A major motion picture about Steve Jobs was inevitable. Even before the Apple cofounder and CEO's death in 2011, Jobs was a figure of almost unparalleled universal interest. Apple, after all, was one of the biggest companies in the world, and for most regular people, Jobs was Apple. Perhaps not since Walt Disney had a company been so associated with its CEO. See also: Steve Jobs Emails Show How to Win a Hard-Nosed Negotiation The reverence for Jobs only grew after his death. Countless books about Apple and Jobs had been published before 2011, but Walter Isaacson's officially sanctioned biography, Steve Jobs, had unprecedented access to the man himself. Slated for release just weeks after...
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