Steve wozniak steve jobs biography reviews
Steve Wozniak - Wikipedia
Steve Jobs Biography (1955–2011) -Readers Books Club
- Walter Isaacson weaves a full and often revealing tale that brings 'Steve Jobs' to life through interviews with the late Apple visionary and those in his inner circle.
Book review: 'Steve Jobs' by Walter Isaacson
Book: Steve Jobs
Walter Isaacson
Hachette
pages
Rs
One of the weird things about quantum mechanics is that an electron can be in two places at the same time, which obviously makes it a difficult subject to understand. Steve Jobs can be equally hard to pin down. One moment he seems like a hero and the next he’s a zero. Reading the former Time managing editor, Walter Isaacson’s journalistic, anecdote-filled biography of Jobs can keep you oscillating between the two positions, until finally an apple falls on your head and you get it — that Jobs was possibly in both places at the same time.
Jobs himself thought in binary terms, according to Isaacson — ideas were either ‘great’ or ‘crap’ and never in between; sometimes they could be ‘crap’ one day and ‘great’ the next day, when he would claim to have thought it up himself. People to
‘Steve Jobs’ by Walter Isaacson - Review - The New York Times
‘Steve Jobs’ review: Walter Isaacson’s biography mesmerizes
Steve Jobs (film) - Wikipedia
| It discusses Steve Wozniak's life before and after Apple, such as the things he created for science fairs that gave even high school students. | |
| Mr. | |
| He was dishonest and manipulative to Steve Wozniak in the early days of their collaboration, and mistreated the people who worked for him. |
Book review: 'Steve Jobs' by Walter Isaacson - DNA India
- Mr.
Book review: 'Steve Jobs' by Walter Isaacson - The Verge
Steve Wozniak | Biography & Facts | Britannica
- With greater funding, a charismatic spokesman in Steve Jobs, and an engineering genius in Steve Wozniak, Apple developed the Apple 2, which was a giant success.
iWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Pe…
- Why he chose him is not surprising: Isaacson’s biographies of Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein are engrossing, epic, and readable studies of men who changed history.