JACKSON, Tenn. — Oct. 5, 2011 — By the time this article is published, a wave of obituaries on the life of Steve Jobs will have appeared in print and online. The assessments have rightly lionized him for what he was: a creative genius, entrepreneur, visionary and once-in-a-generation inspiration.
His iconic black mock turtleneck, blue jeans and tennis shoes 鈥 his gear during countless eagerly anticipated Apple product release presentations 鈥 reassured us. His demonstrations, punctuated with boy-like wonder, thrilled us.
That was the way of Steve Jobs. He was sophisticated, yet simple. When he decided Apple should produce a smartphone, he reportedly told the engineers that ever since he was a kid, he hated shirts with buttons, so he didn鈥檛 want his phone to have too many buttons either. Soft spoken, he let the quality of his work do the talking for him.
In an age in which technology often seems so dirty, the shiny devices he held in his hands seemed clean. To the guys who got pushed around by football players in high school, Steve Jobs made geeks look cool, and, perhaps even more importantly, held out hope for us that they win in the end.
Like any great hero story, Jobs鈥 biography was filled with thrilling highs and gut-wrenching lows. His was the ultimate American success story, starting Apple in a garage with his pal Steve Wozniak, and going on to build the greatest, most innovative, successful and easy-to-use technology products of all time.
When Jobs lost a power struggle with the company鈥檚 board in 1986, he was sent into exile. When he returned in 1996, Apple was in a full-scale design, management and philosophy crisis. Jobs moved quickly to restore confidence in the Mac by making a deal with the man we Mac users then saw as the enemy: Bill Gates. But by the time Apple released the 鈥淚鈥檓 a Mac. I鈥檓 a PC鈥 commercials just a few short years ago, the verdict was in: Steve Jobs had the last laugh.
But there was something more to what Jobs did with Apple than offering products with great design and superior usability. He made us feel different about ourselves, even good about life, when we powered up our Mac and heard the massive last chord struck on The Beatles鈥 鈥淪ergeant Pepper鈥檚 Lonely Hearts Club Band.鈥
I can still vividly remember watching the Super Bowl when Apple鈥檚 now famous 鈥1984鈥 commercial aired. A monochrome crowd sat stone-faced and motionless, receiving orders from a totalitarian regime leader on a giant screen, when suddenly a girl dressed in red like an Olympian raced down the center aisle and hurled a hammer which smashed the screen and disrupted the propaganda of the machine. Then the following words scrolled onto the screen read by a confident, yet playful voice: 鈥淥n January 24, Apple Computer will introduce Macintosh. And you鈥檒l see why 1984 won鈥檛 be like 鈥1984.鈥欌
It was a smart, subversive and funny way to promote a new computer. But even better yet, to a suburban loner wolf kid like me, it did something far more. It made using a Mac feel like an act of defiance 鈥 a protest against everything that was wrong, oppressive and broken with the 鈥渟ystem.鈥
The passing of Steve Jobs comes at a particularly bitter time for America. Many folks feel like they鈥檙e back in that scene from 1984, helpless and locked into a society that is cold and indifferent to them as individuals. For me, Apple鈥檚 homepage Wednesday night which read simply 鈥 Steve Jobs: 1955-2011 鈥 felt like the death of Superman.
But this is America, where heroes are born and proved. And somewhere out there there鈥檚 a kid in his garage furiously working away on some new innovation, and thanks to Steve Jobs, keeps dreaming.