Steve Jobs' personal life wasn't that great, he had one daughter named Lisa, he denied being Lisa's father publicly and he had a lot of discussions with her, Jobs urged his children to explore different fields and find what made them happy. But it's easy to see that a career in technology would be intimidating, considering he accomplished so much in his short life. Personally, I think he wasn't a good father for her, but he was a role model when it was about teaching her how the world worked. Jobs had a succesful life, everything he created was always a hit, such as the MAC and NeXT, everything happens for a reason and this can be seen when Jobs had to leave Apple and ended in NeXT, both companies were on …show more content…
Apple decided that the benefits outweighed the cons . Likewise for not supporting Flash, having non-removable batteries, a single locked-down App store and dropping floppy drives. The entire philosophy of iOS is built around making a computer that a grandmother could use without issue - installing an app is a two tap process, viruses are non-existent - and that's only possible because they made other, tough decisions. The fact that most of the industry argued these decisions were wrong (before ultimately copying them) shows you how powerful these decisions were - Apple had an unusual connection with what customers really wanted, not what experts thought they did. Most tech companies focus - understandably - on tech. Apple built their success on artistic values. To make great art, you focus on what you're passionate about. Your work gets people excited. You make decisions that piss some people off because the otherwise your art is a slurry of mediocrity. No good artist surrenders to groupthink or is led by committee. And I believe this artistic ethos is at the core of Apple's