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Steve Jobs was born on 24th February 1955 in San Francisco California. His birth parents
had to give up Steve due to being too young at the time and not wanting to get married. Having
a child out of wedlock had a strong stigma in the 50's, so Steve was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs.
In 1961 the family moved to Mountain View, California. This area, just south of Palo
Alto, California, was becoming the hub for electronics such as radios, televisions,
stereos, and computers. At that time people started to refer to the area as "Silicon Valley."
Paul Jobs was a machinist and fixed cars as a hobby.
Jobs remembers his father as being very skilled at working with his hands.
Paul built a workbench in his garage for his son to "pass along his love of mechanics”.
Steve often found it difficult in making friends his own age and struggled to function
in a traditional classroom. He resisted authority figures, frequently misbehaved and was suspended a
few times. Jobs later said himself he was “pretty bored in school and had turned into a little
terror..” He regularly played pranks on others at Monta Loma Elementary school in Mountain View.
Although Jobs credited his fourth grade teacher with turning him around:
"It took her about a month to get hip to my situation. She bribed me into learning. She would
say, 'I really want you to finish this workbook. I'll give you five bucks if you finish it.'
That kindled a passion in me for learning! I learned more that year than I think I learned in
any other year in school. They wanted me to skip the next two years in grade school and go straight
to junior high to learn a foreign language, but my parents very wisely wouldn't let it happen.”
Jobs did skip the fifth grade and transferred to the 6th grade at Crittenden Middle
School in Mountain View. However, this transition led to Jobs being bullied,
he then gave his parents an ultimatum, take him out of Crittenden or he would drop out of school.
His parents used all their savings in 1967 to buy a new house which would allow Jobs to change
schools. Their new house on Crist Drive in Los Altos, California would later become a
key figure in Apple's history. Whilst Jobs started studying at Cupertino Junior High.
A fellow electronics hobbyist, Bill Fernandez, from Cupertino Junior High, became his first
friend. Fernandez later commented that "for some reason the kids in the eighth grade didn't like
Steve because they thought he was odd. I was one of his few friends." Fernandez eventually
introduced Jobs to electronics whiz Steve Wozniak, who lived across the street from Fernandez.
As a child, Jobs preferred doing things by himself. He swam competitively but was not
interested in team sports or other group activities. He spent a lot of time working
in the garage workshop of a neighbour who worked at Hewlett-Packard, an electronics manufacturer.
Jobs also enrolled in the Hewlett-Packard Explorer Club where he saw engineers demonstrate new
products, and he saw his first computer at the age of twelve. He was impressed and knew immediately
that he wanted to work with computers. While in high school Jobs attended lectures
at the Hewlett-Packard plant. On one occasion he boldly asked William Hewlett, the president,
for some parts he needed to complete for a class project. Hewlett was impressed,
he gave Jobs the parts and offered him a summer internship at Hewlett-Packard. Jobs said
“He didn't know me at all, but he ended up giving me some parts and he got me a
job that summer working at Hewlett-Packard on the line, assembling frequency counters...well,
assembling may be too strong. I was putting in screws. It didn't matter; I was in heaven.”
The location of the Los Altos home meant that Jobs would be able to attend nearby Homestead High
School, which had strong ties to Silicon Valley. He began his first year there in late 1968.
During mid-1970, Steve went through a period of change, he said "I got stoned for the first time;
I discovered Shakespeare, Dylan Thomas, and all that classic stuff. I read Moby Dick and went back
as a junior taking creative writing classes." From that point, Jobs developed two different
circles of friends, those involved in electronics and engineering and those interested in art and
literature. These dual interests were particularly reflected during Jobs's senior year as his best
friends were Wozniak and his first girlfriend, the artistic Homestead junior Chrisann Brennan.
He was described by a Homestead classmate as "kind of a brain and kind of a hippie ... but
he never fit into either group. He was smart enough to be a nerd, but wasn't nerdy. And he
was too intellectual for the hippies, who just wanted to get wasted all the time. He was kind
of an outsider. In high school everything revolved around what group you were in.
and if you weren't in a carefully defined group, you weren't anybody. He was an individual,
in a world where individuality was suspect." Paul and Clara Jobs had made a pledge when they
adopted Steve that they would send him to college. So they had worked hard and
saved dutifully for his college fund, which was modest but adequate by the time he graduated.
However Jobs, becoming ever more wilful minded, did not make it easy. At first he toyed with not
going to college at all. “I think I might have headed to New York if I didn't go to college,”
When his parents pushed him to go to college, he responded in a passive-aggressive way. He did not
consider state schools, such as Berkeley, where Steve Wozniak was, despite that they were more
affordable. Nor did he look at Stanford, just up the road and likely to offer a scholarship. “The
kids who went to Stanford, they already knew what they wanted to do,” he said.
“They weren't really artistic. I wanted something that was more artistic and interesting.”
Instead he insisted on applying only to Reed College, a private liberal arts school
in Portland, Oregon, that was one of the most expensive in the nation. He was visiting Steve
Wozniak at Berkeley when his father called to say an acceptance letter had arrived from Reed,
he tried to talk Steve out of going there. So did his mother. It was more than they
could afford but similarly their son responded with an ultimatum: If he couldn't go to Reed,
he wouldn't go anywhere. They relented, as usual. Reed was known for its free-spirited hippie
lifestyle, which combined somewhat uneasily with its rigorous academic standards. Steve
enrolled at Reed to study Physics and Philosophy. Chirssan Brennan remained involved with Jobs while
he was at Reed. However Steve soon decided to drop out of Reed College. He liked being at
Reed however he didn't enjoy having to attend the required classes. Jobs continued to attend classes
he enjoyed like calligraphy. During that time the relationship between Jobs and Brennan broke down.
In a 2005 commencement speech at Stanford University, Jobs stated that during this period,
he slept on the floor in friends' dorm rooms, returned Coke bottles for food money,
and got weekly free meals at the local Hare Krishna temple. In that same speech,
Jobs said: "If I had never dropped in on that single calligraphy course in college,
the Mac would have never had multiple typefaces or proportionally spaced fonts.”
In 1972 Wozniak had designed a low-cost digital "blue box" to generate the
necessary tones to manipulate the telephone network, allowing free long-distance calls.
Jobs decided that they could make money selling it. The two stopped making the
boxes after they were nearly caught by the police. Despite giving up on the venture,
they reportedly made about $6000 selling the blue boxes. Jobs said that if not for the blue boxes,
there would have been no Apple. And that they could take on large companies and beat them.
In mid-1973, when Jobs was 18 he moved back to the San Francisco area and began renting
his own apartment. Brennan and Jobs relationship was complicated by this stage. Jobs hitchhiked
and worked around the West Coast and Brennan would occasionally join him. Brennan wrote
this in her dairy, "little by little, Steve and I separated. But we were never able to fully let go.
We never talked about breaking up or going our separate ways and we didn't have that conversation
where one person says it's over." They continued to grow apart, but Jobs would still seek her out,
and visit her while she was working in a health food store or as a live-in babysitter.
In 1973, Steve Wozniak designed his own version of the classic video game Pong. After finishing it,
Wozniak gave the board to Jobs, who then took the game down to Atari in Los Gatos. Atari thought
that Jobs had built it and gave him a job as a technician. Later Atari's co-founder said
"The truth is that very few companies would hire Steve, even today. Why? Because he was an outlier.
To most potential employers, he'd just seem like a jerk in bad clothing. Steve was difficult but
valuable. He was very often the smartest guy in the room, and he would let people know that."
By early 1974, Jobs was living what Brennan describes as a "simple life" in a Los Gatos cabin,
working at Atari and saving money for his impending trip to India. One of his friends
had been to India and he was urging jobs to take his spiritual journey there too.
He ended up reaching the foothills of Himaya after days of traveling by train and bus.
That's where he was supposed to see Neem Karoli Baba but by the time Jobs got there he had
passed away. Despite the setback, Jobs still spent seven months in India exploring his spirituality.
He said, “The people in the Indian countryside don't use their intellect like we do,
they use their intuition and their intuition is more developed than the rest of the world.
Intuition is a very powerful thing, more powerful than intellect,
in my opinion. That's had a big impact on my work”
After staying seven months, Jobs left India and returned to the US. Jobs
had changed his appearance; his head was shaved and he wore traditional Indian clothing. Over this
time, Jobs experimented with psychedelics, later calling his experimentation with LSD “a profound
experience, one of the most important things in my life. LSD shows you that there's another side
to the coin, and you can't remember it when it wears off, but you know it. It reinforced
my sense of what was important—creating great things instead of making money,
putting things back into the stream of history and of human consciousness as much as I could.”
Jobs and Brennan both became practitioners of Zen Buddhism. Jobs was living with his parents again,
in their backyard tool-shed which he had converted into a bedroom with a sleeping bag,
mat, books, a candle, and a meditation pillow. He considered taking up monastic residence in Japan,
and maintained a lifelong appreciation for Zen. Jobs would later say that people around
him who did not share his countercultural roots could not fully relate to his thinking.
Jobs then returned to Atari and was assigned to create a circuit board for the arcade video
game Breakout. According to Bushnell, Atari offered $100 for each TTL chip that was eliminated
in the machine. Jobs himself had little knowledge of circuit board design and made a deal with
Wozniak to split the fee evenly between them if he could minimize the number of chips. Much to the
amazement of Atari engineers, Wozniak reduced the TTL chip count from 96 to 46, a design so tight
that it was impossible to reproduce on an assembly line. According to Wozniak, Jobs told him that
Atari gave them only $700 (instead of the $5,000 paid out), and that Wozniak's share was thus $350.
It was only later that Wozniak found out about this to which he said "I cried, I cried quite
a bit when I read that in a book." It was around this time that Jobs
and Wozniak attended meetings of the Homebrew Computer Club in 1975,
which was a stepping stone to the development and marketing of the first Apple computer.
In 1976, Wozniak designed and developed the Apple I computer and showed it to Jobs,
who suggested that they sell it. Jobs, Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne founded Apple
Computer in the garage of Jobs's Los Altos home on Crist Drive.
The two Steves attended the Homebrew Computer Club together; a computer hobbyist group that
gathered in California's Menlo Park from 1975. Woz had seen his first MITS Altair there - which
today looks like little more than a box of lights and circuit boards. Wozniak was inspired by MITS'
build-it-yourself approach (the Altair came as a kit) to make something simpler for the rest of us.
Wozniak went on to produce the first computer with a typewriter-like keyboard and the ability to
connect to a regular TV as a screen. It was later christened the Apple I and was the archetype of
every modern computer, but Wozniak wasn't trying to change the world with what he'd made
- he just wanted to show off how much he'd managed to do with so little resources.
The two decided on the name "Apple" after Jobs returned from the All One Farm commune in Oregon
and told Wozniak about his time spent in the farm's apple orchard. Neighbours
on Crist Drive had described Jobs as an odd individual who would greet his
clients "with his underwear hanging out, barefoot and hippie-like."
Jobs approached a local computer store, The Byte Shop with the Apple I, who said they
would be interested in the machine, but only if it came fully assembled. The owner, Paul Terrell,
went further, saying he would order 50 of the machines and pay US $500 each on delivery. Jobs
then took the purchase