
I'm sure his kids and family knew him well. But as Steve Jobs said in 2005, "[you need] to tell your kids everything you thought you'd have the next 10 years to tell them in just a few months."Damn, that last paragraph made me tear up. I hope his kids got to know their dad better these last few months.
Myself and a co-worker thought that it would be fitting if we could somehow organize the night that Steve Jobs is laid to rest where everyone goes outside at a certain set time across the U.S. when it is dark and we put our iPhones, iPods, iPads and point them to the sky so they display a glowing and bright white Apple logo on their screens (sample attached)..or even just the trademark white glowing screen of Apple devices.
We would need obviously someone to create a simple iOS application for this that displays a illuminated/glowing Apple Logo on a black background on the screens of these iOS devices and it would be a free download so everyone could participate it so we can pull this off.
I think this would be a fitting tribute to Steve. And I think it would be stunning if we saw the imagery of this from above from the various cities.
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Like I said yesterday. This man is the epitomy of class.
"I wanted my kids to know me," he said. "I wasn't always there for them, and I wanted them to know why and to understand what I did."
impulse462 said:Usually the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer is a death sentence. Steve still introduced the iPhone and iPad after this diagnosis.
Simply Amazing.
All you guys are making me feel bad about myself. I don't know if there is something wrong with me, but I'm really not feeling the same way about his death as most of you are. I am not crying. I'm not thinking about some fitting tribute I will perform. I'm not going to encase my iPad, or this new hardcover, in glass. I don't feel the "s" in 4S stands for "Steve".
Why not? Because although I own a small army worth of Apple products (and want even more), I never really knew the man. Heck, his own kids, it turns out, didn't even know him. Did he change my life in a positive way? You bet. My iPhone is like a 3rd arm to me. I'm certain sadden by his death, but I feel much sadder for his family he left behind who will miss him immensely.
Looking forward to getting my e-book version of this to read on my ipad.
Man, what an emotional day - that last paragraph really got to me.
🙁
I am further saddened to read that he, in part, wanted to do the book in order for his children to get to know him, to get to know a person in a way that all of us who read this book will get to know. By this I mean that we will know him almost just as well as they know him, if what he says is true.
The last line about him wanting his kids to know him is simultaneously touching and disturbing. I'm torn because I know how important I found him and the products that he helped design and bring to market, but is all of that really worth it if he felt like he needed a biography to help his kids know him? I'm not sure.
Hmmm..
I think the exact opposite, someone with more class would have been there.
Hmmm..
I think the exact opposite, someone with more class would have been there.
All you guys are making me feel bad about myself. I don't know if there is something wrong with me, but I'm really not feeling the same way about his death as most of you are. I am not crying. I'm not thinking about some fitting tribute I will perform. I'm not going to encase my iPad, or this new hardcover, in glass. I don't feel the "s" in 4S stands for "Steve".
Why not? Because although I own a small army worth of Apple products (and want even more), I never really knew the man. Heck, his own kids, it turns out, didn't even know him. Did he change my life in a positive way? You bet. My iPhone is like a 3rd arm to me. I'm certain sadden by his death, but I feel much sadder for his family he left behind who will miss him immensely.