STEVE JOBS
Steve Jobs was born February 24, 1955, to two University of
Wisconsin graduate students who gave him up for adoption. Smart but
directionless, Jobs experimented with different pursuits before starting Apple
Computers with Stephen Wozniak in the Jobs' family garage. Apple's
revolutionary products, which include the iPod, iPhone and iPad, are now seen
as dictating the evolution of modern technology.
His father, Abdulfattah Jandali, was a Syrian political
science professor and his mother, Joanne Simpson, worked as a speech therapist.
Shortly after Steve was placed for adoption, his biological parents married and
had another child, Mona Simpson. It was not until Jobs was 27 that he was able
to uncover information on his biological parents.
As an infant, Steven was adopted by Clara and Paul Jobs and
named Steven Paul Jobs. Clara worked as an accountant and Paul was a Coast
Guard veteran and machinist. The family lived in Mountain View within
California's Silicon Valley. As a boy, Jobs and his father would work on electronics
in the family garage. Paul would show his son how to take apart and reconstruct
electronics, a hobby which instilled confidence, tenacity, and mechanical
prowess in young Jobs.
While Jobs has always been an intelligent and innovative
thinker, his youth was riddled with frustrations over formal schooling. In
elementary school he was a prankster whose fourth grade teacher needed to bribe
him to study. Jobs tested so well, however, that administrators wanted to skip
him ahead to high school—a proposal his parents declined.
After he did enroll in high school, Jobs spent his free time
at Hewlett-Packard. It was there that he befriended computer club guru Steve
Wozniak. Wozniak was a brilliant computer engineer, and the two developed great
respect for one another.
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