Steve Jobs生平简介英文翻译(9页).doc
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1、-Steve Jobs生平简介英文翻译-第 9 页Steve Jobs, 19552011: Mourning Technologys Great Reinventor Steve Jobs, whose death was announced Wednesday night, Oct. 5, 2011, wasnt a computer scientist. He had no training as a hardware engineer or industrial designer. The businesses Apple entered under his leadership fr
2、om personal computers to MP3 players to smart phones all existed before the company got there. But with astonishing regularity, Jobs did something that few people accomplish even once: he reinvented entire industries. He did it with ones that were new, like PCs, and he did it with ones that were old
3、, like music. And his pace only accelerated over the years. He was the most celebrated, successful business executive of his generation, yet he flouted many basic tenets of business wisdom. (Like his hero and soul mate, Polaroid founder Edwin Land, he refused to conduct focus groups or other researc
4、h that might tell him what his customers wanted.) In his many public appearances as the head of a large public corporation, he rarely sounded like one. He introduced the first Macintosh by quoting Bob Dylan, and he took to saying that Apple sat at the intersection of the liberal arts and technology.
5、 Jobs confidence in the wisdom of his instincts came to be immense, as did the hype he created at Apple product launches. That might have been unbearable if it werent the case that his intuition was nearly flawless and the products often lived up to his lofty claims. St. Louis Cardinals pitching gre
6、at Dizzy Dean could have been talking about Jobs rather than himself when he said, It aint bragging if you can back it up. Jobs eventual triumph was so absolute in 2011, Apples market capitalization passed that of Exxon Mobil, making it the planets most valuable company that its easy to forget how c
7、heckered his reputation once was. Over the first quarter-century of his career, he was associated with as many failed products as hits. Having been forced out of Apple in 1985, he was associated with failure, period. Even some of his admirers thought of him as the dreamer whod lost the war for perso
8、nal-computer dominance to Microsofts indomitable Bill Gates. Until the iPod era, it seemed entirely possible that Jobs most lasting legacy might be the blockbuster animated features produced by Pixar, the company he founded after acquiring George Lucas computer-graphics lab in 1986. Instead, Pixar t
9、urned out to be, in Jobs famous phrase, just one more thing. Born in 1955 in San Francisco to an unmarried graduate student and adopted at birth by Paul and Clara Jobs, Steven Paul Jobs grew up in Silicon Valley just as it was becoming Silicon Valley. It proved to be a lucky break for everyone conce
10、rned. He was only 21 when he started Apple officially formed on April Fools Day, 1976 with his buddy Steve Woz Wozniak, a self-taught engineer of rare talents. (A third founder, Ron Wayne, chickened out after less than two weeks.) But Jobs had already done a lot of living, all of which influenced th
11、e company he built. Hed spent one unhappy semester at Reed College in Portland, Ore., and 18 happy months of dropping in on Reed classes as he saw fit. Hed found brief employment in low-level jobs at Silicon Valley icons HP and Atari. Hed taken a spiritual journey to India and dabbled with both psyc
12、hedelic drugs and primal scream therapy. Woz wanted to build computers to please himself. Jobs wanted to sell them to make money. Their first creation, the Apple I, was mostly a warm-up act for 1977s Apple II. The insides of the II were the product of Wozs technical genius, but much about it from it
13、s emphasis on ease of use to its stylish case design reflected Jobs instincts in their earliest form. In an era when most computers still looked like nerdy scientific equipment, it was a consumer electronics device and a bestseller. In 1981, Woz crashed his V-tail Beechcraft and spent months recuper
14、ating, returning to Apple only nominally thereafter. From then on, Jobs was the Steve who shaped Apples destiny. In 1979, he visited Xeroxs PARC research lab in Palo Alto, Calif., and was dazzled by what he saw there, including an experimental computer with a graphical user interface and a mouse. Wi
15、thin 10 minutes . it was clear to me that all computers would work this way someday, he later said. At Apple, PARCs ideas showed up first in the Lisa, a $10,000 computer that flopped. They then reappeared in improved form in 1984s Macintosh, the creation of a dream team of gifted young software and
16、hardware wizards led by Jobs. Launched with an unforgettable Super Bowl commercial that represented the IBM PC status quo as an Orwellian dystopia, the $2,495 Mac was by far the most advanced personal computer released to date. Jobs said it was insanely great, a bit of self-praise that became foreve
17、r associated with him and with Apple, even though he retired that particular phrase soon thereafter. The Mac was insanely great but it was also deeply flawed. The original version had a skimpy 128 KB of memory and no expansion slots; computing pioneer Alan Kay, who worked at Apple at the time, ticke
18、d off Jobs by calling it a Honda with a one-gallon gas tank. In a pattern Jobs would repeat frequently in the years to come, he had given people things they didnt know they needed while denying them at least temporarily ones they knew they wanted. Just as Jobs intuitively understood, PARCs ideas wou
19、ld have ended up on every computer whether or not the Mac had ever existed. But theres no question that he accelerated the process through sheer force of will. He wanted you to be great, and he wanted you to create something that was great, said computer scientist Larry Tesler, an Apple veteran, in
20、the PBS documentary Triumph of the Nerds. And he was going to make you do that. Whether Jobs was coaxing breakthroughs out of his employees or selling a new product to consumers, his pitches had a mesmerizing quality. Mac software architect Bud Tribble gave it the name it would be forever known by:
21、the Reality Distortion Field. Jobs may have been inspiring, but he was also a high-maintenance co-worker. He dismissed people who didnt impress him and they were legion, inside and outside of Apple as bozos. He was not a master of deadlines. He tormented hapless job candidates and occasionally cried
22、 at work. And he was profoundly autocratic. (Jef Raskin, the originator of the Macintosh project, said Jobs would have made an excellent King of France.) Among the people whose buttons he increasingly pushed was Apples president, John Sculley, the man he had famously berated into joining the company
23、 with the question, Do you want to sell sugared water for the rest of your life, or do you want to come with me and change the world? Frustrated with Jobs management of the Macintosh division and empowered by the Macs sluggish sales, Sculley and Apples board stripped him of all power to make decisio
24、ns in June 1985. In September, Jobs resigned. Decades later, the notion of Apple deciding it would be better off without Steve Jobs is as unfathomable as it would have been if Walt Disney Productions had sacked Walt Disney. In 1985, though, plenty of people thought it was a fabulous idea. I think Ap
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