Apple Inc.'s Steve Jobs may not have invented personal computers, mobile phones, or portable music players, but he surely did revolutionize the way the world lived with them, from the 1970s onward.
Steve Jobs, Apple's mastermind who took charge of the golden era of personal computing, led a full life characterized by several idiosyncrasies, some of which portray the amusing personality he was.
Two days after the world was saddened by the death of Apple co-founder and long-time CEO Steve Jobs, his funeral is taking place as the outpouring of emotion and respect continues.
A funeral for Apple Inc.'s co-founder Steve Jobs is being held on Friday with a small private gathering, a source close to the event told The Wall Street Journal. The funeral comes two days after Jobs' death on Wednesday, presumably at the end of his long fight with pancreatic cancer. Prior to his passing, Jobs had surgery for the disease, as well as a liver transplant.
The funeral for Apple co-founder Steve Jobs is taking place Friday, according to a person familiar with the matter.
When the world heard the news that Apple's co-founder and visionary, Steve Jobs, had died on Wednesday their tributes went far beyond social media networks and comments made on the gadgets he masterminded. People flooded to their nearest apple stores, leaving notes, flowers, apples and lighting candles all in honor of the way his technology impacted their lives.
Filmmakers Alex Gibney (“Enron”), Peter Joseph (“Zeitgeist”), Michael Moore (“Capitalism: A Love Story”) and Charles Ferguson (“Inside Job”) top the list of documentarians whose work scrutinizes the establishment and actually calls it what it is: damaged goods.
The man behind the genius will soon be revealed as Steve Job's official biography has been expedited and will be released on Oct.24.
A new play about Steve Jobs, the public's love affair with the devices he created, and the human cost of creating them, will go ahead next week despite his death, theater representatives said on Thursday.
Despite a serious illness, Steve Jobs worked as Apple's CEO almost until the end, but for more than a year before his death, Jobs worked to ensure Apple's future by planning four years' worth of new Apple products.
With everyone's attention focused on the iPhone, what may have been overlooked from the event was the future of iPods. Where is Apple planning to go with the music player that changed the way we listen to music?
In the Let's talk iPhone event, Apple Inc. unveiled iPhone 4S just to satisfy the feature-hungry fans with basic smartphone specifications. The iPhone 5 remained a mystery after all, but analysts are expecting the Cupertino tech giant to release a 4G LTE iPhone 5 in 2012.
While the world mourns Steve Jobs' death, Westboro Baptist Church said it plans to protest his funeral. The irony? The church sent the message out using the iPhone.
The previously lost and restored exclusive video of Steve Jobs biggest moment at Apple. The lost 1984 video where the young Steve introduces the Macintosh.
With the end of an era as Steve Jobs died, it's time to reflect on his tenure with Apple and on some of his famous statements.
Jobs died on October 5th from pancreatic cancer.
Westboro Baptist Church informed the Twitter universe Wednesday night of their intentions to protest the funeral of Steve Jobs, the Apple CEO who died on Oct. 5, 2011. Here’s the good part: They did it via Twitter for iPhone.
A look at how people are mourning Steve Jobs.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who died Oct. 5 of pancreatic cancer, changed the sports world forever.
The memory of Steve Jobs has been visible across the country, including at Apple workplaces, where people gathered outside of Apple stores to remember the founder of the technology giant.
Steve Jobs had a rare form of pancreatic cancer initially believed to be treatable
Steve Jobs, almost single-handedly, turned personal technology into personal technology. Which is a truly astonishing legacy to leave.