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  • He is considered the father of the digital revolution, a master of innovation and a design perfectionist

  • He had a network of over eight billion dollars in 2010

  • He is one of my personal favorite entrepreturs of all time

  • He is Steve Jobs from Apple and here is his top ten rules for success

  • The thing I would say is

  • when you grow up, you tend to get told that the world is the way it is

  • and your

  • your life is just to live your life inside the world, try not to bash into the walls too much

  • Ah, try to have a nice family life

  • have fun, save a little money

  • but life

  • that's a very limited life

  • life can be much broader

  • once you discover one simple fact

  • and that is everything around you that you call life was made up by people there were no smarter than you

  • and you can change it, you can influence it

  • you can, you can build your own things that other people can use

  • and the minute that you understand that you can poke life in actually

  • something you know you push in, something you pop out the other side

  • you can, you can change it

  • you can mold it

  • Ahm, that's maybe the most important thing

  • is to shake off this

  • this ... notion that life is there and you're just gonna live in it

  • versus, embrace it, change it, improve it

  • make your mark upon it

  • Uh, I think that is very important

  • and however you learn that once you learn it

  • you'll wanna change life and make it better

  • cause it's kinda messed up in a lot of ways

  • once you learn that, you'll never be the same again

  • People say you have to have a lot of passion for what you're doing

  • And it's totally true

  • and the reason is

  • is because it's so hard that if you don't, any rational person would give up

  • it's really hard

  • and you have to do it over a sustained period of time

  • so if you don't love it, you don't have fun doing it

  • you don't really love it

  • you're gonna give up

  • and that's what happens to most people actually if you really look at

  • at the ones that ended up

  • you know being successful "on quote the eyes of society" than the ones that didn't

  • often times, it's the ones that were sucessful love what they did so they could persevere

  • you know, it got really tough

  • and... and the ones that didn't love it, quit

  • cause they're ???????

  • right, who would wanna put up with this stuff if you dont love it

  • so, it's a lot of hard work

  • and ... and it's a lot of worrying constantly

  • and ... if you don't love it, you're gonna fail

  • so you gotta love it, you gotta have passion

  • we had absolutely no idea what people gonna do ....

  • because we can't afford to buy it a computer to the market so we liberated

  • some parts for new Packard and tari quickly i'm not report down design for

  • about six months and decided that

  • I would build on computer so we built and i was up till four in the morning

  • for many moons and we've got it working we showed some reference immediately

  • everybody want and it turned out to talk about 40 hours to build one of these

  • things in about another 20 30 40 bucket and we have a lot of friends at work

  • that similar companies who could liberate the parts also have seven Mary

  • screaming of arts in line

  • helping our friends to build computers and it's just going to be a tremendous

  • strain on our on our lives so we got the idea one day that that we could make a

  • printed circuit board without the parts and selling black printed circuit boards

  • to our friends and probably cut the assembly and debug time down that you

  • know five ten out

  • so wat soldiers hpc calculator and i sold my van we got 1,300 bucks together

  • and they are a friend of ours who is this a pc board layout person 1,300

  • bucks to do is lay out the side we sell printed circuit board that twice what it

  • cost to build them and hopefully recoup our calculator and transportation some

  • later date

  • so that's what we did and I was out trying to peddle PC boards one day and

  • walked into a bike shop the first by chopping out of you and Paul Terrell

  • then owner of the bike shop said you would like to take 50 of these computers

  • and I saw dollar signs in front of my eyes

  • and what he had one catch was that he wanted them fully assembled and tested

  • ready to go

  • which is a new twist so we spent the next five days on the phone with

  • distributors and convince the electronics parts distributors around

  • here to give us about ten thousand dollars with the parts are thinner this

  • time Susie as so we got the parts and we built a hundred computers and we sold 50

  • of them for cash and 29 days paid off with distributors and that's how we got

  • started so we have 50 computers leftover while that man we had to sell so then we

  • started worrying about marketing wearing red distribution got on the phone with

  • the other computer stores around the country and gradually the whole thing

  • began to build momentum and at that point in time we had some feeling that

  • we were onto something

  • but the feeling was is so different than the experience of actually seeing it

  • happen right now it's entirely different and sometimes a lot of a lot of people

  • ask what did you know it was going too much go into this phenomenon and you can

  • say yeah you know we planned it out we have led on a piece of paper but the

  • experience is seeing 500 people working at apple computers are different in the

  • experience of seeing a five-year-old kid who really understands what he's the

  • tool that he's got in front when you first got the job at the yo you got a

  • call from Steve Jobs and he offered you some advice

  • well he didn't call to offer me advice but we have worked together on a Nike

  • Apple collaboration called nike+ we took what Apple knows what nike nose and you

  • know brought a new technology to the market anyway long story short uh

  • he said hey congratulations that's great you're going to do a great job

  • I said well do you have any advice and he said no no you know your grade and

  • then there's a pause and goes well I do have some advice

  • it was 90 makes some of the best product in the world

  • I mean product that you lust after absolutely beautiful stunning product

  • but you also make a lot of crap

  • he said just get rid of the crappy stuff and focus on the good stuff and then I

  • expected a little pause and a laugh but there was there was a pause but no

  • laughs at the animal and he was absolutely right

  • greatest people are self-managing they don't need to be managed you think they

  • know what if once they know what to do

  • they'll go figure out how to do it they don't need to be managed at all what

  • they need is a common vision and that's what leadership is what leadership is

  • having a vision being able to articulate that so the people around you can

  • understand it and getting a consensus on a common vision we wanted people that

  • were insanely great at what they did but work were not necessarily those seasoned

  • professionals but who had on at the tips of their fingers and in their passion

  • the latest understanding of where technology was and what we could do with

  • that technology and he wanted to bring that it's a lot of people so the neatest

  • thing that happens is when you get a core group of you know ten great people

  • that it becomes self policing as to who they let in to that group so I consider

  • the most important job of someone like myself is recruiting agonized over

  • hiring we have the interviews I go back and look at some of the interviews again

  • they would start at nine or ten in the morning and go through dinner

  • I knew interviewing would talk to everybody in the building at least once

  • maybe a couple times and then come back for another round of interviews and then

  • they'll get together and talk about it and then before the last edited by now

  • it's critical hardly ever here at least to my mind was when we finally decided

  • we like them enough to show them the Macintosh prototype and then set them

  • down in front of it and if they just kind of our borders and this is a nice

  • computer we don't want we

  • I wanted their eyes to light up and then to get really excited and then we knew

  • they were one of us and everybody just wanted to work not because it was work

  • that had to be done but it was because something that we really believed in

  • that was just going to really make a difference and that's what kept the

  • whole thing going we all want to do exactly the same thing

  • instead of spending our time arguing about what the computer should be

  • we all knew what the computer should be and just when did we went through that

  • stage and Apple where we went out and we got off we're going to be a big company

  • let's hire professional management

  • we went out and hired a bunch of professional management it didn't work

  • at all

  • most of them are bozos they they knew how to manage but they don't know how to

  • do anything

  • and so what if you're a great person why do you want to work for something you

  • can't learn anything from and you know what's interesting you know what the

  • best managers are there are the great individual contributors who never ever

  • want to be a manager but the side they have to be a manager because all every

  • no one else is going to be able to do as good a job as them after hiring two

  • professional managers from outside the company and firing them both jobs

  • gambled on Debbie : a member of the Macintosh team 32 years old and english

  • literature major with an MBA from Stanford

  • did he was a financial manager with no experience in manufacturing

  • I mean there's no way in the world anybody else would give me this chance

  • to run this kind of operation and I don't kid myself about that is an

  • incredible high risk for myself personally and professionally and for

  • Apple as the company and put a person like myself in this job

  • I mean they're really getting on a lot of things we're betting that my feel

  • that organizational effectiveness

  • you know override all those in a lack of Technology lack of experience lack of

  • you know time in manufacturing

  • so it's a big risk and i'm just an example in every single person on the

  • Mac team almost in your you know entry level person you could say that about

  • this is a place where people were afforded incredibly unique opportunities

  • to prove that they could do a good down

  • they could write the book again inscribed inside the casing of every

  • Macintosh

  • unseen by the consumer are the signatures of the whole team

  • this is apple's way of affirming that their latest innovation is a product of

  • the individuals who created it

  • not the corporation it's very interesting

  • I was worth about over a million dollars when I was 23 and over 10 million

  • dollars when I was 24 and over a hundred million dollars for those 25 and it's it

  • wasn't that important because I never did it for the money

  • I I think money is wonderful thing because it enables you to do things

  • enables you to in investing ideas that don't have a short-term payback and

  • things like that but especially at that point in my life it was it was not the

  • most important thing the most important thing was the company

  • the people the products we were making what we were going to enable people to

  • do with these products so I didn't think about it a great deal and I never sold

  • any stock just really believe that the company would do very well over the long

  • term

  • our goal is to make the best personal computers in the world and make products

  • we are proud to sell and would recommend to our family and friends and we want to

  • do that at the lowest price as we can but i have to tell you there's some

  • stuff in our industry that we wouldn't be proud to ship that we wouldn't be

  • proud to recommend to our family and friends and we can't do it

  • we just can't ship junk so there's there's a thorough thresholds that we

  • can't cross because of who we are but we want to make the best personal computers

  • in the industry slice of the industry that wants that too

  • and what you'll find is our products are usually not premium-priced you go what

  • you go and price out our competitors products and you add the features that

  • you have to add to make them useful and you'll find in some cases they are more

  • expensive than our price

  • x the difference is we don't offer stripped-down lousy products you know we

  • just don't offer categories of products like that but if you move those aside

  • and compare us with our competitors

  • I think we compare pretty favorably and a lot of people who have been doing that

  • and saying that now for the last 18 months

  • yes mr. jobs

  • you're a bright an important man

  • your tongue

  • add and clear that I'm several counts you discussed you don't know what you're

  • talking about

  • I would like for example for you to express in clear terms

  • how is a java any of its incarnations address that the idea is embodied and

  • open . and when you're finished with that perhaps you could tell us which you

  • personally have been doing for the last seven years

  • yeah

  • you know you can please some of the people some of the time but

  • one of the hardest things when you're trying to effect change is that people

  • like this gentleman are right in some areas

  • I'm sure that there are some things open doctors probably even more than i am not

  • familiar with that nothing else out there does and I'm sure that you can

  • make some demos

  • maybe a small commercial app that demonstrates those things

  • the hardest thing is what

  • how does that fit in to a cohesive larger vision that's going to allow you

  • to sell eight billion dollars 10 billion dollars of products a year and one of

  • the things I've always found is that you've gotta start with the customer

  • experience and work backwards to the technology

  • you can't start with the technology and try to figure out where you're going to

  • try to sell it and I've made this mistake probably more than anybody else

  • in this room and I got the scar tissue approve it and I know that it's the case

  • and as we have tried to come up with a strategy and a vision for apple

  • it started with what incredible benefits can we give to the customer where can we

  • take the customer not not starting with let's sit down with the engineers and

  • and figure out what awesome technology we have and then how we going to market

  • that and I think that's the right path to take

  • I remember with the laser writer

  • we built the world's first small laser printers you know and there was awesome

  • technology in that box we have the first canon laser printing cheap laser

  • printing engine

  • the world in the United States here at apple we had a very wonderful printer

  • controller that we designed we have Adobe's postscript software and there we

  • have apple talking they're just awesome technology in the box and I remember

  • seeing the first print out come out of it and just picking it up and looking at

  • thing you know we can sell this because you don't have to know anything about

  • what's in that box all we have to do is hold of something you want this

  • and if you remember back to nineteen eighty-four before laser printers was

  • pretty startling to see that people want

  • Wow yes and that's that's where Apple's got to get back to

  • and you know I'm sorry that open dr. casualty along the way and I readily

  • admit there are many things in life that I want defense that is what I'm talking

  • about

  • so I apologize for that too but there's a whole lot of people working super

  • super hard right now at apple

  • you know ah be John Green Oh Fred I mean the whole team is working

  • burning the midnight oil trying to an end and people you know hundreds of

  • people below them to execute on some of these things and they're they're doing

  • the best and i think that what we need to do and some mistakes will be made by

  • the way some mistakes will be made along the way

  • that's to it because at least some decisions are being made along the way

  • and we'll find a mistake affects them and I think what we need to do is

  • support that team going through this very important stage as they work their

  • butts off they're all getting calls being offered three times as much money

  • to go do this without the valleys hot none of them are leaving and I think we

  • need to support them and see them through this and write some damn good

  • applications to support apple on the market that's my own point of view

  • mistakes we made some people will be pissed off

  • some people will not know what they're talking about but it's I think it is so

  • much better than where things were not very long ago and I think we're gonna

  • get there

  • I mean marketing about values

  • this is a very complicated world is a very noisy world and we're not going to

  • get a chance to get people to remember much about us

  • no company is and so we have to be really clear on what we wanted to know

  • about us

  • now Apple fortunately is one of the half a dozen best brands in the whole world

  • right up there with nitin disney coke

  • sony it is one of the Great's of the great not just in this country but all

  • around the globe and but but but even a great brand needs investment and caring

  • if it's going to retain its relevance and vitality and the apple brand has

  • clearly suffered from neglect in this area in the last few years and we need

  • to bring it back

  • the way to do that is not to talk about speeds and feeds

  • it's not to talk about myths and negatives it's not to talk about why the

  • better than windows the dairy industry tried for 20 years to convince you that

  • milk is good for you to lie but they tried anyway

  • the sales are going like this and then they tried got milk and the sales are

  • going like this

  • got nothing to talk about the part that focuses on the absence of the product

  • but but but the best example of all and and one of the greatest jobs of of

  • marketing and the if the universe has ever seen as nike remember 90 sell the

  • commodity

  • this is shoes and yet when you think of 90 you feel something different than the

  • shoe company and their ads you know they don't ever talk about the product it

  • will never tell you about the air soils and by the better the reeboks their

  • souls was not you doing advertising they they honor great athletes and they on a

  • great athletics

  • that's who they are that's what they are about Apple spent a fortune on

  • advertising

  • you'd never know it you never know

  • so when I got here

  • apple just fired the agency doing the competition with 23 agencies that you

  • know for mr. Naylor pick one and we blew that up and we need higher child day

  • the ad agency that i was fortunate to work with years ago we created some

  • award-winning work including the commercial both of the best out of a

  • maid 1984 by advertising professionals and we started working about eight weeks

  • ago and what was the question we asked was our customers want to know who

  • example

  • and what is it that we stand for where do we fit in this world and

  • what more about isn't making boxes for people to get the job done

  • although we do that well we do that better than almost anybody in some cases

  • but apples about some more than apple at the cool

  • its core value is that we believe that people with passion can change the world

  • of the day that's what we believe and we have the opportunity to work with people

  • like that we have an opportunity to work with people like new with software

  • developers with customers who have done it in some big and some small ways and

  • we believe that in this world

  • people can change it for the better and that those people are crazy enough to

  • think they can change the world are the ones that actually do

  • and so what we're going to do in our first brand marketing campaign in

  • several years is to is to get back to that core value a lot of things have

  • changed that would market two totally different place than it was a decade ago

  • and apples totally different apples place in it is totally different and

  • believe me the products and the distribution strategy and manufacturing

  • totally different we understand that but values and core values those things

  • should change the things that Apple believed in at its core are the same

  • thing that Apple really stands for them

  • and so we wanted to find a way to communicate this and what we have is

  • something that I am I'm very moved by it honors those people who have changed the

  • world

  • some of them are living some of them are not at the ones that aren't as you'll

  • see you know if they ever use the computer it would have been

  • in the campaign is think different

  • it's the people honoring the people who think difference and who move this work

  • forward and its it is what we are about it touches the soil of this company

  • so I'm going to have a wallet and i hope that you feel the same way about it

  • here's to the crazy ones

  • mr. its

  • rebels

  • round pegs in the square holes

  • ones who see things

  • you're not from who

  • respect stands

  • you can quote them disagree with you

  • we were fine and vilified

  • the only thing you can

  • change

  • for

  • and while some may see them as the crazy

  • because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world

  • want to do

  • thank you

  • I'm honored to be with you today for your commencement from one of the finest

  • universities in the world

  • truth be told I never graduated from college and this is the closest I've

  • ever gotten to a college graduation today I want to tell you three stories

  • from my life

  • that's it no big deal just three stories

  • the first story is about connecting the dots

  • I dropped out a reed college after the first six months but then stayed around

  • as a drop in for another 18 months or so before I really quit

  • so why did I drop out it started before I was born my biological mother was a

  • young unwed graduate student and she decided to put me up for adoption she

  • felt very strongly that I should be adopted by college graduates so

  • everything was all set for me to be adopted at Birth by a lawyer and his

  • wife except that when I popped out

  • they decided at the last minute that they really wanted a girl so my parents

  • who were on a waiting list

  • got a call in the middle of the night asking we've got an unexpected baby boy

  • if you want him they said of course my biological mother found out later that

  • my mother had never graduated from college and my father had never

  • graduated from high school she refused to sign the final adoption papers

  • she only relented a few months later when my parents promised that I would go

  • to college

  • this was the start in my life

  • and 17 years later I did go to college but I naively chose a college that was

  • almost as expensive as Stanford and all of my working-class parents savings were

  • being spent on my college tuition

  • after six months I couldn't see the value in it

  • I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life and no idea how college was

  • going to help me figure it out

  • and here i was spending all the money my parents had saved their entire life so I

  • decided to drop out and trust that it would all work out okay

  • it was pretty scary at the time but looking back it was one of the best

  • decisions I ever made

  • the minute i dropped out

  • I could stop taking the required classes that didn't interest me and begin

  • dropping in on the ones that looked far more interesting

  • it wasn't all romantic I didn't have a dorm room so I slept on the floor and

  • friends rooms

  • I return coke bottles for the five-cent deposits to buy food with and I would

  • walk the seven miles across town every Sunday night to get one good meal a week

  • at the Hari Krishna temple

  • I loved it and much of what i stumbled into by following my curiosity and

  • intuition turned out to be priceless later on let me give you one example

  • reed college at that time offered perhaps the best calligraphy instruction

  • in the country throughout the campus every poster every label on every drawer

  • was beautifully hand Calla graft because i had dropped out and didn't have to

  • take the normal classes

  • I decided to take a calligraphy class to learn how to do this

  • I learned about serif and sans serif typefaces about varying the amount of

  • space between different letter combinations about what makes great

  • typography great

  • it was beautiful historical artistically subtle in a way that science can't

  • capture and I found it fascinating

  • none of this had even a hope of any practical application in my life but 10

  • years later when we were designing the first macintosh computer

  • it all came back to me

  • and we designed it all into the mac it was the first computer with beautiful

  • typography

  • if I had never dropped in on that single course in college

  • the mac would have never had multiple typefaces are proportionally spaced

  • fonts and since windows just copy the mac

  • it's likely that no personal computer would have them

  • if I had never dropped out

  • I would have never dropped in on that calligraphy class and personal computers

  • might not have the wonderful typography that they do

  • of course it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward when I was in

  • college but it was very very clear looking backwards

  • ten years later again you can't connect the dots looking forward you can only

  • connect them looking backwards so you have to trust that the dots will somehow

  • connect in your future

  • you have to trust in something your gut destiny life karma whatever because

  • believing that the dots will connect down the road will give you the

  • confidence to follow your heart even when it leads you off the well-worn path

  • and that will make all the difference

  • my second story

  • is about love and loss

  • I was lucky I found what I love to do early in life was and i started apple in

  • my parent's garage when I was 20

  • we worked hard and in 10 years applet grown from just the two of us in the

  • garage into a two billion dollar company with over 4,000 employees we just

  • released our finest creation the Macintosh a year earlier and I just

  • turned 30 and then I got fired

  • how can you get fired from a company you started

  • well as Apple grew we hired someone who I thought was very talented to run the

  • company with me and for the first year or so things went well but then our

  • visions of the future began to diverge and eventually we had a falling out when

  • we did our Board of Directors sided with him and so 30 i was out and very

  • publicly out what had been the focus of my entire adult life was gone and it was

  • devastating

  • I really didn't know what to do for a few months I felt that I let the

  • previous generation of entrepreneurs down that I dropped the baton as it was

  • being passed to me

  • I met with david packard and Bob noise and tried to apologize for spring up so

  • badly

  • I was a very public failure and I even thought about running away from the

  • valley but something slowly began to dawn on me

  • I still loved what I did the turn of events that Apple has not changed that

  • one bit

  • I've been rejected but i was still in love and so I decided to start over

  • I didn't see it then but it turned out that getting fired from Apple was the

  • best thing that could have ever happened to me

  • the heaviness of being successful was replaced by the lightness of being a

  • beginner again less sure about everything

  • it freed me to enter one of the most creative periods of my life

  • during the next five years i started a company named next another company name

  • Pixar and fell in love with an amazing woman who would become my wife

  • Pixar went on to create the world's first computer animated feature film toy

  • story and is now the most successful animation studio in the world

  • in a remarkable turn of events

  • apple bought next and I return to apple and the technology we developed it next

  • is at the heart of apples current Renaissance and Loreen and i have a

  • wonderful family together

  • I'm pretty sure none of this would have happened if I hadn't been fired from

  • Apple

  • it was awful tasting medicine but i guess the patient needed it sometime

  • life sometimes life is going to hit you in the head with a brick

  • don't lose faith I'm convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I

  • loved what I did

  • you've got to find what you love and that is true for work as it is for your

  • lover's your work is going to fill a large part of your life and the only way

  • to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work and the only way

  • to do great work is to love what you do

  • if you haven't found it yet keep looking and don't settle

  • as with all matters of the heart you'll know when you find it

  • and like any great relationship it just gets better and better as the years roll

  • on

  • so keep looking don't settle

  • yeah

  • my third story is about death when i was 17

  • I read a quote that went something like if you live each day as if it was your

  • last

  • someday you'll most certainly be right it made an impression on me

  • and since then for the past 33 years I've looked in the mirror every morning

  • and asked myself if today were the last day of my life

  • what I want to do what I am about to do today

  • and whenever the answer has been no for too many days in a row

  • i know i need to change something remembering that all 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 remembering that you are going to die is

  • the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose

  • you are already naked there is no reason not to follow your heart

  • about a year ago I was diagnosed with cancer

  • I had a scan at seven thirty in the morning and it clearly showed a tumor on

  • my pancreas

  • I didn't even know what a pancreas was the doctors told me this was almost

  • certainly a type of cancer that is incurable and that i should expect to

  • live no longer than three to six months

  • my doctor advised me to go home and get my affairs in order which is doctors

  • code for prepare to die

  • it means to try and tell your kids everything you thought you'd have the

  • next 10 years to tell them in just a few months

  • it means to make sure everything is buttoned up so that will be as easy as

  • possible for your family

  • it means to say your goodbyes I live with that diagnosis all day

  • later that evening I had a biopsy

  • where they stuck an endoscope down my throat through my stomach and into my

  • intestines put a needle into my pancreas and got a few cells from the tumor

  • I was sedated but my wife who was there told me that when they view the cells

  • under a microscope the doctor started crying because it turned out to be a

  • very rare form of pancreatic cancer that is curable with surgery I had the

  • surgery and thankfully I'm fine now

  • this was the closest I've been to facing death and I hope it's the closest I get

  • for a few more decades

  • having lived through it I can now say this to you with a bit more certainty

  • than when death was a useful but purely intellectual concept

  • no one wants to die

  • even people who want to go to heaven don't want to die to get there

  • and yet death is the destination we all share

  • no one has ever escaped it and that is as it should be because death is very

  • likely the single best invention of life its lights change agent it clears out

  • the old to make way for the new right now

  • the new is you but some day not too long from now you will gradually become the

  • old and be cleared away

  • sorry to be so dramatic but it's quite true

  • your time is limited so don't waste it living someone else's life

  • don't be trapped by Dogma which is living with the results of other

  • people's thinking

  • don't let the noise of others opinions drown out your own inner voice and most

  • important have the courage to follow your heart and intuition they somehow

  • already know what you truly want to become everything else is secondary

  • yeah

  • when I was young there was an amazing publication called the whole earth

  • catalog which was one of the Bible's of my generation

  • it was created by a fellow named Stewart Brand not far from here in menlo park

  • and he brought it to life with his poetic touch this was in the late

  • sixties before personal computers and desktop publishing

  • so it was all made with typewriters scissors and polaroid cameras

  • it was sort of like Google and paperback form 35 years before Google came along

  • it was idealistic overflowing with me tools and great notions

  • Stuart and his team put out several issues of the whole earth catalog and

  • then when it run its course they put out a final issue

  • it was the mid-nineteen seventies and I was your age on the back cover of their

  • final issue was a photograph of an early morning country road

  • the kind you might find yourself hitchhiking on if you were so

  • adventurous beneath it were the words

  • stay hungry stay foolish it was their farewell message as they signed off

  • stay hungry stay foolish and I've always wished that for myself and now as you

  • graduate to begin a new I wish that for you

  • stay hungry stay foolish thank you all very much

  • i made this video because card games TV one asked me to

  • so there's a famous entrepreneur that you want me to profile leave it in the

  • comments below and we'll see what we can do

  • thank you so much for watching continue to believe we I don't see you soon

He is considered the father of the digital revolution, a master of innovation and a design perfectionist

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A2 初級

スティーブ・ジョブズの成功のためのトップ10のルール (Steve Jobs's Top 10 Rules For Success)

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    Chaman Singh に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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