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Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Jobs. Show all posts

Monday, June 29, 2009

CEO Steve Jobs is back on the JOB


SEATTLE — Apple Inc. co-founder and CEO Steve Jobs is back at his office a few days a week after taking a 5,-month medical leave and getting a new liver.

Jobs, 54, will work from home on days he doesn’t work from Apple’s Cupertino, Calif., headquarters, company spokesman Steve Dowling said Monday.

Dowling did not say exactly when Jobs returned to the office.

The state of Jobs’ health and the timing of his return have been watched closely by investors and the media, because few CEOs are considered as instrumental to their companies’ success as Jobs has been to Apple.

He is seen as the visionary behind Apple’s popular iPod music players and the iPhone, which left far more experienced mobile phone makers scrambling to catch up.

The Apple chief was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer called an islet cell neuroendocrine tumor. He had surgery in 2004 and announced then that he was cured.


Health questions
Last year, Jobs’ dramatic weight loss prompted new questions about his health, which Apple only intensified by saying in December that the CEO would not deliver the opening keynote at the Macworld conference.
In early January, Jobs said in a statement that he was suffering from an easily treated hormone imbalance, but he reversed course less than two weeks later, saying his medical condition was more complex than he thought.

He announced he would take a leave of absence until the end of June.

Methodist University Hospital Transplant Institute in Memphis, Tenn., said last week that Jobs had received a liver transplant.

Medical experts who were not involved in Jobs’ treatment have told The Associated Press that cancer cells not removed in the original surgery could have spread to Jobs’ liver.

The hospital would not say when the transplant took place, but in a statement said Jobs was recovering well and his prognosis is good.


A top producer
Since Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 after a 12-month hiatus, the company has expanded from a niche computer maker to become the top producer of portable media players and an increasingly important player in the cell phone business.
Job’s insistence on elegant design, and his ability to persuade consumers to spend more for it, has also given Apple’s Mac computers a boost.

But under the direction of Apple’s chief operating officer, Tim Cook, the company had continued to release well-received products during Jobs’ leave, including updated laptops with lower entry-level prices, updated Mac software and a faster iPhone with many longed-for features.

Apple sold more than a million of the new iPhone 3GS during its first three days on the market.


Stock issues
News and rumors about Jobs’ health have sent Apple stock soaring and sinking, but the company has largely kept investors in the dark about the details of the CEO’s condition and care.
Federal rules around what information Apple must disclose to shareholders aren’t specific on the matter of executive health unless the information would affect a reasonable investor’s decision to buy or sell a stock.



by the associated press

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Jobs ready to return


SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Apple Inc CEO Steve Jobs is on track to return to the company from his medical leave of absence as planned, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing a person who had seen Jobs in recent weeks.
The report that Jobs will return by the end of the month comes ahead of Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference in San Francisco on Monday, an event at which Jobs unveiled Apple's 3G iPhone a year ago but had not been expected to attend this time.

Jobs, 54, had said his medical leave would run until the end of June when he initially announced the move in January, setting the stage for a July return. Company representatives had said repeatedly he remained involved in strategic decisions and would return as scheduled.

Apple's spokesman did not return calls for comment.

Some analysts and investors feared that Jobs, a survivor of pancreatic cancer, might not return if his health problems did not improve.

Jobs was treated for a rare type of pancreatic cancer in 2004. He appeared gaunt at an Apple event last June and in January said he would take a leave of absence because his health problems were "more complex" than originally thought.

The Apple CEO's recovery "is coming along," the Journal reported.

The report also said two people who do business with Apple have been told by Apple managers that the company is trying to coordinate Jobs' return with a product launch or public event.

Jobs, a college dropout, co-founded Apple in 1976 in a Silicon Valley garage. After a falling-out with the board, he left the company in 1985.

Apple floundered, setting the scene for his return in 1997. The company has flourished under Jobs 2.0, rolling out the concept of a computer as a 'digital hub' along with the iPod and iPhone.


from REUTERS

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Steve Jobs still not going to work


Today Apple announced some of the plans for its 2009 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) event in San Francisco, which starts on June 8. During the past two WWDC events, Apple has unveiled new iPhone devices. This year ailing Apple CEO Steve Jobs will not be giving the keynote presentation, which will be led by Apple's Senior Vice President of Worldwide Product Marketing, Philip Schiller. Jobs is expected to remain on medical leave from the company until the end of June, 2009.

The press release made no mention of any new iPhone devices, though it does mention the iPhone OS 3.0 that the company unveiled earlier this year.



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