Steve Jobs: One Last Thing
Steve Jobs was
He gave us tools
to change our lives
and the way we communicate.
Here comes a device
that comes with no manual,
and everybody knows
how to use it... amazing.
They weren't just hits in
the sense that they sold well,
but they actually changed
the whole nature of technology
and caused everyone else
to follow them.
This intimate portrait
is a revealing insight
into Steve Jobs' life...
Andy Warhol gets
down on his hands and knees,
Steve showing him
how to use the mouse.
His career...
He shook up
a whole industry.
His character...
Steve loved
those creative ideas.
His faults...
Steve ultimately
betrayed everyone.
His artistry...
Just the smooth
lines of it.
And his achievements...
He is going to inspire
a whole new generation.
By the people
who knew him best.
I'd give a lot to have
Steve's taste.
If he needed You,
he was your best friend,
and he would seduce you.
When I was having a hard time,
he would be on the phone,
he'd drive up
from silicon valley,
take me out for dinner,
hang out and take walks with me.
He turned on me,
total street bully,
in my face, screa...
We were... and I went crazy.
I'd never been there.
I don't ever want
to be there again.
How much fun we had... ohh...
How much fun we had in those
days doing things together,
you know, but you lose it,
you can't ever go back,
and just to have those conversations
that make us both smile.
Through their eyes,
we reveal what made him
the man who always gave us...
Now there's
one more thing.
Steve Jobs
Steve Jobs
"One Last Thing"
Mikhel for Subtitulos.es
Steven Paul Jobs died
on October 5, 2011,
at the age of 56,
a life cut short
in its creative prime by cancer.
His death was
not a surprise,
and yet its impact
reverberated around the world.
The news had spread,
and the tributes were created
on the new iDevices that
his visionary genius had made.
His is a success story that
could only have happened
in the U.S.A.
I don't mean to say
that there aren't geniuses
and world-changing people
everywhere... there are...
But I think in Jobs' case,
the particular path
of his career,
this could only have
happened in America.
Steve Jobs'
world-class salesmanship found
a global audience in his famous
Apple product presentations.
He always had
"one more thing" to announce.
Everyone thinks, "wow.
That's... that's so much,"
and, "well, we got
one more thing,"
and then you put
your biggest thing at the end
because it'll tip it.
It's good, uh... it's
good showmanship really.
Tragically
that "one more thing"
has now become "one last thing."
The news that Steve Jobs
had finally logged out
made headlines everywhere.
This man really had
changed the world.
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,
try to have
a nice family life,
have fun, save a little money.
In this exclusive,
never before seen interview,
Steve Jobs gave a rare glimpse
of his vision of the world.
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 that
were no smarter than you,
and you can change it,
you can influence it,
you can build your own things
that other people can use.
Um, once you learn that,
you'll never be the same again.
In the Los altos suburb
of San Francisco, California,
just about everybody
was an engineer
or worked in electronics
a childhood spent here
in the future silicon valley
in Steve Jobs' young life.
His closest childhood
friend was Bill Fernandez.
In about eighth grade,
halfway through,
this new guy came
into the school,
who was Steve Jobs,
and we were both introverted,
intellectual,
kind of socially inept,
and we gravitated
towards each other.
The two boys shared
the same hobby.
We started taking long walks
and talking
about the meaning of life
and what is this all about,
and after a while
we started doing...
In addition to walking
and talking...
Doing electronics
projects together.
Fernandez also knew
another electronics geek,
his neighbors' son
Steve Wozniak,
universally known as Woz.
So one day, Steve Jobs bicycled
over to hang out with me
and do electronics projects
in the garage,
and out in front was Wozniak
washing his car.
So I thought to myself,
"ok. This Steve is
"an electronics buddy,
he's an electronics buddy.
They'd probably like to
meet each other."
Fernandez
had no idea at the time
that the meeting
between his two friends
would change our world.
Jobs and Woz were soon to
start a business together.
Its name was Apple.
If Woz and Jobs
had never met,
there never would have been
an Apple computer.
There would have
been computers,
and there would have
been personal computers,
but we probably wouldn't have
the kind of
wonderful empowering
things that people
fall into if Woz
and Jobs hadn't met.
This neighborhood
we grew up in had
a lot of
lockheed engineers in it,
and I would go up
and down the street
to the various dads
on the street
and get mentored
in electronics,
and Steve Wozniak's father
was one of the people
who mentored me.
As Jobs and I were
walking over,
I noticed Woz out
washing his car,
and I said, "hey, Woz.
Um, come over and meet Steve."
So, "Steve, meet Steve."
And this is where
it happened,
basically right here.
Woz and Jobs became
inseparable friends,
but their first venture was not
a computer.
The pair developed
an electronics Kit
mimicking telephone
router codes
to make free calls
around the world.
You know, when you make
a long distance phone call
in the background you hear,
"do do do do do"?
Those are the telephone computers
actually signing each other,
sending information to each
other to set up your call.
And there used to be
a way to fool
the entire telephone system
into thinking
you were
a telephone computer.
You could, you know,
call from a pay phone,
go to white plains, new York,
take a satellite to Europe
take a cable to turkey,
um, come back to Los Angeles,
and you'd go around the world
3 or 4 times and call
the payphone next door,
shout in the phone,
and be about 30 seconds, it
would come out the other phone.
The pair quickly moved
on from phone-jacking for fun
to creating computers,
building the prototype
of the very first Apple.
It's a fond memory
for Steve Wozniak.
He was always thinking
about certain technology,
the early products that got
developed, the building parts,
what those might lead to
in our future,
and he was a always pushing
me as an engineer...
"Could you possibly
add this someday,
could you possibly add
that someday?"
Yes, yes, yes, I could,"
thinking, "no.
It's way, way off,"
but eventually we all did.
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"Steve Jobs: One Last Thing" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/steve_jobs:_one_last_thing_18880>.
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