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Steve Jobs: Misses and hits in a remarkable career

Steve Jobs was widely regarded as a marketing genius with a keen eye for spotting promising technology and trends. But not everything he touched turned instantly to gold.

Steve Jobs was widely regarded as a marketing genius with a keen eye for spotting promising technology and trends. But not everything he touched turned instantly to gold.

The Apple chiefs career was pockmarked with challenges. In some instances, it involved things he was working on directly that went awry; in others, he stepped in and graduallyfixed the errors made by others.

Above all, it was Jobs stubbornness, passion and conviction that made the difference time and again, turning ideas and technology thatlooked questionable into game-changers.

Apple

Jobs best-known miss began and ended as a hit his leadership of Apple Computer Co. itself.

He founded the company with Steve Wozniak in 1976 and had a string of early successes, starting with the Apple I (a circuit board sold to computer enthusiasts), and the first-ever complete home computer, the Apple II.

From left, Steve Jobs, chairman of Apple Computers, John Sculley, president and CEO, and Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple, unveil the new Apple IIc computer in San Francisco on April 24, 1984. (Sal Veder/Associated Press)
The company began to struggle in the 1980s as competition in the technology industry increased, and in 1985, while managing some of Apples computer development efforts, Jobs battled with CEO John Sculley for control of the company. Jobs attempted a boardroom coup that backfired and was left with no managerial responsibility at Apple, but remained chairman. He resigned from the company that same year and Apple continued its downward spiral, with some speculating it would ultimately either flame out or be bought by a competitor.

Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 when it purchased NeXT, a technology company he had founded in the interim. That same year, he was named CEO of Apple after the company posted huge losses.

Jobs reorganized the company, oversaw the launch of new devices and services, and gradually turned Apple into a trend-setting, money-making powerhouse. Today it is a major player in hardware, software and entertainment, with products ranging from desktops and laptops, to tablets, media players and smartphones, to online sales of music, movies and apps.

Apple overtook arch-rival Microsoft in 2010 to become the second most valuable U.S. company. On Aug. 9 of this year it was ranked No. 1, briefly displacing Exxon Mobil. Today Apple has a stunning market capitalization of $347 billion.

NeXT

Jobs technology and marketing skills worked magic at Apple, but his entrepreneurial record has a notable blemish - although it ended up fueling some of his biggest successes.

When he left Apple in 1985, Jobs poured his efforts into a new venture that he started the same year called NeXT Inc. His goal was to develop advanced computers for higher education and research.

The company won accolades in the technology community for innovative hardware and software designs and the graphics capabilities of its machines, but itdidnt sell many computers. The NeXT Cube, for example, was a commercial failure despite its advanced design, cutting-edge software and impressive computing power.

In an interview with the Smithsonian in 1995, Jobs said: "We basically wanted to keep doing what we were doing at Apple, to keep innovating. But we made a mistake, which was to try to follow the same formula we did at Apple, to make the whole widget. But the market was changing. The industry was changing. The scale was changing."

NeXT shipped fewer than 10,000 machines a year on average over the time it was in the hardware business, never becoming more than a niche player in the computer market. The company stopped making workstations and desktops in 1993 to focus on its NeXTStep operating system and advanced object-oriented software. NeXT never came close to becoming a household name.

Ironically, Apple ended up buying NeXT in 1997. Jobs returned to the company hed helped to create, and engineered its incredible turnaround.

But it wasnt just Jobs steady hand at the helm that put Apple back on a course to profitability. The hardware and software developments pioneered at NeXT were absorbed into Apples products, which helped them stand out from the competition. NeXTStep, for example, became part of the foundation for Apples move to the Unix-based Mac OS X. And NeXTs graphics technology helped Apple build its reputation in the design and higher education markets the goals Jobs had originally set for NeXT.

Lisa

Among the long string of hardware success stories, Apple has also had some less-than-successful launches. Development of the Lisa computer, for example, began in 1979 after Jobs got the idea that graphical interfaces (GUIs) would be the next big thing in computing, following a visit to Xerox Palo Alto Research Center (PARC).

Apple's $10,000 Lisa computer from the 1980s, on display at a conference on the Lisa in Varese, Italy, in 2003. (All about Apple Museum)

The computer was supposedly named for Jobs' eldest daughter, Lisa Nicole, although Apple says it officially stands for Local Integrated Software Architecture. When it debuted in 1983, Jobs told the New York Times, "The industry's not had a real technical innovation in five years."

The first Lisa model had one megabyte of internal memory, afive-megabyte hard drive and came with six programs. A seventh program, forLISA to "communicate with other computers," was optional.

Lisa was said to be the best computer on the market for user friendliness. Here's how the Times described the experience in 1983:"Instead of typing instructions, one points to pictures on the screen by sliding a handheld device called a mouse along the top of the desk next to the computer. As the mouse moves, the cursor - the arrow that points to particular places on the screen - moves accordingly."

Lisas price tag was a whopping $10,000,which was one of the reasons it failed. By 1986, Apple was letting Lisa owners trade in their computer for a Macintosh Plus.

But Jobs again helped turn a miss into a hit. TheLisa was in a division headed by Jobs, Apple 32, whose other product was the Macintosh. While the LISA wasnt a big seller, many of its innovations were built into the Macintosh, a faster machine with a much lower price tag that launched in 1984 and started the Mac and the mouse-and-GUI revolution.

Newton

Lisa wasnt the only flop for Apple. Before the smash-hit iPhone and the iPad, there was the Newton MessagePad personal digital assistant.

Apple's Newton MessagPad 2000. (Richard Drew/AP)
The Newton, which launched in 1993, had a calendar, software to help organizeand manage personal data anda screen the user could tap. It also had handwriting recognition that was widely criticized as being barely usable.

Development of the device, Apples first foray into PDAs, was done after Jobs was ousted from the company and during John Sculleys time as Apples chief executive. Sculley, who is credited with introducing the term "personal digital assistant" in 1992, was the devices major champion throughout its development. Just before it was due for release, he too was forced out of the company.

The Newton was plagued with problemsmemory was one and even mocked in the Doonesbury cartoon. It was a clunky and awkward to hold, and reportedly a money-loser for the company.

After Jobs returned to Apple in 1997, he killed several projects, including Newton. But in many ways the handheld device was simply ahead of its time. Jobs recognized this, and when mobile computing power caught up, rather than being scared off by Apples poor experience with handheld gear, he capitalized on it by launching products like the iPod and iPhone,which went on to devour the PDA market and become some of the best-selling consumer devices of all time.

In 2009, Apple rehired one of the original Newton developers, and revisited the idea of a next-generation PDA-like device with a touch screen. The result, the iPad, quickly created a massive market for tablets and dominated it in a way Sculley likely only dreamed of.

iTunes

It wasnt just hardware that posed challenges for Jobs. iTunes was unveiled at the 2001 Macworld Exhibition, at a time stock analysts were increasingly negative about Apple, and it was a near-miss that turned into yet another monster hit.

Jobs introduces iTunes 10 at an Apple media event in San Francisco, California on Sept. 1, 2010. (Robert Galbraith/Reuters)
The company had quietly purchased an audio player program called Soundjam MP and then developed it into iTunes.At Macworld, Jobs acknowledged that music management was an area Apple had missed, and was rushing to catch up with the competition. Jobs conceded it was not based on an original idea for Apple, but he promised iTunes would be much easier to use and more integrated than products already on the market.

"The PC or Mac can become the digital hub of our new digital lifestyle," he stated boldly at Macworld.After the exhibition, many analysts did not "believe he has shown enough startling innovations to turn around the company immediately," the New York Times reported at the time. iTunes also received lots of flack forits digital-rights management (DRM) locks on songs, and critics said it wouldnt survive.Eleven months later, the iPod hit the stores, and the marriage with iTunes rewrote the rules for the music industry. Today, iTunes is the dominant software for both Macs and PCs for playing and organizing music, video and podcasts, and the billions in sales are a huge contributor to Apple's bottom line.

Pixar

Another Jobs venture that has had a huge impact on pop culture began rather inauspiciously. Pixar was founded in 1979 as a manufacturer of high-end computer hardware. Jobs purchased the company from Lucasfilm in 1986, shortly after he left Apple.

Jobs headed Pixar Animation Studios from 1986 to 2006. Behind Jobs is an animated ant from Pixar's then-unreleased feature A Bug's Life, in 1998. (Brad Rickerby/Reuters)
Despite having Disney as a client, by the late-80s Pixar was experiencing flagging sales and the future of the company was in question. To boost its fortunes, John Lasseter, the head of the companys animation department, began creating commercials for other companies, including Tropicana. The animation was so eye-popping and visionary that Jobs sold off the companys hardware division in 1990, and in 1991, Pixar inked a $26-million US deal with Disney to produce three computer-animated feature films.

In 1995, Pixar released Toy Story, which went on to gross more than $360 million worldwide at the box office and is now seen as a game-changer in animated moviemaking. Pixar followed with A Bugs Life (1998) and Toy Story 2 (1999), and has now released 11 films in total, including Oscar winners like The Incredibles, Ratatouille, Wall-E and Up.

In addition to their visual dazzle, Pixars films raised the bar on storytelling. Under the auspices of director John Lasseter and with Jobs backing, the screenplays were laced with pop culture references and emotional resonances rarely seen in animated films, to the point where films like Toy Story and Up are equally enjoyed by children and adults.

Pixar has also become a merchandising behemoth offshoot products for the first Cars movie (2006) alone brought in $5 billion in sales.