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Steve Jobs (3) Apple Business Cards (1997, 1998, and 1999) as "Interim CEO" and "iCEO" Rare set of three Apple Computer business cards of Steve Jobs from 1997, 1998, and 1999, which date to his return to the company where he assumed the role of Interim CEO, a title he later creatively altered to ‘iCEO.’ The cards, each 3.5 x 2, all feature the Apple logo, with the two earlier versions bearing the iconic ‘rainbow’ logo, and the third featuring a red ‘translucent’ logo. The ‘rainbow’ cards share identical contact information, but differ in title, with the earliest version marked “Interim CEO,” and the second version identifying Jobs as “iCEO.” The red ‘translucent’ also lists Jobs as the “iCEO,” but features a break in the contact information and is dual-sided, with the reverse identical minus Jobs’s title in Japanese characters. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from a former Apple employee who states that he “worked for the company from 1987 to 2015, nearly three decades, during which I had the privilege of witnessing and contributing to some of the most transformative periods in the company's history. Throughout my tenure, I was based at Apple's headquarters, directly experiencing the leadership and vision of Steve Jobs...I acquired these cards directly from Steve's executive assistant. My role required regular interaction with the executive team, and through these professional connections, I was able to obtain these items.”

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Steve Jobs (3) Apple Business Cards (1997, 1998, and 1999) as "Interim CEO" and "iCEO" Rare set of three Apple Computer business cards of Steve Jobs from 1997, 1998, and 1999, which date to his return to the company where he assumed the role of Interim CEO, a title he later creatively altered to ‘iCEO.’ The cards, each 3.5 x 2, all feature the Apple logo, with the two earlier versions bearing the iconic ‘rainbow’ logo, and the third featuring a red ‘translucent’ logo. The ‘rainbow’ cards share identical contact information, but differ in title, with the earliest version marked “Interim CEO,” and the second version identifying Jobs as “iCEO.” The red ‘translucent’ also lists Jobs as the “iCEO,” but features a break in the contact information and is dual-sided, with the reverse identical minus Jobs’s title in Japanese characters. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by a letter of provenance from a former Apple employee who states that he “worked for the company from 1987 to 2015, nearly three decades, during which I had the privilege of witnessing and contributing to some of the most transformative periods in the company's history. Throughout my tenure, I was based at Apple's headquarters, directly experiencing the leadership and vision of Steve Jobs...I acquired these cards directly from Steve's executive assistant. My role required regular interaction with the executive team, and through these professional connections, I was able to obtain these items.”

Estimate 5 000 - 7 000 USD
Starting price 500 USD

* Not including buyer’s premium.
Please read the conditions of sale for more information.

Sale fees: 24.98 %
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For sale on Thursday 22 Aug - 18:00 (EDT)
amherst, United States
RR Auction
+16037324284
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Steve Jobs Signed 1976 Apple Computer Check - PSA MINT 9 Early Apple Computer Company check, 6 x 3, filled out in type and signed by Jobs, "steven jobs," payable to Redwood Ans. Service for $16.90, July 4, 1976. Headed "Apple Computer Company," the check uses Apple's first official address at "770 Welch Rd., Ste. 154, Palo Alto"—the location of the answering service and mail drop that they used while still operating out of the famous Jobs family garage. In very fine condition, with a minor brush to Jobs' last name. Encapsulated and graded by PSA/DNA as "MINT 9." Signed on the Fourth of July amidst celebrations of the United States bicentennial, Steve Jobs was about to foment a revolution of his own—the microcomputer revolution. During this period in the summer of 1976, roughly three months after founding the Apple Computer Company, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak were hard at work building their first product: the Apple-1 Computer. Running the company out of the Jobs family garage, they got an 'official' address with the Redwood Answering Service in Palo Alto, which gave them a mail drop and telephone number for dealer inquiries. They set the price of the Apple-1 at $666.66, and sold about 175 of the 200 units built over the span of ten months. The initial, niche success of the Apple-1 spurred development of the Apple II, released in 1977. The Apple II, along with the Commodore PET 2001 and Tandy TRS-80, became known as the 'trinity' of mass-market personal computers, and represented the advent of the microcomputer revolution.

Steve Jobs Apple Business Card (c. 1980) Early 1980 Apple Computer, Inc. business card of Steve Jobs, 3.5 x 2, which simply lists his name without his company title, “Steven Jobs.” The off-white card is embossed with the Apple 'byte' logo in the upper left, and lists the company's address at "10260 Bandley Drive, Cupertino California 95014." In fine condition, with faint soiling and two small Rolodex bumps to the bottom edge. The consignor, John S. Romain, documented his meeting with Jobs in his 2019 book, The Road to Eden: The Journey Home, which is included. The story, told on page 88, reads: ‘The first Omni event that I attended was a small gathering of Silicon Valley luminaries at a very exclusive restaurant in San Francisco in early February 1980. Omni publisher Kathy Kenton had set up the dinner to establish a relationship with the emerging personal computer industry. The guest list included not only key executives but also the brightest visionaries of the valley. As host, I was privileged to dine at the table with those who were both. Though it was my job to entertain, I spent most of the evening just listening to the conversations between the guests, the most memorable being a young Steve Jobs in a passionate discussion with two of his colleagues about artificial intelligence. I asked if this was possible in our lifetime. Oh, yes, they all agreed. Jobs went so far as to say that we would probably see it happen within thirty years. That moment came back to haunt me thirty-one years later, when Steve Jobs died the day after Apple introduced its first product embedded with artificial intelligence, the iPhone 4.5 with Siri.’