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Before iTunes, music executives had failed to be convinced about the success of an online music market. But coupled with Apple's hugely-successful iPod - launched just two years earlier - Steve Jobs proved it was a market worth exploring. 




Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak founded Apple in Steve Jobs’s house in January 1976, brought together by friendship and mutual respect at meetings of the Homebrew Computer Club, birthplace of so many early silicon valley ventures. 








Few if any business leaders could command such respect, awe and affection and be associated with a product in the same way as Steve Jobs and Apple. 
A friend explained that computers would change all that forever; making it easier and quicker to produce, store and transmit copy. It all sounded rather technical to a Luddite like me. But I was impressed with the Apple Macintosh Classic. It was easy to use, with little or no need for technical training or back-up because the answer to every problem was always somewhere on the screen, and so I bought one in 1990. 



'Where will we find another one,' Steve Wozniak asked of the man he co-founded Apple with 35 years ago. 
Apple's store at the corner of Fifth Avenue and 59th Street in Manhattan is the only one in America, and possibly in the world, that's open 24 hours. Arriving there at about 11:30pm, there was only a crowd of 20 or so people, which I was told had been closer to 50 or so an hour earlier. 

Built around the inspiration of its co-founder, Apple will be a company in mourning. In a memo to Apple's staff announcing his death, Mr Cook said that 'those of us who have been fortunate enough to know and work with Steve have lost a dear friend and an inspiring mentor. Steve leaves behind a company that only he could have built, and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple.' 

