Skip to main content

Diigo Home

The decade of Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple - The Diigo Meta page

money.cnn.com/...index.htm - Cached

This link has been bookmarked by 9 people . It was first bookmarked on 05 Nov 2009, by juremes sss.

  • 14 Nov 09
  • 12 Nov 09
  • 10 Nov 09
  • 09 Nov 09
    koroghcm
    koroghcm us

    Steve Jobs and his career in changing four major markets: computing, music, movies and cell phones. Interesting piece with a number of supplemental articles and video snippets.

    apple history business technology technology use

  • 08 Nov 09
    • merely listing his achievements is sufficient explanation of why he's Fortune's CEO of the Decade (though the superlatives continue). In the past 10 years alone he has radically and lucratively reordered three markets -- music, movies, and mobile telephones -- and his impact on his original industry, computing, has only grown.
    • He isn't motivated by money, says friend Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle (ORCL, Fortune 500). Rather, Jobs is understandably driven by a visceral ardor for Apple, his first love (to which he returned after being spurned -- proof that you can go home again) and the vehicle through which he can be both an arbiter of cool and a force for changing the world.
    • 1 more annotations...
  • 06 Nov 09
    ampedstatus
    Amped Status

    How's this for a gripping corporate story line: Youthful founder gets booted from his company in the 1980s, returns in the 1990s, and in the following decade survives two brushes with death, one securities-law scandal, an also-ran product lineup, and his own often unpleasant demeanor to become the dominant personality in four distinct industries, a billionaire many times over, and CEO of the most valuable company in Silicon Valley. Sound too far-fetched to be true? Perhaps. Yet it happens to be the real-life story of Steve Jobs and his outsize impact on everything he touches. The past decade in business belongs to Jobs. What makes that simple statement even more remarkable is that barely a year ago it seemed likely that any review of his accomplishments would be valedictory. But by deeds and accounts, Jobs is back.

  • 05 Nov 09