Steve tasks Aimed To Revolutionize TV, Textbooks and photography

Steve Jobs’ untimely death to pancreatic cancer has unquestionably left a glaring hole through Apple’s core.

It’s been public domain for a long while now that the Cupertino-based company is wanting to delve into the market of linked TV. Although Apple TV has been around for a few years now, the tiny black box was initially dismissed as a pastime by CEO Steve Jobs, and the recent reports of iTV with a potential 2013 introduce would certainly seem more like it.

Walter Isaacson, who documented Jobs’ life story in his very popular biography of the Apple co-founder, has exposed in a new York Times interview that the profitable television market was just one of three main areas in which tasks sought to “reinvent”.

“There’s no reason you should have all these complicated remote controls,” he told Isaacson, which seems to confirm – if there was ever any doubt – that Siri will likely play a major part in any Apple-branded television set.

As well as TV, he wished to revolutionize the way people use textbooks, which suggests that rather bringing a new product to the fold necessarily, he envisaged all textbooks going through yet another fruit company Store, enabling trainees to get the most recent and best textbooks to read (and possibly annotate) on their iPads.

He also, rather interestingly, wished to place Apple’s seed in the photography market – which could mean a number of things. The cameras in the iphone range are contending with the big guns on socio-image sites like Flickr, so there’s every reason to believe that he envisaged smartphone snappers eventually reaching a conventional whereby the bulkier standalone cameras are no longer necessary.

However, it could have implied (and, theoretically, could still mean in terms of eventual release) that he organized to design a camera bearing that renowned Apple logo .

Whatever the case, it will be interesting to see whether such a rethink of those three markets will ever bear fruit. Without Jobs’ determination, concepts and vision, we may never fully see what he had in store.

Although he stated that tasks is irreplaceable at Apple, Isaacson does reckon that Tim cook – the “business” side of Steve Jobs’ brain, paired with Jony Ive – the “artistic, emotional, romantic side,” will be more than sufficient in continuing the tasks legacy.

(Source new York Times)

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