Steve Jobs Still Casts Long Shadow At Web Summit

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RIP Steve Jobs
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Ron Miller

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Ron Miller has been writing about the enterprise at TechCrunch since 2014.

Previously, he was a long-time Contributing Editor at EContent Magazine. Past regular gigs included CITEworld, DaniWeb, TechTarget, Internet Evolution and FierceContentManagement.

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Ron was formerly corporate blogger for Intronis where he wrote once weekly on IT issues. He has contributed to various corporate blogs in the past including Ness, Novell and the IBM Mid-market Blogger Program.

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I spent this past week in Dublin at Web Summit, and I couldn’t help but notice, we are still fascinated, dare I say obsessed with the late Apple co-founder Steve Jobs more than three years after his death. If you knew the man or even had a meeting with him back in the day, interviewers wanted to hear about it.

Heck, even TechCrunch got into it this week with a retrospective of never-before seen Jobs photographs. It seems if you had any connection to Jobs, you’re in demand. Take former Apple CEO John Sculley as an example. He was famously lured to Apple by Jobs in 1983, but the honeymoon was short-lived and Jobs left under a cloud of animosity in 1985 to start NeXT Computers. Sculley was a successful executive before he joined Apple. He left Apple profitable 11 years later, and he’s done quite a bit in the 20 years since he left the company, but you would never know it.

All anyone wants to hear about is what Steve was like, and his involvement in forcing Jobs out of the company (although he disputed just how that went down). Almost 30 years after the fact though, we’re still talking about it and dissecting the politics of the situation, and asking Sculley about what happened. He is famous by association and it’s a strange dynamic.

But it wasn’t just Sculley who got asked about Jobs, so did Drobox CEO Drew Houston who was asked about a single meeting he had with Jobs in 2009. This wasn’t the first time he talked about this. In fact, he gets asked about it all the time. Why? Because we want to hear stories about the man. For Houston, it was by all accounts a surreal experience where he met a hero who wanted to buy his company. But he wasn’t there to sell and it never went much further than that because as Houston pointed on stage at Web Summit this week, if you don’t want to sell your company, don’t take meetings about selling your company. It ended there, but five years later just because Houston had a conversation with the guy, we still want to hear about it.

In the closing session of Web Summit, U2 lead singer, Bono appeared on a panel with House of Cards producer Dana Brunetti and Eric Wahlforss, co-founder of SoundCloud. There was lots of industry talk of course, but moderator David Carr of the New York Times had to ask Bono about a meeting with Steve Jobs five years ago in France (millionaire’s talk) when he infamously told him iTunes looked like a spreadsheet. Bono was surprised that for a guy who was so concerned about design, that Jobs didn’t make iTunes prettier. To be honest, the look of iTunes in my view is the least of its problems, but once again he had a face-to-face with Jobs and the world wanted to hear about  it.

Jobs died over three years ago, but his influence on the technology industry will very likely go on for a long time to come, and if Web Summit was any indication, our desire to hear stories about a man who had so much impact on the industry will likely continue too.

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