Saturday, January 21, 2012

Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson

I’m always wary when people who behave terribly, often in the workplace, are described in a slightly forgiving way as ‘complicated’.

Aren’t well all complicated human beings? Does that mean we can all behave as intolerable bullies?

At times, Walter Isaacson’s biography of the Steve Jobs tends towards this “oh he is complicated’ rationale to explain away Job’s awful behaviour in the workplace and in his personal life.

But fortunately, Isaacson as a biographer is able to distance himself from his subject and call Jobs out on his distortions of reality and at times deluded behaviour.

This does stop this book from being a hagiography, though it would have benefited from just a little more distance between the author and his subject.

Overall, this biography is a fascinating testimonial of how one person completely moulded a company to his will and in doing so forced a whole lot of industries to change.

I found the later chapters the most interesting. They focused on the development of the iPhone and iPad and Isaacson provides a detailed account from inside Apple on how Jobs and his team created these game changing products.

Isaacson also traces the often antagonistic relationship between the two titans of the tech world: Jobs and Bill Gates. He also clearly explains the divergent philosophies of Apple and Microsoft/Google, that is the clash between the 'closed' and 'open' system.

I would have liked more about the relationship between Google and Apple, but I guess that topic could take up another book.

This book is worth reading because it not only provides an indepth and fascinating account of one of the key innovators of our time, but also gives you a better understanding of the players in the tech world like Intel, Microsoft, Google and also entertainment industry too.

In the end, Isaacsons's biography reveals to us some of the brute realities of the inspiring tale of Steve Jobs, who built a company where 'technology and creativity' intersect.

1 comment:

fiaja said...

Ahh was wondering about this book as well! whether it was worth hours of my life ... there's a film in the making with ashton as Jobs... not sure if I can watch that...hmmm