beet.tv - 1/17/2009
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We read this morning Newsweek's Dan Lyon's rant about the "rotten press" corps in Silicon Valley and that PR people who are mostly paid to "tell lies. " We don't think that Apple handled the health issues around Steve Jobs properly, but we wonder why Dan is so worked up about Apple coverage ...
bloomberg.com - 1/16/2009
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bloomberg.com —
Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. Chief Executive
Officer Steve Jobs is considering a liver transplant as...
a result of complications after treatment for pancreatic cancer in 2004, according to people who are monitoring his illness. Patients with ...
(more)
Apple’s Jobs Said to Be Considering Liver Transplant ...
newsweek.com - 1/16/2009
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newsweek.com —
For the past six months Steve Jobs has
been looking terribly ill. But only this week did...
Apple finally acknowledge that Jobs isn't doing well, when the company announced that Jobs would take a leave for six months. Some suggest the company has misled ...
(more)
Lyons: The Media's Rotten Reporting on Apple | Newsweek ...
macblogz.com - 1/18/2009
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macblogz.com —
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has been making rounds
in the media weighing in on Steve Jobs’ medical...
leave of absence with his own analysis. The latest is a video interview on CNBC where he mentions a few crucial elements regarding ...
(more)
Steve Wozniak Sheds Some Light On Steve Jobs’ Health ...
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Roundup: The Jobs saga continues, Circuit City razed, Hulu apologizes and more
VentureBeat —
... don’t you guys leave me alone — why is this important?” Jobs told Bloomberg today. NetworkWorld lays out why Jobs health probably isn’t important from a legal perspective, while Valleywag’s Owen Thomas lays out why he thinks we all care so much about the issue.
Meanwhile, the stories continue. Various reports speculate that Jobs’ cancer may have returned, or that he could be considering a liver transplant. Beet.TV’s Andy Plesser talked with Lyons (the man formerly known as Fake Steve Jobs ...
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Rotten Reporting
community.winsupersite.com 1/22/2009 — Dan Lyons finally takes on a very obvious problem : Apple has too many friends in the media and rather than be critical of the company, they simply suck up to Apple in return for "super-secret" access. Heads-up, Dan. It's old news. I've ...
Meet Tim Cook: The Man in Charge of Apple
blog.wired.com 1/15/2009 —
For millions of Apple fans, Steve Jobs is irreplaceable. But if there's one man Jobs himself trusts to stand in his shoes, it is his second in command, Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook.
With Jobs on medical leave until June, Cook ...
Steve Jobs Takes 'Medical Leave' from Apple
valleywag.gawker.com 1/14/2009 — CNBC's website is reporting that Steve Jobs , Apple's heroic CEO, is taking a six-month leave of absence to deal with his declining health. It is the best thing for Jobs. And for Apple. Jobs has battled pancreatic cancer and its aftereffects since ...
Apple Without Jobs: Fine For Now, But... (AAPL)
alleyinsider.com 1/15/2009 — Apple CEO (AAPL) Steve Jobs is taking a six month medical leave to treat health-related issues that are "more complex" than he thought a week ago . Jobs will "remain involved in major strategic decisions" while he is out. But let's assume the worst: ...
What If Steve Jobs Doesn't Come Back to Work?
bits.blogs.nytimes.com 1/15/2009 — The corporate operating system of Apple so revolves around the autocratic vision of Steve Jobs that it will need a cultural upgrade if he doesn't return from medical leave.
Steve Jobs Skipping Final Macworld Apple Keynote [Apple]
gizmodo.com 12/17/2008 — Steve Jobs is not going to deliver this year's Macworld keynote. We suspected this was coming . But there's more: Apple has confirmed that this is their last Macworld ever. LIVE UPDATES Instead of Jobs, delivering this year's supposedly final ...
Lawsuits against Apple likely in light of Jobs' latest disclosure
appleinsider.com 1/15/2009 — While many are wishing Steve Jobs a speedy recovery, members of the legal and investment communities believe his disclosure Wednesday will inevitably open Apple to lawsuits from shareholders unhappy with the recent secrecy over his uncertain health.
Apple after Steve
crunchgear.com 1/15/2009 —
Mr. Jobs is taking a well-deserved breather from Apple. We here at CrunchGear hope he gets well soon, and think he’s doing the right thing: few jobs are more important than one’s own health, and certainly not being the CEO of a company ...
Exclusive
bloomberg.com 1/15/2009 — Apple’s Cook Pushes Staff in Lieu of Jobs’s Magic (Update1) By Dina Bass and Connie Guglielmo Jan. 15 (Bloomberg) -- Apple Inc. founder and Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs is prone to fits of passion, table pounding and screaming. Tim Cook , who ...
After Steve Jobs, who runs Apple?
apple20.blogs.fortune.cnn.com 12/21/2008 — “We are in the early stages of changing roles in Apple’s management structure,” Piper Jaffray’s Gene Munster wrote last week in the wake of Steve Jobs’ decision to hand the Macworld keynote over to senior vice ...
Week in review: Changes at the helm —
CNET News - Business Tech 1/16/2009
One tech pioneer welcomed a new chief executive this week, while another lost its leader--at least temporarily.
After months of insisting that Steve Jobs' health was a private matter with no impact on the company, Apple's chief ...
Apple's Jobs may seek new liver, report says —
SFGate: Technology 1/17/2009
Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs, who recently went on medical leave until June, may be considering a liver transplant as part of his continuing treatment for a pancreatic tumor that was surgically removed in 2004, according to a report from Bloomberg ...