November 15, 2024
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview is Now Available in iTunes

Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview is Now Available in iTunes

Posted July 3, 2012 at 2:35pm by iClarified
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview is now available to rent via iTunes.

Candid, controversial and funny…the original and unedited interview with Steve Jobs, conducted by tech journalist and former Apple Inc. employee Robert X. Cringely, from 1995 when Steve Jobs was still CEO of NeXT Computer and Pixar.

Robert Cringely was employee number 12 at Apple and host of "Triumph of the Nerds". He describes finding the tape:


"This is from my documentary series called 'Triumph of the Nerds' made in 1995. We interviewed 125 Silicon Valley luminaries including Steve Jobs for that three hour series which has been seen in sixty countries. We only used nine minutes out of the sixty nine minute Jobs interview and then all of the master tapes were lost. Until, Steve Jobs died on October 5th and the director said, 'I think I kept a copy of that Jobs interview. Let's go look for it' - in his garage."

Read More [via TNW]


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Comments (2)
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Hami
Hami - July 18, 2012 at 10:03pm
Talking about the environment gets you famled by both sides the people who purposefully want to detract and confuse, and those who believe that they are being even more green than you are and then tell you off for not getting all your facts right.The green movement suffers more than most from the circular firing squad' syndrome where so many people detract from what others are doing, because they don't think it is any more green than what they do.As these people see themselves as on a moral crusade, they actually cause more harm than the people who wish to detract from the green debate in the first place, creating confusion and detracting from the real argument.I have found one way to get around this problem: write well researched articles and quote sources for all facts that are given in the article. Ensure the sources are all well established scientific or governmental organisations and preferably find several sources for similar threads of information. If somebody wants to say you're wrong , they then have to back up their argument with a properly thought out debate and provide sources for their information.Occasionally this happens, and because both people are putting forward a well thought out debate, backed by facts rather than heresay, everybody gains. What you don't get is all the silly little arguments that have no basis in fact.
Damien
Damien - July 3, 2012 at 4:15pm
God bless the trolls.
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