 
 Steve Jobs introducing the iPhone 4 last year.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)Apple co-founder and Chairman Steve Jobs died today, Apple said. He was 56. 
  "Steve's brilliance, passion and energy were the source of countless  innovations that enrich and improve all of our lives," Apple said in a statement. "The world is immeasurably better because of Steve." 
 Jobs had been suffering from various health issues following the  seventh anniversary of his surgery for a rare form of pancreatic cancer  in August 2004. Apple announced in January that he would be taking an  indeterminate medical leave of absence, with Jobs then stepping down  from his role as CEO in late August. 
 Jobs had undergone a liver  transplant in April 2009 during an earlier planned six-month leave of  absence. He returned to work for a year and a half before his health  forced him to take more time off. He told his employees in August, "I  have always said if there ever came a day when I could no longer meet my  duties and expectations as Apple's CEO, I would be the first to let you  know. Unfortunately, that day has come." 
 
 Flags fly at half-staff at Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, Calif.
(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET) One of the most legendary businessmen in American history, Jobs turned  three separate industries on their head in the 35 years he was involved  in the technology industry. 
 Personal computing was invented with  the launch of the Apple II in 1977. Legal digital music recordings were  brought into the mainstream with the iPod and iTunes in the early 2000s, and mobile phones were never the same after the 2007 debut of the iPhone.  Jobs played an instrumental role in the development of all three, and  managed to find time to transform the art of computer-generated  movie-making on the side. 
 The invention of the iPad in 2010, a touch-screen tablet  computer his competitors flocked to reproduce, was the capstone of his  career as a technologist. A conceptual hybrid of a touch-screen iPod and  a slate computer, the 10-inch mobile device was Jobs' vision for a more  personal computing device. 
 Jobs was considered brilliant yet  brash. He valued elegance in design yet was almost never seen in public  wearing anything but a black mock turtleneck, blue jeans, and a few days  worth of stubble. A master salesman who considered himself an artist at  heart, Jobs inspired both reverence and fear in those who worked for  him and against him, and was adored by an army of loyal Apple customers  who almost saw him as superhuman. 
 Jobs was born in San Francisco  in 1955 to young parents who gave him up for adoption. Paul and Clara  Jobs gave him his name, and moved out of the city in 1960 to the Santa  Clara Valley, later to be known as Silicon Valley. Jobs grew up in  Mountain View and Cupertino, where Apple's headquarters is located. 
  He attended Reed College in Oregon for a year but dropped out, although  he sat in on some classes that interested him, such as calligraphy.  After a brief stint at Atari working on video games, he spent time  backpacking around India, furthering teenage experiments with  psychedelic drugs and developing an interest in Buddhism, all of which  would shape his work at Apple. 
 Back in California, Jobs' friend  Steve Wozniak was learning the skills that would change both their  lives. When Jobs discovered that Wozniak had been assembling relatively  (for the time) small computers, he struck a partnership, and Apple  Computer was founded in 1976 in the usual Silicon Valley fashion:  setting up shop in the garage of one of the founder's parents. 
  Wozniak handled the technical end, creating the Apple I, while Jobs ran  sales and distribution. The company sold a few hundred Apple Is, but  found much greater success with the Apple II, which put the company on  the map and is largely credited as having proven that regular people  wanted computers. 
 It also made Jobs and Wozniak rich. Apple went  public in 1980, and Jobs was well on his way to becoming one of the  first tech industry celebrities, earning a reputation for brilliance,  arrogance, and the sheer force of his will and persuasion, often  jokingly referred to as his "reality-distortion field." 
 The  debut of the Macintosh in 1984 left no doubt that Apple was a serious  player in the computer industry, but Jobs only had a little more than a  year left at the company he founded when the Mac was released in January  1984. 
 By 1985 Apple CEO John Sculley--who Jobs had convinced to  leave Pepsi in 1983 and run Apple with the legendary line, "Do you want  to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want a  chance to change the world?"--had developed his own ideas for the future  of the company, and they differed from Jobs'. He removed Jobs from his  position leading the Macintosh team, and Apple's board backed Sculley. 
Steve Jobs: A life in technology
 He went on to found NeXT, which set about making the next  computer in Jobs' eyes. NeXT was never the commercial success that Apple  was, but during those years, Jobs found three things that would help  him architect his return. 
 The first was Pixar. Jobs snapped up  the graphic-arts division of Lucasfilm in 1986, which would go on to  produce "Toy Story" in 1995 and set the standard for computer-graphics  films. After making a fortune from Pixar's IPO in 1995, Jobs eventually  sold the company to Disney in 2006. 
 The second was  object-oriented software development. NeXT chose this development model  for its software operating systems, and it proved to be more advanced  and more nimble than the operating system developments Apple was working  on without Jobs. 
 The third was Laurene Powell, a Stanford MBA  student who attended a talk on entrepreneurialism given by Jobs in 1989  at the university. The two wed in 1991 and eventually had three  children; Reed, born in 1991, Erin, born in 1995, and Eve, born in 1998.  Jobs has another daughter, Lisa, who was born in 1978, but Jobs refused  to acknowledge he was her father for the first few years of her life,  eventually reconciling with Lisa and her mother, his high-school  girlfriend Chris-Ann Brennan. 
 Jobs returned to Apple in 1996,  having convinced then-CEO Gil Amelio to adopt NeXTStep as the future of  Apple's operating system development. Apple was in a shambles at the  time, losing money, market share, and key employees. 
Flowers sit near a sign at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif.
(Credit: Daniel Terdiman/CNET)By 1997, Jobs was once again in charge of Apple. He  immediately brought buzz back to the company, which pared down and  reacquired a penchant for showstoppers, such as the 1998 introduction of  the iMac; perhaps the first "Stevenote." His presentation skills at  events such as Macworld would become legendary examples of showmanship  and star power in the tech industry. 
 Jobs also set the company  on the path to becoming a consumer-electronics powerhouse, creating and  improving products such as the iPod, iTunes, and later, the iPhone and  iPad. Apple is the most valuable publicly-traded company in the world,  surpassing ExxonMobil's market capitalization in August. He did so in  his own fashion, imposing his ideas and beliefs on his employees and  their products in ways that left many a career in tatters. Jobs enforced  a culture of secrecy at Apple and was an extremely demanding leader,  terrorizing Apple employees when he returned to the company in the late  1990s with summary firings if he didn't like the answers they gave when  questioned. 
Jobs was an intensely private person. That quality  put him and Apple at odds with government regulators and stockholders  who demanded to know details about his ongoing health problems and his  prognosis as the leader and alter ego of his company. It spurred a 2009  SEC probe into whether Apple's board had made misleading statements  about his health. 
 In the years before he fell ill in 2008, Jobs  seemed to soften a bit, perhaps due to his bout with a rare form of  pancreatic cancer in 2004. 
 In 2005, his remarks to Stanford  graduates included this line: "Remembering that I'll be dead soon is the  most important tool I've ever encountered to help me make the big  choices in life. Because almost everything--all external expectations,  all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure--these things just fall  away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important." 
  Later, in 2007, he appeared onstage at the D: All Things Digital  conference for a lengthy interview with bitter rival Bill Gates,  exchanging mutual praise and prophetically quoting the Beatles: "You and  I have memories longer than the road that stretches out ahead." 
 Jobs leaves behind his wife, four children, two sisters, and 49,000 Apple employees.
Tom Krazit, Erica Ogg, and Josh Lowensohn wrote this report.
 
 A bagpiper plays at Apple headquarters.


 
 




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