is kind of freaky in a different way.

The Steve Jobs set also comes with two pairs of glasses, one black turtleneck, one pair of blue jeans, one black leather belt, two apples (one with a bite out) and one hard backdrop reading "ONE MORE THING."

In Icons did not return a request for comment. Its website says it will start shipping the product worldwide in February.

However, many media watchers are skeptical that the figure actually will ship.

Back in 2010, Apple blocked a company called M.I.C. Gadget from selling a Steve Jobs action figure on Ebay, saying that the action figure was a violation of its copyrights and trademarks.

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Walter Isaacson might add to Steve Jobs biography

Steve Jobs' biography by Walter Isaacson might get an addendum.You know how you wish for more when you get to the last page of a really good book?

In the case of Walter Isaacson's biography of Steve Jobs, that wish may come true.

Isaacson told Fortune senior editor at large Adam Lashinsky during a talk in San Francisco that he might expand the 630-page book.

That could mean an annotated version or an addendum that describes the period around Jobs' death in October.

"This is the first or second draft," Isaacson said. "It's not the final draft."

The biography topped Amazon.com's list of top 10 bestselling books in 2011.

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Photo credit: Albert Watson / Simon & Schuster  

Mark Zuckerberg says Steve Jobs advised him on Facebook

Mark Zuckerberg

Facebook founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg was moved that Apple's Steve Jobs admired him for not "selling out."

"I know that's one of the ways in which — in which we saw eye to eye on kind of what we were trying to do in the world," Zuckerberg said in an hour-long interview with Charlie Rose airing Monday.

Zuckerberg also said Jobs coached him on how to build a management team that is "focused on building as high quality and good things as you are."

Before he died on Oct. 5, Jobs gave younger entrepreneurs advice, according to his biography published last month. Jobs, who told biographer Walter Isaacson that he admired Zuckerberg for not selling his company, had dinner with Zuckerberg and acted as his mentor.

At 27, Zuckerberg is one of the richest people in the U.S., according to Forbes, and is preparing to lead Facebook, which has 800 million users, for an initial public offering as early as next year.

Zuckerberg and Facebook's chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, said during the interview that Jobs did not propose that Apple buy Facebook.

An IPO isn't something Zuckerberg said he spends "a lot of time on a day-to-day basis thinking about."

"We've made this implicit promise to our investors and to our employees that by compensating them with equity and by giving them equity, that at some point we're going to make that equity worth something publicly and liquidly, in a liquid way," he said. "Now, the promise isn't that we're going to do it on any kind of short-term time horizon. The promise is that we're going to build this company so that it's great over the long term, right. And that we're always making these decisions for the long term, but at some point we'll do that."

Zuckerberg told Rose he was trying to stay grounded: "I spend a lot of time just, you know, with my girlfriend and my dog."

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Photo: Facebook co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass. on Nov. 7, 2011. Credit: Brian Snyder/Reuters

Landmark Theaters to screen 'Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview' film

Steve Jobs in 1995, showing of NeXT Computers

Since Steve Jobs died on Oct. 5, we've seen Steve Jobs the book, Steve Jobs the PBS special and now "Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview," a new film that will hit the Landmark Theatres chain on Nov. 16 and 17 in select cities.

The movie will be a 70-minute unedited interview with Steve Jobs, conducted by tech journalist and former Apple Inc. employee Robert X. Cringely, from 1995 when Steve Jobs was still CEO of NeXT Computer and Pixar.

Cringely taped the interview for the PBS documentary Triumph of the Nerds, but "less than 10 minutes were used" in the film "and the other 59 minutes were lost forever when the master tapes disappeared in shipping."

Well, that is, until they were found in London recently, according to a statement from Landmark.

"An unedited copy of the entire Jobs interview was discovered recently in London," the company said. "Restored and improved, yet completely original and unedited."

Check out the post over on our sister blog Company Town for an interview Times reporter Joe Flint conducted with Cringley about "Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview."

According to Landmark, the film will play in the following cities and theaters in its cinema chain:

NEW YORK –Sunshine

LOS ANGELES – Regent

SAN FRANCISCO – Opera Plaza

BERKELEY – Shattuck

PALO ALTO – Aquarius ** this venue will be only a seven-day engagement, Nov. 16-22

SEATTLE – Metro

SAN DIEGO – Hillcrest

DENVER – Esquire

DALLAS – Magnolia

HOUSTON – River Oaks

MINNEAPOLIS- Lagoon

CHICAGO – Century

INDIANAPOLIS – Keystone

BOSTON – Kendall

PHILADELPHIA – Ritz Bourse

WASHINGON, D.C. – E Street

BALTIMORE – Harbor East

ATLANTA – Midtown

MILWAUKEE – Oriental

In the film, Jobs criticizes Microsoft "for making bad products," Landmark said, calling the interview "candid, controversial, and funny."

So, how did the interview-turned-film land in theaters so quickly? Cringley knows Dallas Mavericks and HD Net owner Mark Cuban and told him about the once-lost recording. Cuban and his business partner Todd Wagner own the company 2929 Entertainment, which owns Landmark.

"Cringely had the compelling content, and Cuban the means to present it," Landmark said. "It is being rushed into theatres to allow audiences to witness a key moment with one of the most important figures of our time."

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Photo: Steve Jobs on Aug. 14, 1995, then chairman and chief executive of NeXT Computer Inc., proudly unveils NeXT's WebObjects software at the Object World Expo in San Francisco. Credit: Court Mast/NeXT Computer Inc./AP Photo

'Steve Jobs - One Last Thing' doc airing on PBS tonight [Video]

Steve Jobs unveiling the Apple iMac

"One last thing" -- it was one of Steve Jobs' most well-known catchphrases, his way of introducing the last product or new feature at his one-of-a-kind presentations while Apple's CEO.

The phrase is also the title of a new PBS documentary about the late Apple Inc. co-founder, who since dying last month has been compared to Thomas Edison, Walt Disney and Henry Ford.

"Steve Jobs -- One Last Thing" airs Wednesday at 7 p.m. Pacific time and 10 p.m. Eastern.

The documentary, which will run about an hour in length, will feature interviews with Jobs' Apple co-founders Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne; former presidential candidate and businessman Ross Perot, who was also a major investor in Jobs' NeXT Computer company; Dean Hovey, designer of Apple's first mouse; Robert Palladino, Jobs' calligraphy professor at Reed College; Bill Fernandez, who introduced Jobs and Wozniak in Sunnyvale, Calif.; columnist Walt Mossberg of the Wall Street Journal; and Will.i.am, tech lover, music producer and member of the Black Eyed Peas, PBS said in a statement about the film.

"There has been near-universal agreement that the late Apple founder was a great innovator in business and technology, but why was he great?" PBS said of the documentary's focus. "What were the influences that shaped his character and drove him to such success from humble beginnings? With colleagues who worked closely with him and those who have chronicled his life, take an unflinching look at the mercurial, brilliant man and review his many talents and achievements."

The documentary is being released on the heels of an authorized biography on Jobs by writer Walter Isaacson, titled simply "Steve Jobs," which was released last week. In its first six-days on sale, Isaacson's book sold more than 379,000 copies in the U.S. according to the book sales tracking firm Nielsen BookScan, as reported by the website the Bookseller.

Check out some clips from the PBS film below.

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Photo: Apple Inc. co-founder and then-CEO Steve Jobs introduces the Apple iMac at the Macworld Conference in New York on July 19, 2000. Credit: Peter Morgan / Reuters

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