Steve Jobs knew that constant busyness is the enemy of great ideas. Put his insight to use with the two-hour rule.
Here is the reason why Apple co-founder Steve Jobs would always wear a black turtleneck jumper despite being able to afford anything he wanted.
There's a new year upon us, with 2025 capping off a quarter-century of the modern Apple and its definitive role in personal computing innovation. In particular, 2025 marks 25 years of Apple's intuitive experience that turns elements of hardware and software into a magical coherence.
Among the key management skills he learned from Jobs was the importance of not being married to past beliefs, a competency that Cook says few leaders possess. Jobs welcomed debates, relished being challenged, and valued those who were willing to admit they were wrong when new evidence emerged.
The 61-year-old philanthropist is participating in the demanding 'Kalpavas' ritual for 10 days. This includes daily dips in the holy rivers, mantra chanting, meditation, and following a strict vegetarian diet without onion,
Laurene Powell started her career on America’s famous Wall Street. There she worked for Merrill Lynch and later Goldman Sachs. Laurene was among the few women who were in the leadership roles.
In Joe Rogan's podcast, Mark Zuckerberg made several interesting statements, among other things, paying great attention to Apple.
Late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs’ wife Laurene Powell is in Prayagraj to attend the Mahakumbh 2025 that began today. She will be taking a holy dip on Tuesday and has also been given a Hindu name
Mark Zuckerberg criticizes Apple for its lack of innovation since the iPhone, declining sales, high developer fees, and the costly Vision Pro VR device.
A 1974 handwritten letter of late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs is doing rounds on the internet wherein he expressed his desire to visit Kumbh Mela. Check out the letter here.
It seems to be a week for interesting peeks at Apple history, a new piece telling the story of Softbank founder Masayoshi Son making a $17B gamble on the basis of a gentleman’s agreement with Steve Jobs.
A fun piece of Apple history has been revealed thanks to a look at how Sonos started and where it is headed. It turns out that ‘father of the iPod ‘ Tony Fadell wanted Apple to buy the premium audio company. Fadell tried to persuade Steve Jobs to do so, but Apple’s co-founder refused, saying that he instead wanted to sue the company …