Apple co-founder Steve Jobs did serve on White House council in '90s
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs did serve on White House council in '90s
By Josh Ong
Published: 08:40 PM EST (05:40 PM PST)The U.S. Commerce Department has confirmed that Apple co-founder Steve Jobs did in fact serve on former President George H.W. Bush's Export Council during the 1990s.
Earlier this week, a background file on Jobs surfaced that was compiled by the FBI as he was considered for appointment to the council in 1991. The Associated Press then reported on Friday that his role on the council had been confirmed by the Cabinet department.
The Export Council consists of unpaid members who meet a minimum of twice a year to advise the president on trade policy. Given that the Commerce Department said Jobs served during the first Bush administration, it would appear that he was on the council from 1991 to 1993.
The FBI file in question, a level III background investigation, was interesting to note because it included an unusually high number of derogatory comments for that type of investigation. The names of those interviewed had been redacted, but he was described as being "deceptive" and someone of "questionable" moral character. One interviewee recommended Jobs for the "high level political position" in spite of assertions that he was deceptive because "honesty and integrity are not required qualities to hold such a position."
"Mr. Jobs has integrity as long as he gets his way," another person said.

An FBI agent wrote in an interview summary that Jobs had "alienated a lot to people" at Apple because of his ambition. Jobs had been ousted from Apple in 1985 and was deeply involved with work at NeXT in the early 1990s.
The issue of Jobs' former drug use was also addressed by the FBI during interviews. Several individuals, including Jobs himself, "commented" in interviews on past experimentation during his college years, the file indicates. Jobs would later go on to publicly state that doing LSD was one of the "most important" things he had done in his life.
The documents also revealed that Apple was subject to a bomb threat in February 1985. An unnamed caller claimed to have placed explosives in certain individuals' homes and demanded a million dollars to not detonate them. The case was eventually closed in August 1985.
*Instant 3% AppleInsider Reader Discount Applied When Adding Items To Your CartApple co-founder Steve Jobs did serve on White House council in '90s
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FBI file on Steve Jobs reveals he was considered for White House position
FBI file on Steve Jobs reveals he was considered for White House position
By Sam Oliver
Published: 12:55 PM EST (09:55 AM PST)The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation has released its 191-page file on Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, revealing he was considered for an appointment to the White House in 1991, and that there was a bomb threat against him in 1985.
The public document is now available to view in its entirety at the FBI's official website. The document, first highlighted by Gawker, reveals that Jobs was considered for appointment to the President's Export Council by the George H.W. Bush administration in 1991.
A level III background investigation on Jobs was conducted at the request of the White House as he was being considered for the position. The file, author John Cook noted, includes an uncharacteristically high number of derogatory comments for an FBI investigation.
"Often the agents only interview employers and people who are suggested by the candidate," Cook wrote. "It's obviously unclear who these quoted folks are, but if they were among the people Jobs referred the agents to, then he didn't know his friends very well."
The names of the people who made the comments are redacted, but they include numerous statements characterizing Jobs as "deceptive," and having "questionable" moral character. One person said that "Mr. Jobs has integrity as long as he gets his way."
The documents also reveal a bomb threat that was called into Apple's headquarters on Feb. 7, 1985, in which an unnamed caller claimed to have placed "devices" to go off in the homes of certain individuals. The person said that a million dollars must be paid to them or they would detonate the bombs.

In response, the Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office canine unit made sweeps of the victims' residences and vehicles. No bombs were located.
The FBI's San Francisco Division maintained contact with Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., but no additional threatening calls were placed to the company. With no new information obtained, the case was considered closed as of August of 1985.
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16:43 | Labels: considered, House, position, reveals, Steve, white | 0 Comments
Nokia N8 Used to Control Automatic House
The Nokia N8 is being used as a device to control an automatic house in a project by Chinese students. The Chinese university students constructed the automatic house inside a container.
The whole project cost around 120,000 Yen which is around 1500 US$. The total space available in the container is just 9 meters. But they have made the most out of it.
The house has everything you need including Wind turbines that generate electricity. All the furniture is automated.
Now to the main part, all the stuff in the house is controlled by a Nokia N8 over Wi-Fi with 8600 lines of code.
Here are the pictures of the house from the official site.
via ClonedinChina
View the Original article
19:55 | Labels: Automatic, Control, House, Nokia | 0 Comments