Difference between revisions of "Steve Jobs"

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Many wonder if Apple would've been so successful, creative, and innovative, if Steve Jobs hadn't been a heavy advocate for these drugs. Not only does Steve Jobs himself accredit his LSD trips as large source of inspiration, but also there are many parallels between LSD and iPhones. Most strikingly, both "feel profoundly artificial yet deeply real", in other words "transcendent". Additionally, both have positives and negatives that users must weigh before deciding to use either. Drugs and computers both "make us feel divinely connected to our environments and other people, they lift mood and bring us joy". However, they also can create "distance and trigger addiction" and consequently "destroy human connection and affection".<ref name="Healthland">Wikipedia, [https://healthland.time.com/2011/10/06/jobs-had-lsd-we-have-the-iphone/]</ref>
 
Many wonder if Apple would've been so successful, creative, and innovative, if Steve Jobs hadn't been a heavy advocate for these drugs. Not only does Steve Jobs himself accredit his LSD trips as large source of inspiration, but also there are many parallels between LSD and iPhones. Most strikingly, both "feel profoundly artificial yet deeply real", in other words "transcendent". Additionally, both have positives and negatives that users must weigh before deciding to use either. Drugs and computers both "make us feel divinely connected to our environments and other people, they lift mood and bring us joy". However, they also can create "distance and trigger addiction" and consequently "destroy human connection and affection".<ref name="Healthland">Wikipedia, [https://healthland.time.com/2011/10/06/jobs-had-lsd-we-have-the-iphone/]</ref>
  
Another ethical issue that stems from Jobs' drug use is that it has become the inspiration for "microdosing", a popular practice in the Silicon Valley where people consume a small quantity of drugs every few days. Many claim that "microdosing" helps them get ahead by staying productive through exhaustion or by sparking creativity. This becomes problematic because the manufacture of illegal drugs does not have rigorous regulatory controls -- in other words, people don't always get what they are told they are getting.<ref name="Independent">Wikipedia, [https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/lsd-microdosing-california-silicon-valley-california-drugs-young-professionals-a8259001.html]</ref>  
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Another ethical issue that stems from Jobs' drug use is that it has become the inspiration for "microdosing", a popular practice in the Silicon Valley where people consume a small quantity of drugs every few days. Many claim that "microdosing" helps them get ahead by staying productive through exhaustion or by sparking creativity. This becomes problematic because the manufacture of illegal drugs does not have rigorous regulatory controls -- in other words, people don't always get what they are told they are getting.<ref name="Independent">Wikipedia, [https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/lsd-microdosing-california-silicon-valley-california-drugs-young-professionals-a8259001.html]</ref> Although it was not his intention, Jobs' support of LSD has caused young tech entrepreneurs to explore dangerous, unchecked drugs as well.
  
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Interestingly enough, Jobs was such a big fan of drugs, that one time he asked an interviewee, "Are you a virgin?" and "How many times have you taken LSD?". Some people may argue that while they don't have anything against the drugs, these types of personal questions are inappropriate during an interview.<ref name="Our Time">Wikipedia, [http://www.ourtimebd.com/beta/2020/03/02/were-lsd-marijuana-the-secret-to-steve-jobs-billions/]</ref>
  
Interestingly enough, Jobs was such a big fan of drugs, that one time he asked an interviewee, "Are you a virgin?" and "How many times have you taken LSD?". Some people may argue that while they don't have anything against the drugs, these types of personal questions are inappropriate during an interview.
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== Parenting ==
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In a 2018 interview with Vanity Fair, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, Jobs' daughter revealed what her relationship with her dad was like. To begin, she described how Jobs wasn't at the hospital when she was born, and only saw her for the first time a few days later. Upon laying his eyes on Brennan-Jobs, he claimed "it's not my kid" and walked out of the room.<ref name="Vanity Fair">Wikipedia, [https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/08/lisa-brennan-jobs-small-fry-steve-jobs-daughter]</ref>
  
LSD
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Then, in 1980, the district attorney of San Mateo County, California sued Jobs for un-paid child support payments. In response, Jobs denied paternity, claiming he was sterile, and demanded a DNA test. When the test came back 94.4% positive, Jobs agreed to pay $385 per month and medical insurance until Brennan-Jobs turned 18. Four days after trial, Apple went public and Jobs was worth more than $200 million overnight. Jobs then agreed to increase his child-support payments to $500 monthly.
  
http://www.ourtimebd.com/beta/2020/03/02/were-lsd-marijuana-the-secret-to-steve-jobs-billions/
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Many people claim that Jobs only paid $500 monthly because he was trying to ensure his daughter didn't grow spoiled and entitled. However, others claim that Jobs simply wouldn't pay more because he refused to acknowledge his daughter as his own. This could be because he had her out of wed-lock or because of his poor relationship with her mother. No matter the case, however, even Brennan-Jobs claimed that she was "not compelling enough for [her] father, [...], to unequivocally own".<ref name="Vanity Fair">Wikipedia, [https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/08/lisa-brennan-jobs-small-fry-steve-jobs-daughter]</ref> Later, in an interview for 1982 Time Person of the Year, Jobs publicly questioned the reliability of the paternity test and argued that "28% of the male population of the United States could be the father". The Time article's title was later changed from "Person of the Year" to "Machine of the Year".<ref name="Vanity Fair">Wikipedia, [https://www.theguardian.com/global/2018/sep/01/daughter-steve-jobs-denied-lisa-brennan-jobs]</ref>
When one uptight candidate came in for an interview, Jobs asked him, “Are you a virgin?” and “How many times have you taken LSD?” Not only did Jobs want to have colleagues who explored their own minds with psychedelics, but he also chalked up his own success to drugs.
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https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/lsd-microdosing-california-silicon-valley-california-drugs-young-professionals-a8259001.html
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Many years later, after Jobs left Apple, he apologized many times to Lisa and attempted to reconcile with her. Lisa forgave him and legally changed her last name from Brennan to Brennan-Jobs.
The practice, known as “microdosing”, involves taking minute quantities of drugs such as LSD, psilocybin (magic mushrooms) or mescaline (found in the Peyote cactus) every few days.
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Manufacture and supply of illegal drugs are not subject to rigorous regulatory controls. That means users can never be sure of what they are getting.
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https://www.insider.com/what-is-microdosing-2019-1
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“Taking LSD was a profound experience, one of the most important things in my life. LSD shows you that there’s another side to the coin, and you can’t remember it when it wears off, but you know it. It reinforced my sense of what was important—creating great things instead of making money, putting things back into the stream of history and of human consciousness as much as I could.”
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microdosing is seen as a way to get ahead by staying productive through exhaustion or by sparking creativity.
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Familial Relations
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https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/08/lisa-brennan-jobs-small-fry-steve-jobs-daughter
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“It’s not my kid,”
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Then, in 1980, the district attorney of San Mateo County, California, sued my father for child-support payments. My father responded by denying paternity, swearing in a deposition that he was sterile and naming another man he said was my father.
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The court required my father to cover welfare back payments, child-support payments of $385 per month, which he increased to $500, and medical insurance until I was 18
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Four days later Apple went public and overnight my father was worth more than $200 million.
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“Hey, you know that computer, the Lisa? Was it named after me?
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“Nope.” His voice was clipped, dismissive. Like I was fishing for a compliment. “Sorry, kid.”
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Bono asked, “So, was the Lisa computer named after her?”
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There was a pause. I braced myself—prepared for his answer.
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My father hesitated, looked down at his plate for a long moment, and then back at Bono. “Yeah, it was,” he said.
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I assumed small fry meant the kind of french fries left at the bottom of the bag, cold and crusty; I thought he was calling me a runt, or misbegotten. Later, I learned fry is an old word for young fishes sometimes thrown back into the sea to give them more time to grow.
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clearly I was not compelling enough for my father, this incredible man, to unequivocally own.
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Revision as of 19:38, 13 March 2020

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Stevejobs.jpg
Steve Jobs
Birthname Steven Paul Jobs
Date of Birth February 24, 1955
Birth Place San Francisco, CA, USA
Nationality American
Occupation Entrepreneur, Designer, Businessman
Biography Best known as the CEO and Co-Founder of Apple and CEO Pixar

Steve Jobs was an American entrepreneur, investor, and designer born in February 1955. He was the CEO and co-founder of Apple with Steve Wozniak and was the CEO of Pixar Animation studios. He is known for spearheading the personal computer revolution and creating the Macintosh, iPod, iPad, and iPhone. However, despite his colossal successes, Steve Jobs has been openly criticized for his casual use of drugs, parenting, and leadership style.

Drug Use

Jobs was no stranger to marijuana and LSD, and heavily attributes LSD to the creation of Apple. In a government security clearance interview with the Pentagon, Jobs revealed that he used to smoke and eat pot brownies with friends multiple times a week from 1973-1977. Additionally, he “used LSD approximately ten to fifteen times” from 1972-1974.[1] Claiming drugs "helped him relax and made him more creative", Jobs once famously said, "Taking LSD was a profound experience, one of the most important things in my life. [...] It reinforced my sense of what was important—creating great things instead of making money."[2]

Many wonder if Apple would've been so successful, creative, and innovative, if Steve Jobs hadn't been a heavy advocate for these drugs. Not only does Steve Jobs himself accredit his LSD trips as large source of inspiration, but also there are many parallels between LSD and iPhones. Most strikingly, both "feel profoundly artificial yet deeply real", in other words "transcendent". Additionally, both have positives and negatives that users must weigh before deciding to use either. Drugs and computers both "make us feel divinely connected to our environments and other people, they lift mood and bring us joy". However, they also can create "distance and trigger addiction" and consequently "destroy human connection and affection".[3]

Another ethical issue that stems from Jobs' drug use is that it has become the inspiration for "microdosing", a popular practice in the Silicon Valley where people consume a small quantity of drugs every few days. Many claim that "microdosing" helps them get ahead by staying productive through exhaustion or by sparking creativity. This becomes problematic because the manufacture of illegal drugs does not have rigorous regulatory controls -- in other words, people don't always get what they are told they are getting.[4] Although it was not his intention, Jobs' support of LSD has caused young tech entrepreneurs to explore dangerous, unchecked drugs as well.

Interestingly enough, Jobs was such a big fan of drugs, that one time he asked an interviewee, "Are you a virgin?" and "How many times have you taken LSD?". Some people may argue that while they don't have anything against the drugs, these types of personal questions are inappropriate during an interview.[5]

Parenting

In a 2018 interview with Vanity Fair, Lisa Brennan-Jobs, Jobs' daughter revealed what her relationship with her dad was like. To begin, she described how Jobs wasn't at the hospital when she was born, and only saw her for the first time a few days later. Upon laying his eyes on Brennan-Jobs, he claimed "it's not my kid" and walked out of the room.[6]

Then, in 1980, the district attorney of San Mateo County, California sued Jobs for un-paid child support payments. In response, Jobs denied paternity, claiming he was sterile, and demanded a DNA test. When the test came back 94.4% positive, Jobs agreed to pay $385 per month and medical insurance until Brennan-Jobs turned 18. Four days after trial, Apple went public and Jobs was worth more than $200 million overnight. Jobs then agreed to increase his child-support payments to $500 monthly.

Many people claim that Jobs only paid $500 monthly because he was trying to ensure his daughter didn't grow spoiled and entitled. However, others claim that Jobs simply wouldn't pay more because he refused to acknowledge his daughter as his own. This could be because he had her out of wed-lock or because of his poor relationship with her mother. No matter the case, however, even Brennan-Jobs claimed that she was "not compelling enough for [her] father, [...], to unequivocally own".[6] Later, in an interview for 1982 Time Person of the Year, Jobs publicly questioned the reliability of the paternity test and argued that "28% of the male population of the United States could be the father". The Time article's title was later changed from "Person of the Year" to "Machine of the Year".[6]

Many years later, after Jobs left Apple, he apologized many times to Lisa and attempted to reconcile with her. Lisa forgave him and legally changed her last name from Brennan to Brennan-Jobs.
  1. Wikipedia, [1]
  2. Wikipedia, [2]
  3. Wikipedia, [3]
  4. Wikipedia, [4]
  5. Wikipedia, [5]
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Wikipedia, [6]