More

Fans React To Apple News: Steve Jobs's Company Will Survive Without Him

Apple Fans React To Apple News Steve Jobs

BARBARA ORTUTAY and CHRISTINA REXRODE   08/25/11 12:56 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK — Apple fans and would-be customers seemed to agree that while Steve Jobs' charisma and innovative genius is one-of-a-kind, the company he built will survive without him.

After he resigned as CEO of the iconic gadget maker, Jobs was not the topic of conversation.

On the display computers set up around the Apple store on Manhattan's swanky Fifth Avenue across from Central Park, people scrolled through Facebook photos, checked bank account balances and watched videos on YouTube. They weren't, from the looks of it, reading news stories about Jobs.

Ira Rovitz played with his iPad as he emerged from the store Thursday morning. He had stopped by to get an update on when a new version of the iPhone might be coming out. His wife already has an iPhone, and he's interested in getting one, too.

Rovitz said that even without Jobs, Apple will still be a strong company with great products.

"Although he's the face of the company, there will still be lines outside the store," said Rovitz, who is 49 and lives in New York.

Greg Solis, a retired New York City police detective who owns stock in the company, said Apple probably has "enough product in the pipeline for the next few years."

"The iPhone 5 is going to be revolutionary and the iPad 3 is going to take over the world," said Solis, 59, of Warwick, N.Y.

Jobs resigned as CEO on Wednesday, saying he could no longer handle the job. He said he will continue to play a leadership role as chairman of the board. He has been on medical leave since January. Apple's chief operating officer, Tim Cook, who has been filling in for Jobs, was named CEO.

Jared Karlow, 23, was shopping with his girlfriend, Maegan Tabbey, 21, on the evening that Jobs resigned. Both believe that the company will be fine and that Jobs' role likely became less integral as the company grew.

"Apple's created an identity for themselves that is well above and beyond Steve Jobs. People don't think of Steve Jobs when they think of Apple. They think of a sexy brand," said Karlow, who works in information technology for the financial services industry. "You could say the same thing about Microsoft. They have outlived Bill Gates."

Added Tabbey: "My sister just bought a Mac laptop and I promise you she doesn't know who Steve Jobs is."

Apple may be known for its rabid fan base, but the company's creative genius lies in being able to attract a mass-market audience. These are the folks who may only vaguely know that Steve Jobs, the guy in the black mock turtlenecks, is the force behind the iPhone in their pocket or the iPad in their hands.

Unless prompted by a reporter, customers in the Fifth Avenue Apple store didn't seem to be discussing Jobs' departure. Instead, they were asking employees about the products and their prices. Business flowed as usual.

Walking out of an Apple store in Phoenix, Jim Zanzucchi, 49, said he'd never heard of Jobs, and he didn't believe the CEO's departure will mean less innovation for the company.

"I don't know if he's the person who thought of it all," he said. "I'm sure he wasn't. I'm sure there's a host of people below him."

In San Francisco, software engineer P.K. Kalyanraman said he was worried his Apple stock will decline in value.

"I think Steve Jobs has been a shadow figure for the last one and a half to two years now with his health problems, so I still feel like the company will function perfectly fine without Steve Jobs for at least a few more years," he said.

But, he added, "how they progress into new technology and how they keep up with the market is what we've got to look for in the new person who comes in over there."

The biggest Apple fans certainly felt Jobs' departure.

Seanmichael Rodgers, 35, was saddened. He made his way to the Fifth Avenue store after work, after reading the news on his iPad 2 while on a break.

"I just want to be close to him," he said with a laugh. He sat on the plaza in front of the store and played Words With Friends, a Scrabble-like game, on the Apple tablet computer.

When asked why he didn't invite anyone to come with him, he said, "I didn't really think it was a moment to share."

Besides being an Apple fan, he also worked at the company's Fifth Avenue store four years ago, for six months. He now designs closets in people's apartments. Rodgers said Jobs "envisioned how we can use devices to enhance our lives."

___

Ortutay reported from San Francisco. AP Business Writers Joseph Pisani and Bree Fowler in New York, Associated Press writer Michelle Price in Phoenix and Associated Press writer Terence Chea in San Francisco contributed to this story.

FOLLOW HUFFPOST TECH

NEW YORK — Apple fans and would-be customers seemed to agree that while Steve Jobs' charisma and innovative genius is one-of-a-kind, the company he built will survive without him. After he resi...
NEW YORK — Apple fans and would-be customers seemed to agree that while Steve Jobs' charisma and innovative genius is one-of-a-kind, the company he built will survive without him. After he resi...
Filed by Bianca Bosker  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 14
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom95134
03:05 PM on 08/25/2011
The Company may be more than Steve Jobs but the key is did Jobs put together a team that would have his vision. The key to Apple's success has been Jobs' vision. Look how he turned around the company when he returned.

Apple will be closely watched. Will it continue to lead or will it fall into the same class of companies like Sony and other who seemed to loose their way when key visionaries left the company or were retired. Too often the new management tends to start out fine because there are products in the pipeline but then things change because they are forced by Wall Street to keep "making the numbers" and suddenly the easiest way to do that is to become more "productive".
photo
Sixtracks
Pleased to Meet Me
11:39 AM on 08/25/2011
Apple has a culture that could keep them unique in a world of uninspired copycats. However, I'm not holding my breath.
10:34 AM on 08/25/2011
Think about what the state of our country and our economy might be right now if every American industry had a creative genius like Steve Jobs at the helm. This is the kind of innovation, courage and vision we so desperately need now to bring about an economic renaissance in the United States.

Thank you Steve Jobs for making the last almost-thirty years of my life immeasurably more pleasurable and productive.
photo
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SmartladyDem
Woman for OBAMA!
10:32 AM on 08/25/2011
I was especially sad reading this article-
Steve Jobs had a treatable, survivable form of pancreatic cancer-one that surgery can increase survival to ten years and beyond-But, he chose not to use conventional treatments.

The bottom line is, his life, his choice, still it makes me sad.
Here's an article-http://money.cnn.com/2008/03/02/news/companies/elkind_jobs.fortune/index.htm
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cubanmom
Another Woman against the GOP-Taliban
10:18 AM on 08/25/2011
We are big fans of Steve Jobs, own his company's products. Love our MAC. We are sad, but understand he is ill.

God bless you, Steve Jobs.
10:13 AM on 08/25/2011
One of the great industrialist of our generation. I can't even count the number of Apple products I own and bought for my family. They are part of the fabric of our lives.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mherrera
Indigenous Troublemaker
09:26 AM on 08/25/2011
There was a time when I just did not "get" Steve. He was thinking so far into the future that it took me a while to catch up. But he not only saved a company but he created a whole new corporate culture which begins with eliminating the corporate body armor of ties and coats which cause people to be something other than what they are. The relaxed, humane workplace is different. It has its pressures to be sure but it's different and it is productive and successful. Apple is clearly beyond the point of no return in that transformation and will never become just another big company. Cook, Forrestal and Schiller will carry on and let's not forget that Steve is still a very major player in the company. This man changed the way I live and work and I am grateful. He changed the way PC users live and work. He crafted a new vision for what a company can be and if we are all smart, we'll think about that point a lot. It could be a model for creating a new government which is humane and responsive.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Milwaukeetj1
Keep your $$ in your neighborhood.
09:48 AM on 08/25/2011
I could have not said it better. I remember the first Mac computer I touched in the 80's and learned from my teacher a really smart guy named Steve Jobs. It did not matter back then but after all these years Apple took computing to a whole different level, and even though he is departing it does not stop here. If you look at your average Apple consumer we are all different and think outside the box in our own special way.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mherrera
Indigenous Troublemaker
10:10 AM on 08/25/2011
Thanks. I had never touched a Mac until 2006 when I was being forced into Vista and decided it was time to look at alternatives. I did not just buy a computer that year, I started on a path that changed everything about the way I live and work. The Brits have a phrase "ghost in the machine" to describe the presence of the inventor and I can't think of a better way of describing Steve's thoughts right here on my desk, in a pleasant and helpful way.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cubanmom
Another Woman against the GOP-Taliban
10:19 AM on 08/25/2011
Well said!
imayes
Mongo like candy!
08:36 AM on 08/25/2011
I think fans don't remember what happened to Apple the last time Steve Jobs was not there. Apple will eventually become like HP, IBM, Microsoft; just another tech company. Steve provided a vision that made Apple what it is today. You can't get that type of person by just picking over a pool of MBA's. He will be missed.
08:42 AM on 08/25/2011
The last time Steve "left" Apple was on the brink of going bankrupt. When he came back he turned the company around. It will be intresting to see how long the changes Steve made at Apple last and if they can keep the momentum before falling apart again. Apple 10 years from now will not be the same Apple we deal with now.