Steve Jobs is best known for creating Apple Inc, a multimillion -dollar brand that won the whole world from MacBook computers to ipod and iPhone.
But how did his path begin and how did he create Apple?
This curious inventor was silent about his personal life during his career, but in the past few years he began to open.
Here are 15 inspirational facts about the Jobs Steve that you should know.
Steve Jobs was born on February 24, 1955 in the family of Abdulfattha Jandali and Joanne Shibl.
Jandali came from Muslim origin, and a slant from Catholic origin, and they were not married when the explosion was pregnant.
Both at that time worked at the University of Wisconsin, Shibl fled to California to give birth to a child.
Jobs gave Jobs to adopt after she decided that she should not leave the child.
However, years later they had a daughter, whom they left.
In 1974, Jobs went to India to stay in Ashram Karoli in search of spiritual enlightenment.
Unfortunately, upon arrival, he learned about the death of Nim Karoli last year, so he changed his trip.
Instead, he went to the ashram of Heidakhan Babaji, where he spent seven months before returning to the United States.
Jobs began to practice Zen Buddhism, which became a huge part of his life.
At some point, he was thinking of becoming a monk in Eihei-ji in Japan.
Like many successful entrepreneurs, Jobs threw a college.
In 1972, Jobs entered the Reed College, but threw his studies through one semester.
He explained to his parents that he did not want to spend their money on education, which is pointless for him.
Jobs's adoptive parents promised his biological mother a slaughter that they would pay for his education.
Together with Steve, Jobs created the first Apple computer in March 1976.
Wozniak developed Apple I, and together with Jobs they decided to sell it to the public.
By April 1, 1976, they, together with Ronald Wayne, founded the Apple Computer Company as a business partnership, now known as Apple Inc.
The business was registered in the house of Jobs's parents for Krista Drive. Jobs's bedroom was their office, which later moved to the garage.
The name "Apple" appeared at the time when Jobs worked in the All One Farm commune in Oregon.
Jobs spent a lot of time in the apple garden and decided that it should be the name of the company.
Of the four children of Steve, only three were with his wife Lauren Powell.
His first child was from his girlfriend Homestead High Chrisann Brennan.
When Brennan found out that she was pregnant, Jobs denied responsibility for pregnancy, as a result of which Brennan tore off his relationship with Jobs.
Lisa Nicole Brennan-Jobs was born on May 17, 1978. Jobs was not present at the birth of Lisa, but three days later Brennan came to visit. Together they called the daughter Lisa.
Then Jobs called the computer he worked on, Apple Lisa.
Then he publicly denied that he named the system in honor of his daughter and that Lisa deciphens as "architecture of local integrated systems."
Years later, he admitted that the project was named after his daughter.
Jobs first met his future wife in 1989 during the lecture, which he gave in the Stanford Higher School of Business.
Lorin Powell sat in the front row at Jobs's lecture, and he could not take his eyes off her.
After the lecture, Jobs met with Powell in a parking lot and invited her to dinner.
Jobs made an offer to Powell in 1990, and they got married at Ahwahnee Hotel in the Yosemiti National Park on March 18, 1991.
Due to the fact that he was adopted in childhood and did not know his biological family, it took a lot of time to find out about his sister.
Jobs found his sister, writer Mon Simpson, and met her when he was 27 years old.
Her first book was called “anywhere, not here” and was dedicated to her relationship with her parents, a biological family of Jobs.
Initially, it was a subsidiary of Disney until Jobs invested funds, and the company became an independent subsidiary.
The first film Pixar “The History of toys” (1995) was a joint venture with Disney, but because of Jobs investments, this meant that he was appointed executive producer.
Disney bought the company in 2006.
As part of the absorption, Disney converted Pixar shares in Disney, which for a short time made Jobs one of Disney's largest shareholders.
The exact number of patents in which the name Jobs is indicated either as the only inventor or as a co -author, varies depending on the direction.
Jobs has 43 patents for “inventions” in their name, while everyone else is related to the design.
He has patents for speakers, stairs, bags, power adapters, telephones, etc.
Jobs received a patent for the user interface Mac OS X Dock the day before his death.
After his death, he received another 141 patent in his name. Thus, there are hundreds of patents in which the name Jobs is mentioned.
Not the same clothing, but the same style.
Jobs accepted the dress code, which consisted of a black turtleneck, jeans and sneakers.
His style was simple, but thanks to this he became famous.
He wore only Levis jeans, and, according to rumors, he had about 100 pairs.
In 2003, a cancer, a pancreatic tumor was diagnosed near Steve Jobs.
Initially, Jobs ignored the proposed treatment in search of an alternative.
It is believed that alternative treatment may be the cause of such an early death of Jobs.
In 2004, he finally underwent an operation to remove a pancreatic tumor. Unfortunately, in 2006, his tumor returned, but not everyone knew about it.
Tim Cook suggested Jobs part of his liver, since they both have a rare blood type.
In April 2009, Jobs was transplanted by the liver in Memphis, Tennessee, at the Institute of Transplantology of the Methodist University Hospital.
In January 2011, Apple gave Jobs a vacation due to illness so that he could focus on his health.
In 2007, Jobs was introduced into the Glory Hall of California.
It is located in the California Museum of History, Women and Arts.
The first iPhone was released on June 29, 2007, after they worked on it since 2005.
In addition, in 2007, Fortune called Jobs the most influential person in business.
In 1978, at the age of 23, Steve Jobs's own capital was $ 1 million. Just two years later, Jobs was $ 250 million.
At the time of his death in 2011, his own capital amounted to 10.2 billion dollars.
Most of this was from his shares in Disney, not Apple.
In 2009, Jobs began to talk about his life and interviewed journalists.
Jobs allowed Walter Aisekson to write his only biography.
Isaacson granted all the rights to create a biography, except for the cover.
Jobs allowed Isaacon to get true interviews from friends, family and colleagues so that the book becomes a true description of his life.
Isaacon founded a book on more than 40 interviews with Jobs and spent hundreds of interviews with people who were part of his life.
Jobs said that he did not want to read the book before it was published, because he wanted it to be true and had no influence.
Unfortunately, it was not published until October 24, 2011, 19 days after his death.
In the capital of Hungary, there is a bronze statue of Jobs almost 7 feet high (2.1 meters).
The artist Erno, he created a sculpture for Graphisoft, a Hungarian software development company.
The statue was established on December 21, 2011, after his death in the same year.
The statue was established to commemorate Jobs’s contribution to the technological industry and support that he provided to Graphisoft during their communist rule.
The statue is located in the Park of Graphisoft, where other technological and scientific companies are based.
Steve Jobs had an interesting life, starting with the fact that he was adopted, but then he found a spiritual path through Buddhism.
His interest in electronics and computers was his gate to a successful and innovative future when he created Apple Inc.
Jobs has so much influenced personal computer systems and technologies that even today his work is part of everyday life.
His legacy will live while Apple continues to create and invent. #Science #technology #interesting facts #Celebrities #interesting stories #Apple #Secrets