After officially going on sale today, Walter Isaacson's authorized biography of Steve Jobs may become the top selling book of 2011 for the world's largest online retailer, Amazon.com. "The way things ...
A new biography portrays Steve Jobs as a skeptic all his life — giving up religion because he was troubled by starving children, calling executives who took over Apple "corrupt" and delaying cancer ...
When Steve Jobs official biography was announced, everyone wondered why the notoriously private Steve Jobs would let Walter Isaacson, the author, interview him over 40 times, let Isaacson talk to ...
A little heads up on the state of the official Steve Jobs biography: MacRumors has confirmed that the book is getting longer — 208 pages longer to be exact. Since the former Apple CEO’s resignation, ...
Steve Jobs's authorised biography is to be released earlier than planned, it has been announced. Due to overwhelming demand since the Apple co-founder's death on Wednesday, the official story of his ...
Steve Jobs is to feature in a biography comic book from Bluewater Productions. Written by CW Cooke with illustrations from Chris Schmidt, the 32-page one-shot chronicles the Apple CEO's life and ...
The much-anticipated authorized biography on Apple co-founder Steve Jobs has arrived a few hours early for customers who purchased the book through Amazon's Kindle ebook platform or the iBookstore ...
There are so many reasons to get excited about the forthcoming Steve Jobs biography. For one, it'll be the first of its kind to feature exclusive interviews with the Apple founder himself. Secondly, ...
Steve Jobs (February 24, 1955 - October 5, 2011) Steve Jobs was an American entrepreneur and inventor best known for being the chairman and CEO of Apple Inc., which developed products like the iPod.
Simon & Schuster's Steve Jobs biography has generated a fair amount of buzz-- despite the fact that it doesn't come out until March of next year-- mostly due to the fact that it's the first Jobs bio ...
The latest book about Steve Jobs suggests the late Apple cofounder’s dislike of TV was one reason he terminated a 1990s personal computer called the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh (TAM). The ...
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