
Steve Jobs may not be with us anymore, but his legacy is certainly there.
And on Tuesday, the public will get access to the tech icon’s inner workings.
More than a decade after the death of the founder of Apple, Steve Jobs Archive to publish “Make Great Thing: Steve Jobs in His Own Words,” A curated digital collection of job letters, correspondence and interviews.
Jobs died in 2011 after a bout with pancreatic cancer. The technology code was 56.
The idea is that the book will “inspire readers to do ‘wonderful things’ that move the world forward.” Archives said in a statement on their website.

“In the pages of this book, Steve shares his perspective on his childhood, the launch and push of Apple, his time with Pixar and NeXT, and his eventual return to the company that started it all,” said the archives. .
According to the Washington Post, the book falls on the spectrum between a scrapbook and a diary. It includes some images that the public has never seen before.
The book includes a foreword by Jobs’ wife, Lauren Powell Jobs. Edited by Leslie Berlin.
Powell Jobs told The Washington Post that the idea was to let readers hear about Jobs himself. Powell Jobs said, “It’s been written about him, but these are actually his writings and his work.” “So there is no middleman.”
The digital book will be free to the public and was created by Jony Ive’s LoveFrom, Apple’s chief design officer, as an e-book for Apple Books. The exact time for the book’s release on Tuesday has yet to be announced.
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the The Steve Jobs Archive was launched last SeptemberCreated by Jobs’ family and friends. According to the archive, it is “the official home to Steve’s story and resource to help new generations make their own mark”.
The website includes excerpts from internal Apple meetings, commencement letters, emails, and more.
In addition to the soon-to-be-released digital book, the Archive reviews upcoming programs, fellowships, and digital exhibitions to carry Steve’s “sense of possibility” into the future.