Have you ever wanted to create a custom timeline of your achievements or highlight features in creative way?
It’s never been easier! We’ve created a sample timeline of Steve Job’s life for your review below.
1955-1985 Youth & Apple's early years
1986-1996 NeXT Pixar & wilderness
30 Jan 1986
Jobs buys the computer division of George Lucas’ ILM for $10 million and incorporates it as Pixar.
1997-2004 Rebuilding Apple
Fall 1997
Apple starts its ‘Think Different’ campaign to restore its damaged brand image. The new slogan will quickly enter popular culture and define the company for the next five years
28 Apr 2003
Apple opens the revolutionary online iTunes Music Store in the US, after negotiating landmark deals with all major music labels
30 May 2003
Opening day of Finding Nemo, Pixar’s first Best Animated Feature Academy Award winner
23 Jun 2003
Steve Jobs unveils the Power Mac G5, the world’s fastest computer, at WWDC
Fall 2003
Steve Jobs is diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, but stubbornly refuses any modern medical treatment for months. He tries alternative diets instead
6 Jan 2004
Steve unveils the iPod mini and the iLife suite at Macworld. The iPod mini will soon become the world’s best-selling MP3 player and truly establish Apple as a consumer electronics powerhouse
Aug 2004
Steve Jobs finally has his pancreatic tumor removed by surgery
2005-2011 The Big Apple
12 Jun 2005
Steve Jobs makes a memorable commencement speech at Stanford University. History will remember its closing remarks, Steve’s advice to the young students:
‘Stay hungry, stay foolish’
24 Jan 2006
The Walt Disney Company acquires Pixar for $7.4 billion. Pixar’s largest shareholder Steve Jobs joins the Disney board while Ed Catmull becomes president of the Walt Disney Animation Studios, and John Lasseter its chief creative officer
15 Jan 2008
At Macworld 2008, Steve Jobs introduces MacBook Air, with the tagline ‘the world’s thinnest notebook’. Three years later, it will come to redefine all of Apple’s notebook product line
Apr 2009
Steve receives a liver transplant at the Methodist University Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee. He was weeks away from dying when he got the surgery