A new biography of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and a 60 Minutes special are packed with Jobsian gems. The man who ran the biggest technology company in the world believed the iPhone antenna controversy was a smear campaign by Google and Motorola, while his special relationship with design genius Jony Ive was tested when he stole credit for products like the iMac, iPod, iPhone and iPad.
Jobs was majorly miffed when the newly launched iPhone 4 was discovered to have a pretty major flaw. He believed the antennagate controversy was part of a smear campaign by rival phone makers. Jobs believed Google and Motorola were attempting to "shoot Apple down", and took the criticism personally.
Apple initially dismissed the problem and claimed other smart phones had the same problems -- it was only when his right-hand man and successor in the hot seat Tim Cook suggested that was kind of a Microsoft-y way to act that Jobs decided to change tack.
Apple investigated the problem and subsequently dished out free bumper cases to iPhone 4 owners.
Jobs felt the issue had been "blown so out of proportion that it's incredible", which suggests he didn't understand the price of the cult he had crafted around Apple. When Apple based its products and the company's entire image on a certain superiority, then any mistakes, no matter how small, appear to be either a let-down for fans or delicious hubris for critics.
Google's role in the controversy is not clear, but it seems Jobs believed that extreme tactics were called for in the struggle between the two companies. He vowed to wage 'thermonuclear war' on Google's Android.
Ive: "It hurts when Jobs takes credit for my designs"
British-born industrial designer Ive discusses his unique relationship with Jobs in interviews with the book's author Walter Isaacson. Locked in his private design studio, Ive was kept hidden from even senior Apple staff. But he would meet with Jobs constantly, the pair obsessing over the latest Apple products right down to the smallest part.
Thoughout the design process Ive says he pays "maniacal attention to where an idea comes from, and I even keep notebooks filled with my ideas. So it hurts when he (Jobs) takes credit for one of my designs."
Fair enough. Jobs, who died this month aged 56, may have had a single-minded vision for what technology could be, but he wasn't the man who actually made that technology work.
Hear some words of wisdom from Jobs and friends on US show 60 Minutes.

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anonymous 24 October, 2011 14:26
The guy was definitely more deluded than Gaddafi
Ryan J Pattinson 24 October, 2011 14:26
he does talk to much ****
Rich Trenholm 24 October, 2011 15:08
Very tasteful, thanks chaps
anonymous 24 October, 2011 16:29
It does show what an egotistical **** he was though. You have a problem, man up and take responsibility for it, instead of blaming others. It took his "No 2" to convince him ****.
Naryan 25 October, 2011 08:59
Yeah, he's an arrogant nutcase, but we all knew that anyway.
As far as I see it, he was a salesman. I don't really see too much evidence of his supposed god-like knowledge of technology... at all...
Late8 25 October, 2011 09:52
The more I read about Jobs that more I think he was a complete ********.<br /><br />
Arrogant and not the genius people make out. The only thing he was good at was taking ideas and innovation from other people and putting it together.