Jobs introduces the iPhone in at MacWorld Expo in January 2007. (Credit: Declan McCullagh/CNET)
While at the helm of Apple, Steve Jobs transformed the tech industry, but he wasn't perfect. Among his regrets, Jobs' decision to postpone surgery for his pancreatic cancer was likely to have cost him his life. This was but one of the many revelations that Jobs' biographer, Walter Issacson, offered in his interview on "60 Minutes".
Steve Jobs and "the passion of his honesty"
The Apple co-founder's fire made for great products, but also cruelty, biographer Walter Isaacson says. Jobs also was determined not to let money ruin him. Read more
Steve Jobs told Obama he would be a one-termer
When the late Apple co-founder met with President Obama, Jobs gave the president ideas about generating jobs and retaining talented engineers from overseas, Jobs' biographer tells "60 Minutes." Read more
Walter Isaacson: "The key to understanding Steve Jobs"
The biographer talks to "60 Minutes" about Jobs' early childhood and his reaction to being adopted--including his take on his biological father. Read more
Steve Jobs, family man beyond the public persona
Until his death, few of us knew much about Steve Jobs' home life--his wife, his kids. Jobs' biographer gives "60 Minutes" a rare look inside the family's photo album--on an iPad, of course. Read more
Jobs regrets postponing surgery, has secret transplant
Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs' biographer, tells "60 Minutes" that he regretted postponing surgery that could have saved his life. And then has a secret liver transplant. Read more
Steve Jobs and his "reality distortion field"
Colleagues of the late Apple co-founder tell CBS' "60 Minutes" that Jobs believed that his belief that something was possible could make it so. Read more
Steve Jobs: "I admire Mark Zuckerberg"
In a "60 Minutes Overtime" segment, we hear from the late Steve Jobs on which tech companies and leaders he liked--and loathed. Read more
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