Huffington Post: ” Steve Jobs Biography Reveals He Told Obama, ‘You’re Headed For A One-Term Presidency’ ” The Hill: ” Dem Rep. Cardoza won’t seek reelection ”

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The Daily Grind: Jobs Tells Obama to ‘Think Different’

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The revolution that Steve Jobs led is only just beginning

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The revolution that Steve Jobs led is only just beginning

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Steve Jobs and the American Dream [Domenech]

On October 7, 2011, in Barack Obama, Uncategorized, by Onoshobishobi

The career of Steve Jobs exemplifies the American dream. While his illness was long a matter of public knowledge, it is still jarring that death strikes Jobs at a point so young – at 56, he barely had half the… See the article here: Steve Jobs and the American Dream [Domenech]

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Steve Jobs and the American Dream [Domenech]

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Download audio here Download Podcast | iTunes | Podcast Feed On today’s edition of Coffee and Markets , Brad Jackson and Ben Domenech are joined by Francis Cianfrocca to discuss the latest unemployment numbers, Occupy Wall Street and the passing of Steve Jobs. We’re brought to you as always by BigGovernment and Stephen Clouse and Associates . If you’d like to email us, you can do so at coffee[at]newledger.com. We hope you enjoy the show. Related Links: Job Creation Posts Jump But Rate Still Steady at 9.1% September Unemployment Report Obama Endorses New Tax on Wealthy Earners as Spreading Protests Divide Party Apple’s Steve Jobs Is Dead Steve Jobs in his own words Steve Jobs, One of America’s Brightest Minds, Has Died Steve Jobs and the American Dream Follow Brad on Twitter Follow Ben on Twitter Follow Francis on Twitter The hosts and guests of Coffee and Markets speak only for ourselves, not any clients or employers.

http://newledger.com/podcasts/CoffeeandMarkets100711.mp3

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The Latest Unemployment Numbers and the Loss of Steve Jobs

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Steve Jobs

On October 6, 2011, in Barack Obama, by georgiana wren

What a funny age in which we live. At a time some are demonizing the successful and the so called 1% at the top, today the whole world is stopping to remember the guy who so profoundly changed the early twenty-first century — Steve Jobs, a man in a class by himself. I begin and end this Morning Briefing today remembering him. In my office where I sit this still, quiet morning I have an iMac, iPhone, iPad, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, and Air Port. I am an Apple fan. Guys like me used to be called a cult. But a funny thing happened. Steve Jobs made Apple the world’s most popular consumer electronics company. The iPad is the best selling tablet computer. The iPhone is the most popular smart phone. At some point the people who derisively mocked people like me found themselves — perhaps even now they don’t know it — the cult of a small fringe of people who found it cool to hate what everyone else is embracing. The minority became the majority and the majority now is the minority. Apple is cool, hits the nostalgic elements of the age, and while seemingly exclusive has become ubiquitous — a feat few can pull off. It says something profound about Steve Jobs that a guy who grew up in the counter culture movement when “the man” and “business”, much like today, were not cool went on to redefine what cool is and what culture is through growing a business that now rivals Exxon as the most valuable in the world. Steve Jobs is genius. I grew up in Dubai. I was the only kid in my school who did not have a computer. But I would stay after school playing on the Apple IIe computers and then the IIgs and then the Mac SE. I learned programming, desktop publishing, and a love for writing and music both on computers Steve Jobs created. When I moved back to Louisiana, my parents bought me a PC. I went from Dubai as the only kid in school without a computer to rural Louisiana where I was the only kid in school with a computer. In college, I finally convinced my parents to get me a Mac. I never went back. In our lives, we occasionally come upon geniuses who give us special insight or special creations. Often we do not appreciate their genius until they have departed — like great artists whose value is undiscovered until they die. But then there are the Einsteins, the Edisons, the Disneys, the Picassos, and the Steve Jobses of the world. We not only see them and share with them that which they bring into the world, but we know we are in the presence of someone great. And so it is that much sadder when they depart and deprive us of them. Humanity is selfish, but also glorious. Many of us are sad to see Jobs go because we want more from him, but we appreciate what Steve Jobs gave us in design and ideas and innovation while he walked among us. And now we cheer on his company and his legacy. If there is one story to sum up the life of Steve Jobs and end this note with a smile, consider last night on Twitter. Margie Phelps of the Westboro Baptist Church tweeted “Westboro will picket his funeral. He had a huge platform; gave God no glory & taught sin.” She tweeted that, according to Twitter, from her iPhone. I wish Steve Jobs’ family well. Requiescat in pace

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Steve Jobs

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