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English. Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview is a documentary released to theaters in 2012. It consists of the original 70 minute interview that Steve Jobs gave to Robert X. Cringely in 1995 for the PBS documentary, Triumph of the Nerds .
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview: Directed by Paul Sen. With Robert X. Cringely, Steve Jobs. A conversation with Steve Jobs as he was running NeXT, the company he had founded after leaving Apple.
Movie Info. The original, unedited interview with Steve Jobs, conducted in 1995 by tech journalist and former Apple Inc. employee Robert X. Cringely when Jobs was still CEO of NeXT...
Steve Jobs The Lost Interview. In this candid, in-depth interview with the late visionary filmed in 1995, Steve Jobs discusses at length his early days, career battles, and vision for the future.
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview movie review (2011) | Roger Ebert Reviews iSteve: The talking head in action Roger Ebert November 14, 2011 Tweet Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch If Steve Jobs was right in 1995 and the computer is the most important tool in the history of the human race, then he was the most important toolmaker.
Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview can't be called a film, for as it is one long, static shot of Steve Jobs, occasionally interrupted by a freeze-frame and a voice-over of Cringley wording the questions he remembers asking, and begins with a very brief introduction explaining the origins of this interview by Cringley himself.
Available on iTunes. In this candid, in-depth interview with the late visionary filmed in 1995, Steve Jobs discusses at length his early days, career battles, and vision for the future.
In this candid, in-depth interview with the late visionary filmed in 1995, Steve Jobs discusses at length his early days, career battles, and vision for the future. Small portions of the piece were used for. a television series at the time, but the vast majority was shelved and for 17 years thought to be lost.
In this fascinating interview from 1995, Steve Jobs discusses his early life, the beginnings of his career and his thoughts on the future of the tech industry. Streaming Airings
It's a tribute to the singular popularity of Steve Jobs that he's probably the only talking head people would pay to watch for more than an hour. Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Nov 14, 2011