


The tech titan's love of simplicity
- where does it come from?
- where does it come from?
- It was not just zen that gave Steve Jobs design thinking mindset
- A friend recounts the moment when he encountered Japanese art
- Exclusive interview with former Apple CEO reveals Jobs' creative origins
Steve Jobs was a titan of tech. He masterminded the iMac and iPhone, and changed the world. He had a deep love of Japanese culture, from woodblock prints to ceramics, and the inner workings of electronics giant Sony. Here, close friends, colleagues and design experts shed new light on how this came to be.
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0m 03s
Good evening.
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I'm Steve Jobs from Apple Computer.
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0m 08s
I'm very glad to be here tonight.
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0m 11s
In 1984, Steve Jobs revolutionized computing.
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0m 32s
The Macintosh promised new levels of self-expression.
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0m 37s
At launch, a familiar face.
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But another, perhaps not.
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She's from a Japanese woodblock print.
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0m 59s
And when it comes to Jobs' love of Japan, she's the tip of the iceberg.
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1m 11s
Close friends, colleagues and design experts shed new light on why this came to be.
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1m 22s
Steve was thinking about how do you take the things that the Japanese culture
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1m 27s
has developed in a way that it could go into commercial products.
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1m 34s
Steve was exposed to the way my mom decorated the house,
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1m 40s
the Japanese sense of style and design.
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1m 45s
Jobs developed close bonds with Japanese artisans.
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1m 51s
He wrapped his hands around the work.
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1m 57s
Then he would do this.
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2m 04s
He touched very gently, handling it with loving care.
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2m 12s
And their creations informed his own approach to design.
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2m 19s
One pioneer.
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And a passion that changed the world.
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2m 35s
Steve Jobs first encountered Japanese art as a boy.
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2m 45s
His best friend was Bill Fernandez, who hails from San Francisco.
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2m 57s
Bill was even Apple's very first employee.
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3m 05s
Before that, they whiled away the days tinkering with electronics.
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3m 18s
Jobs was always at his friend's house.
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3m 25s
He felt right at home.
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3m 30s
And Bill's mother treated Jobs like a son.
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3m 35s
Bambi says he always had an inquisitive mind.
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3m 40s
He was in and out so much.
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3m 43s
Bill had a portion of the garage that we made
into a desk for him to do his electronic stuff. -
3m 52s
He was interested in what was around him.
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3m 55s
And he was interested in talking to you and
he could talk well, even at that time. -
4m 01s
So, he was interesting to talk to as a person,
as a friend. So, we became very good friends. -
4m 09s
Bambi studied Japanese art.
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4m 11s
And her home was full of it.
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One wall featured three shin-hanga woodblock prints.
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4m 24s
Jobs was transfixed.
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4m 31s
The three shin-hanga hanging over the white couch in our family room.
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4m 35s
The one when you came into the house, the first thing you saw.
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He loved those.
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4m 40s
He was drawn to them.
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4m 41s
They appealed to him.
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4m 43s
There was one shin-hanga that had a forest and a person walking down a road
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4m 48s
that looked very similar to forest in California.
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4m 52s
We have a rare Redwood forest, very tall stately trees.
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4m 59s
And he remarked, you know, is that California?
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5m 02s
And, you know, that looks like California.
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5m 04s
And she said, no, that's Japan, you know,
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5m 09s
The ones over the couch.
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5m 11s
Those are the ones that caught his attention,
even though over time he saw other ones that I added. -
5m 18s
Those are the ones that he was drawn back to.
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5m 21s
And he would stand across the room from them
and just look at them. -
5m 25s
And then as he grew older,
he started talking to me. -
5m 29s
He'd look at the prints and he looked at me and
he'd say, "You know, I think you should share." -
5m 36s
I said, "No, I don't share my father's collection,
but you're welcome to look at them whenever you want." -
5m 44s
Shin-hanga is a 20th-century take on ukiyo-e, an older form of woodblock printing.
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5m 53s
Artists sought to modernize and increase the appeal of their craft, which was already popular overseas.
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6m 09s
Bill shows us a gift from his old friend.
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6m 14s
So, this is the shin-hanga by Hasui Kawase that was his wedding gift to me and my first wife.
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6m 24s
I felt very happy that shin-hanga still meant so much to him
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6m 30s
and that he would honor me by giving me a gift that he knew would be very meaningful to me.
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6m 36s
A very thoughtful gift because I also love shin-hanga.
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6m 45s
Bill says shin-hanga was the starting point for Jobs' appreciation of Japanese beauty.
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6m 55s
Our house was a catalyst for Steve Jobs' development of his aesthetic sense.
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7m 02s
A big part of that was the shin-hanga, because that's what you see.
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7m 07s
You walk in and boom, pictures, beautiful pictures.
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7m 11s
Oh, that's so wonderful.
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7m 11s
I love that.
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7m 12s
They speak to me.
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7m 15s
I think that was the beginning where he said, I like this, I like simple, I like clean, I like natural wood.
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7m 22s
I like this style of art.
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7m 25s
I like this aesthetic, this sensibility and so forth.
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7m 28s
You can see his love of simplicity and elegance throughout his life, like in the products that he developed at Apple.
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7m 55s
There are similar sentiments from a key player in Apple's history.
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8m 15s
Hello. Mr. Sculley.
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8m 19s
Former CEO John Sculley.
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8m 26s
Jobs poached him from Pepsi.
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8m 28s
And the pair quickly became close.
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8m 37s
Sculley's background includes industrial design, and they would often discuss art.
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8m 46s
Sculley remembers a man who invented products, but kept his own possessions to a minimum.
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8m 56s
When I went into his house for the first time, I was very surprised.
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9m 00s
I knew he could afford anything he wanted, but the fact that he lived such a simple life at home personally.
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9m 09s
And I asked him.
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9m 11s
I said, "Is this what you like to do, or you just didn't have time to, you know, attend to getting things in your house?"
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9m 20s
He said, "No, I actually like it.Very simple. This is how I like it. I actually have the things in my home that I wanted to have in my home."
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9m 31s
But one wall spoke volumes.
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9m 38s
His bedroom had just a simple single person bed on the wall where three photos,
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9m 47s
one of Einstein, the other of Mahatma Gandhi, and the 3rd of a Japanese woodcut print of a lady.
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9m 56s
And the other thing that was in the room was a Tiffany lamp.
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10m 02s
The shin-hanga Sculley talks of is likely a work titled "Asanegami" - or "morning hair".
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10m 13s
Compared with Einstein and Gandhi, it's a little bit weird to see this kind of presence, right?
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10m 20s
It doesn't feel weird at all with me knowing Steve.
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10m 24s
Steve was highly impressionable by things that influenced him and he was very careful to select things that were important to him.
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10m 35s
He was highly influenced by Japanese culture personally.
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10m 39s
So, it makes total sense to me that would be of equal importance to Einstein and Gandhi.
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10m 54s
Jobs bought the work in Tokyo's upscale Ginza district.
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11m 06s
Gallery clerk Matsuoka Haruo remembers a man introducing himself as Steve.
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11m 14s
But this was no ordinary customer.
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11m 23s
He said, "I'm going to start collecting Shin-hanga. So please teach me everything."
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11m 29s
And he gave me his business card, featuring the multicolored Apple logo.
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I was a little surprised, because color printing was still very expensive at the time.
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11m 47s
Jobs had clearly done his homework.
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11m 55s
"Morning Hair" depicts a woman who has just woken up, and it was banned by authorities at the time.
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12m 03s
Only a few still exist, which meant the price was high.
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12m 10s
I was somewhat taken aback.
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12m 12s
He seemed so casual about choosing it.
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12m 20s
He was particularly fond of landscape specialist Kawase Hasui.
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12m 31s
Just like his friend's mom.
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Hasui traveled across Japan, skillfully depicting nature and moments in time.
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And he is often mentioned in the same breath as famous ukiyo-e artists Hokusai and Hiroshige.
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13m 04s
He wanted to learn, but already seemed to have a mental picture of everything, and of what he liked.
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13m 13s
I was impressed by the way he could single out major works.
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13m 22s
Shin-hanga are deceptively simple.
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The production process is actually highly intricate.
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A carver creates an outline based on the artist's vision.
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And woodblocks are made for every color.
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14m 00s
They are then taken to a printer, who renders the outlines first.
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14m 09s
The colors are added one by one, layer by layer.
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With Ukiyo-e, the craftsmen work independently at each step.
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But shin-hanga artists convey their plan directly to the carver and printer.
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The aim is to keep the results as close to the original idea as possible.
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The number of layers increased as artists pushed the boundaries.
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In some cases, more than 30.
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That's two to three times more than your typical ukiyo-e.
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15m 06s
The way shin-hanga artists had control over an entire production process was not lost on Jobs.
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15m 19s
I do remember distinctly that he was very excited when he came back
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15m 24s
and we met in New York in the end of March when talking about the shin-hanga.
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15m 30s
Because he said,
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15m 31s
"I really, so excited on this trip, because I thought that woodcuts were made by different people through collective process."
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15m 42s
And then, I was introduced to the shin-hanga.
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15m 45s
It was the individual expression of person from artist to carver to printer.
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15m 52s
And he said, "That's exactly what we are trying to do with technology with Macintosh."
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15m 59s
You could create the design, you could render it in a digital format and then you could print it out on a printer.
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16m 09s
And he said that's the essence of what Macintosh is in this day, he was working on what he called Desk Top Publishing,
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16m 16s
giving people the creative possibility to print on their own desk.
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16m 25s
Jobs amassed as many as 48 shin-hanga over the course of 20 years.
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16m 38s
He even bought two prints of this work, titled "Combing her hair".
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16m 43s
A beautiful lady, and a model for self-expression.
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16m 53s
In a 2001 interview with NHK, he set out his ideas for what we can do with a computer.
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17m 05s
I'd shoot some footage, and I remember making my first iMovie, where I could edit the clips together,
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17m 11s
and I could put some cross dissolves in, and some titles on,
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17m 15s
and then I took one of my favorite pieces of music and stuck it in and added a soundtrack, and I made about a three-minute movie,
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17m 20s
and it was, I showed it to my wife, and she started crying.
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17m 24s
Some of the movies are not better than others.
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17m 28s
But they all are very emotional.
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17m 31s
Can we help you in express yourself in richer way in your music, in your movies,
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17m 37s
in your photography, these kinds of things that people want to do.
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17m 58s
Apple was on the cusp of big things back in the early 80s.
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18m 05s
Jobs was developing the Macintosh.
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18m 11s
But some of the firm's success was down to another visionary in a faraway land: Sony Chairman Morita Akio.
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18m 23s
The Japanese company's products were widely regarded as some of the world's best.
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18m 32s
Simple, and beautiful.
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18m 38s
Jobs was a big fan.
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18m 47s
Satjiv Chahil used to be Apple's senior vice president of international marketing.
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18m 54s
He says Sony provided more than just influence.
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19m 03s
Every component of the Macintosh, the Apple product came from Sony.
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19m 10s
The screen was a trinitron screen.
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19m 14s
In fact, the first even laptop was actually completely produced by Sony.
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19m 21s
So, Steve Jobs had great respect for Sony, for its design, for its perfection.
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19m 30s
And it's an innovation in miniaturization.
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19m 36s
So, that was, the North Star for Steve was Sony.
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19m 46s
Sculley remembers meeting Chairman Morita in Japan.
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19m 50s
And how Jobs made no secret of his desire to learn.
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20m 00s
Steve wanted to know from Morita-san how involved are you personally in the creation of the Sony Walkman.
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20m 06s
And did you think of the product, do you stay connected with the designers of the product?
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20m 13s
How much attention do you pay to the manufacturing of the product, the materials of the product?
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20m 19s
So, he was, Steve was very curious and he was always asking questions.
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20m 25s
And it turned out that Morita-san was very involved in the product.
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20m 29s
He was a product person, just like Steve Jobs was a product person.
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20m 32s
So, they resonated in that way in a very positive way.
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20m 38s
To Jobs, Sony products were like textbooks.
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20m 41s
Not least, the first CD Walkman.
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20m 50s
I remember when we're visiting with Morita-san in Tokyo, and he presented Steve and I both with Sony Walkman.
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20m 58s
This was before the product was actually introduced on the market.
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21m 01s
And when we got on the plane to fly home, we both opened our box and we were looking at it.
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21m 07s
And Steve said, "Give it to me", and I said, "What do you mean give it to you?"
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21m 11s
He said, "Morita-san gave us each one for a gift."
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21m 14s
He said, "No. We're going to take it back and our engineers are going to take both of these apart and we're going to look at every detail."
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21m 22s
And Steve had so much respect for Sony because Sony paid attention to the details.
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21m 27s
And at that time, in the electronics world, nobody was paying attention to details except for Apple and Sony.
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21m 38s
Apple's early promotional materials proudly conveyed the firm's philosophy.
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21m 48s
A philosophy with deep roots in Japan.
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21m 55s
We always would come back to the foundational idea that simplification is the greatest sophistication.
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22m 03s
And Steve admired that in the Japanese culture and with Japanese artisans.
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22m 09s
And, Akio Morita confirmed that.
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22m 14s
He said, "Yes, we pay a lot of attention to that. That's a principle for us of priority of how we develop and build our products."
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22m 41s
Jobs saw the need for a seismic shift in the way Apple runs.
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22m 50s
He recruited Hartmut Esslinger, who had worked extensively with Sony.
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23m 00s
The designer created over 100 products for the Japanese firm.
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23m 04s
And Jobs was impressed.
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23m 09s
He wanted Apple products to be the...well, computers ...to be the best designed computers in the world ...
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23m 16s
Actually (he wanted)Apple to be the best design in the world.
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23m 20s
Quite ambitious.He had a sense of what is nice, what is not.
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23m 26s
But he didn't have the sense of how to make it.
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23m 32s
And how to get it through organization.
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23m 34s
So, the first proposal that we handed to Apple was that the designers get a little more power
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23m 42s
by reporting to the Engineering head of the group.
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23m 49s
Esslinger suggested the designers have control over the engineers.
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23m 53s
Just like Sony.
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23m 58s
And he then proposed a series of designs that helped shape Apple's future.
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24m 03s
But it wasn't all plain sailing.
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24m 09s
That's kind of pretty radical but it doesn't work otherwise.
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24m 14s
The good thing is Steve did it.
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24m 17s
We actually had a lot of fights.
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24m 19s
For example, when that was installed, and Steve let me, and I just said, "That's what we do", people hated it.
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24m 30s
They made their own designs parallel, they sabotaged it.
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24m 34s
I think the connection of Steve to Japan, Japan's culture in general, really happened in the very early days when he worked,
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24m 43s
and he created products then found out using the Japanese system of collaboration,
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24m 51s
of improvement, and so on and so on, and trust, is really the source for Apple's future success.
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24m 58s
So, Apple in fact is based, I think, on the Japanese model.
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25m 04s
Call it 'Industrial Model'.
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25m 18s
What we need now is the third industry milestone product.
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25m 22s
And that's what Macintosh is all about.
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25m 28s
Jobs imbued his groundbreaking computer with everything he had gleaned from Japan.
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25m 38s
It was his time to shine.
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25m 41s
To change the game.
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25m 43s
And he delivered.
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25m 47s
When he's standing back there, he is shaking like a leaf.
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25m 50s
He's so nervous and he turns to me.
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25m 53s
He said, "I can't go out there." He said, "I'm too nervous to go out."
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25m 56s
I said, "Steve. Take some deep breaths, you know, breathe in deeply, breathe in deeply."
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26m 02s
He's doing that and he's taking in exaggerated breaths
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26m 06s
and then all of a sudden he has to go out on the stage and I don't know what's going to happen.
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26m 10s
Steve goes out on the stage.
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26m 12s
The moment he steps onto that stage, he completely transforms.
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26m 17s
Suddenly he is totally confident.
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26m 20s
Suddenly he has every move perfect.
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26m 28s
Jobs made sure to tell the audience his invention would improve their lives.
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26m 36s
It let you sing.
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26m 37s
It let you make pictures.
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26m 39s
It let you make diagrams.
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26m 40s
You would cut them and paste them in your documents.
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26m 42s
It let you put that sense in bold Helvetica, our old English.
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26m 45s
If that's the way you want to express yourself.
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26m 52s
By the 1990s, personal computers were everywhere.
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27m 01s
And people were using them in ways Jobs always knew they would.
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27m 12s
He told NHK of his ambitions to keep on innovating.
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27m 24s
We see at Apple, one of the things we've always felt is that we want to stand at the intersection of the technology and humanities.
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27m 31s
We just talk to the side of people that has to add up, you know, numbers and write a letter, but it, there's so much more to it in that.
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27m 39s
And I think we're finally, with this digital lifestyle era opening,
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27m 44s
going to be addressing those other things that all of us do, you know, some of, every single day.
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28m 06s
The iMac hit shelves in 1998.
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28m 10s
Curvy and colorful - this computer was an instant global hit.
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28m 19s
The design was radically modern.
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28m 23s
But the concept arguably traces back to Japan's ancient capital.
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28m 32s
Jobs found constant inspiration in Kyoto, and he would visit often.
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28m 40s
Traditional gardens, kabuki theater, and much more.
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28m 49s
Sometimes we would stay at a "ryokan", inn.
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28m 56s
And Steve loved the experience of the tatami bed
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28m 59s
and just the whole ceremonial process of how food was served and, you know, just the process of taking a bath.
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29m 12s
There were, all of these things were almost ceremonial as much as they were practical.
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29m 19s
So, Steve loved the experience of kind of being exposed to the Japanese culture.
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29m 30s
And during mealtimes, the food often played second fiddle to the plates.
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29m 37s
It was a very quiet experience watching Steve Jobs touch a Japanese ceramic, hold it in his hands,
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29m 46s
you know, feel the texture of the surface, and he would ask questions slowly and saying...
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29m 53s
Where did the clay come to make this?
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29m 55s
What was the artisans thinking?
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30m 00s
Had he done things like this before?
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30m 02s
He was very inquisitive about what the process was, you know, what motivated the artisan to do this.
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30m 14s
Whenever Jobs visited Kyoto he would stop by the galleries to buy ceramics.
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30m 28s
He even commissioned one artisan over a period of ten years.
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30m 40s
Shakunaga Yukio's pottery dates back centuries.
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30m 48s
He remembers meeting Jobs for the first time in 1996.
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30m 54s
Jobs picked up Shakunaga's works to get a feel for the shapes.
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31m 03s
He wrapped his hands around them.
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31m 10s
Then he would do this.
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31m 17s
The way he touched them was very gentle.
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31m 22s
And he handled them with loving care.
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31m 31s
After a long time inspecting the works, Jobs would buy some.
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31m 38s
Others would be made to order.
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31m 51s
He wanted the usual items like vases, cups and plates.
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31m 59s
But he was extremely particular.
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32m 10s
I suggested the corners be like this.
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32m 14s
But Mr. Jobs said he wants them even rounder.
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32m 25s
He was very specific.
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32m 31s
When corners gently curve, it's easier to follow the shape with the palm of your hand.
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32m 42s
It feels very different.
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32m 50s
I think that gave the dishes a certain charm.
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32m 56s
Works like this may appear unassuming, but they convey clear intent.
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33m 06s
Jobs was pursuing organic forms that make people happy.
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33m 15s
Good morning Sir.
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33m 18s
Kyoto-based ceramics expert Robert Yellin spent time with Jobs.
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33m 28s
One day, he got a call from Apple's Tokyo office asking if he could guide Jobs around some galleries.
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33m 38s
Yellin took him to two, and also the home of a private collector.
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33m 47s
He was like a child in a candy store.
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33m 50s
He was just so excited, and everything was new and fresh, you know.
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33m 55s
He goes, "What's that?" And we would take it and he would hold it and he'd go,
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33m 59s
"Okay. This is very interesting, I like that."
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34m 06s
Jobs was immediately enamored with a 16th century jar.
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34m 14s
It had a squat-like form factor known as "uzukumaru."
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34m 23s
He was very interested in these, you know, and he would take it and turn it and kind of rub the shoulder a bit,
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34m 29s
you know, see how it felt the curve, turn it on the base, see how the clay looked and just like Ooh, Ooh, ok.
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34m 40s
He really loved the slope of the shoulders.
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34m 45s
Look how natural that is.
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34m 46s
It's just so pleasing to the eye.
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34m 50s
You know, there's a softness to it.
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34m 51s
There's a romantic feel of sorts, you know, it's like rubbing your shoulder,
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34m 56s
rubbing your hands over your own shoulders or your girlfriend or wife or whoever, it might be your child.
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35m 01s
So he goes, "Yah, I want my products to have that smooth shoulder feel."
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35m 07s
So I think he got a lot of hints from looking at these old jars.
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35m 13s
The iMac design team sought to create a product that would be cherished by all.
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35m 23s
Every part - from the monitor to the mouse - featured beautiful curved lines.
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35m 39s
And it heralded an era of similar forms across Apple's entire product line.
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35m 47s
I would watch him back in Silicon Valley where he would pick something up in his hands.
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35m 54s
It could be a mouse, pointing device, and how he would hold it in his hands, and he would feel it and look at it from every different angle.
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36m 03s
And he would study it carefully.
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36m 06s
So, for him, he was not interested in consumer research.
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36m 09s
He didn't believe in it.
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36m 12s
He was interested in in his own ability to be able to determine what materials, what products, what shapes.
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36m 22s
So, he had a lot of self-confidence in that.
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36m 25s
Steve was focused on, you know, what impression is it gonna make on the user?
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36m 30s
How will they feel about it, yeah.
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36m 33s
Can we make people aspire to have our products and fall in love with our products?
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36m 42s
Jobs was instinctively drawn to tactile shapes.
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36m 48s
And he used that sensibility to invent brilliant products.
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37m 06s
His passion for curves extended into all areas of the Apple universe.
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37m 22s
"Now, this is our store."
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37m 25s
"So, the first 25% of the store shows you our entire product line."
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37m 31s
Jobs opened the first Apple Store in 2001.
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37m 37s
But it was about much more than shifting units.
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37m 43s
One of the things we want to do is to create a place where people can learn not just about computer
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37m 49s
but more importantly what they can do
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37m 51s
rather than just talking about just Megahertz and Mega bites and things like that.
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38m 04s
US-based Japanese art director Yagi Tamotsu helped with the store's basic concept.
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38m 16s
He says Jobs wanted to create a friendly atmosphere.
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38m 26s
When we first started working together, the kidney shapes used for the children's desks were something visually very new.
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38m 40s
He most certainly had a preference for those curves,
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38m 46s
as opposed to the sharp edges you see nowadays at Apple stores.
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38m 54s
Jobs had full-size models made up of all the furniture.
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39m 03s
And true to form, he inspected them with more than just his eyes.
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39m 12s
He stood up and circled the counter many times,
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39m 17s
touching the edges with the palm of his hand.
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39m 23s
If the curves felt good, he could come to a decision.
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39m 31s
I felt computers on curved tables would leave a deeper impression on the customers than computers on square tables.
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39m 46s
That push for making things as simple as possible, and visually memorable.
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39m 52s
I feel that was constant throughout the project.
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40m 14s
Jobs was diagnosed with cancer in 2003.
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40m 19s
But that didn't stop him from creating more groundbreaking products, including the iPhone.
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40m 29s
Jobs visited Kyoto again in 2010 for what would be the last time.
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40m 38s
He also stopped by Shigaraki, a nearby town long known for ceramics.
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40m 49s
He wanted to meet the local craftspeople.
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40m 55s
Including master potter Takahashi Rakusai the Fifth.
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41m 02s
His family has been producing ceramics for two centuries.
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41m 15s
Rakusai remembers Jobs enquiring about "haikaburi" - a prized style of Shigaraki ware.
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41m 29s
He suddenly asked while holding a teacup, and I could sense he was a pottery lover.
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41m 42s
With haikaburi, ash from the burnt firewood becomes embedded into the clay.
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41m 47s
The results can be stunning.
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41m 51s
Artisans spend their lives refining the technique.
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41m 56s
But no matter how close to perfection they get, much of the process is left to fate.
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42m 07s
It takes two days for the kiln to cool down.
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42m 12s
We then take out each work.
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42m 18s
If I get just one or two good pieces, I'm thrilled.
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42m 27s
Rakusai was glad to meet someone as knowledgeable and passionate as Jobs.
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42m 39s
He bought a large bowl just like this.
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42m 44s
The best one I ever created.
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42m 47s
It's covered with lots of nicely colored ash.
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42m 51s
I was happy that he singled it out.
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42m 55s
I could tell he really loves and understands what we do.
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43m 10s
Jobs had a strong appreciation for the work that goes into making beautiful objects.
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43m 19s
He took inspiration from Japanese culture in various means.
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43m 24s
You know, obviously one was pottery and the beautiful slope of curve of shoulders of ancient jars.
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43m 32s
You know, the carpenters of old Japan, they made something look very simple like this room,
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43m 38s
but it's a very complicated procedure that they were able to produce.
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43m 44s
Looking at something which you perceive as simple beauty,
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43m 48s
but there's a lot of consciousness and technique and thought and design and many failures I imagine,
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43m 56s
to create something so simply beautiful.
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44m 03s
It all sounds a lot like Apple.
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44m 14s
He said what we do at Apple will have no compromises.
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44m 20s
So yes, we'll simplify.
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44m 21s
We'll find the essence that brings out the perfection of the vision.
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44m 29s
But we will take our time and do it right.
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44m 33s
That isn't like the United States, you know,
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44m 36s
we create things quickly and they may be popular and then they may disappear.
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44m 44s
And that's not what Steve saw.
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44m 48s
He saw continuity through time with the Japanese culture and always a purpose.
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44m 55s
And everything he did at Apple had a purpose.
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44m 59s
There was nothing accidental.
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45m 02s
Steve loved beautiful products and the distinction between a beautiful product like the Sony Walkman.
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45m 10s
Or a beautiful art object.
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45m 13s
Like a ceramic.
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45m 16s
Those had a continuity in terms of the principles that were involved.
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45m 24s
So, Steve was fascinated by the fact that artisans would spend a lifetime creating a certain kind of product and.
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45m 35s
Whether it was a print or whether it was a ceramic and he just had so much respect for that
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45m 41s
and what he wanted to do as a business leader was to commercialize those ideas.
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45m 55s
Sculley invite us on a tour of his home.
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46m 00s
So, I wanted to take you into my office and show you something that has great memories for me of my time together with Steve Jobs.
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46m 07s
And I keep it in my office because Steve made a diorama for me as a surprise on the 1st anniversary of my coming to Apple.
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46m 22s
A diorama, handmade by Jobs.
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46m 27s
Apple and IBM are on the up.
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46m 29s
But there's also a Japanese flag.
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46m 35s
Perhaps Jobs was saving a little room at the top for a friendly competitor like Sony.
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46m 47s
And there was a great consistency, I think, in Steve's life with things that he learned and observed, particularly in Japan.
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46m 56s
He loved the food, you know.
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47m 00s
He loved visiting there.
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47m 01s
He loved the art.
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47m 04s
He loved the craftsmanship of artisans.
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47m 08s
And each of these things found important ways of shaping the life that Steve chose to live.
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47m 24s
Jobs kept a shin-hanga in his study.
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47m 30s
And his daughter wrote in detail
about his final days. -
47m 38s
She said there were two framed prints
on the wall by Hasui. -
47m 46s
On October 5, 2011, he died.
Steve Jobs was 56.