Jobs tells Stanford graduates that his move
forced him to be innovative
PALO ALTO, Calif. - Apple Computer Inc.'s CEO Steve Jobs told Stanford
University graduates Sunday that dropping out of college was one of the
best decisions he ever made because it forced him to be innovative — even
when it came to finding enough money for dinner.
In an unusually candid commencement speech, Jobs also told the almost
5,000 graduates that his bout with a rare form of pancreatic cancer
reemphasized the need to live each day to the fullest. "Your time is
limited so don't let it be wasted living someone else's life," Jobs said
to a packed stadium of graduates, alumni and family.
Jobs, wearing sandals and jeans under his robe, was treated like a rock
star by the students, in large part due to the surge in popularity of
Apple's iPod digital music player. A group of students wore iPod mini
costumes over their robes and several students shouted, "Steve, hire
me!"
Jobs, 50, said he attended Reed College in Portland, Ore., but dropped
out after only eight months because it was too expensive for his
working-class family. He said his real education started when he "dropped
in" on whatever classes interested him — including calligraphy.
Jobs said he lived off 5-cent soda recycling deposits and free food
offered by Hare Krishnas while taking classes.
He told the graduates that few friends could see the value of learning
calligraphy at the time but that painstaking attention to detail —
including mastering different "fonts" — was what set Macintosh apart from
its competitors. "If I had never dropped out I might never have dropped in
on that calligraphy," Jobs said.
Jobs also recounted founding Apple in his parent's basement and his
tough times after being forced out of the company he founded when he was
only 30. "I was a very public failure and I even thought about running
away from the valley," Jobs said.
Instead, he founded Pixar Studios, which has released enormously
popular films such as "Finding Nemo" and "Monsters, Inc." "It was awful
tasting medicine but I guess the patient needed it," Jobs said.
When he was diagnosed with cancer, Jobs said his doctor told him he
only had three- to-six months to live. He later found out he had a rare,
treatable form of the disease — but he still learned a tough lesson.
"Remembering you are going to die is the best way to avoid the fear that
you have something to lose," he said.
Before the ceremony, a plane rented by the Computer TakeBack Campaign,
an environmental group, flew over the stadium with a banner that read:
"Steve, don't be a mini player — recycle all e-waste." The group is
prodding Apple to improve its efforts to recycle obsolete electronics.
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