The things I wonder or think about is that four kids no longer can talk to Dad and that a wife rolls over in bed to clutch an empty pillow. So for a little while, I'll wonder what his family life was like. I'll wonder if the drive he demonstrated while at Apple's helm somehow compromised his personal life and if so, did he somehow close the circle when he left. And I hope that when he died he was surrounded by love.
On a pathetic note, I've read where the Westboro Baptist Church will be looking to protest his funeral. The irony will be if any of them will be using iPhones.
This we'll probably never know and we shouldn't because there's a personal sphere to, even for the late Mr. Steve Jobs and his family....
I remember... back in the 80's I did a project on an original V 1.0 Macintosh, with no harddisk and only a 3.5" floppy. I was using a Pascal compiler that was so buggy it could bring the whole OS into instability, for those who know Pascal the syntax is so that the program should complete with an End. And if the . in the program was missing the compiler would go to an infinite loop that brought the OS into never never land, this is where the famous "Finder Bomb" turned up, and I had to reboot and it took a long long time
All these issues with the compiler made me scream in horror and it provided me with many "interesting" moments; in the end, however, everything turned out very well and project was a big success.
What is clear from that moment is that, despite it's issues, Apple and the two Steve's brought a product that was lightyears ahead of anything else at that moment. The design of the Macintosh was at least as revolutionary as the Lamborghini Countach was when it was introduced, the user interface and the user experience was way ahead of competition (that is as long as the OS did not crash showing me the bomb), yes, they got ideas from Xerox, but Steve Jobs managed to make a product of this when Xerox did not.
The products they mad in the 80's were so far ahead of competition, I believe it took Microsoft something like at least 12 years to slightly catch up, perhaps with Windows 95 they were getting closer to catch up, but then Apple were in another position...
What happened later, is no reason to repeat here
I don't buy Apple products and I won't but I have the uttermost respect for Steve Jobs and his work, Steve changed the world and the way we think about electronics and devices.
The world without Mr. Jobs will not be the same... it's not gonna be the same rock shows when a new product is released, it's not gonna be the same exciting stories about products and user experiences... Mr Jobs was one of a kind, we will miss you.......