SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Steve Jobs, the charismatic chief executive of
Apple Computer Inc. and Pixar Animation Studios, said Sunday he had
surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his pancreas but added he
expects a full recovery.
In an e-mail message to employees released by Apple, he said he will be
off to recuperate during August and expects to return to work in
September. The message did not specify where Jobs underwent the surgery.
He identified his cancer as an islet cell neuroendocrine tumor, which he
described as rare and said could be cured by surgical removal if
diagnosed early. He said his was caught early and would require no
chemotherapy or radiation treatment.
A far more deadly - and common form - of pancreatic cancer is
adenocarcinoma, he said.
``I mention this because when one hears 'pancreatic cancer' (or Googles
it), one immediately encounters this far more common and deadly form,
which, thank God, is not what I had,'' he said in the message.
During Jobs' absence, Apple will be run by Timothy Cook, the company's
executive vice president of worldwide sales and operations. Cook said the
current management team has worked with Jobs for many years, and that
experience will guide them through the next month.
``Steve is an extremely hands-on CEO,'' said Cook. ``We have some very
clear priorities for the company for months to come.''
Bill Campbell, an Apple director, said the board is confident Cook can
manage the company in Jobs' absence. He also expressed relief that Jobs'
surgery went well.
``The surgery was hugely successful, and the prognosis is excellent,''
Campbell said. ``We feel very relieved and optimistic about the future.''
Jobs, 49, and friend Steve Wozniak founded Apple Computer in 1976, five
years before IBM Corp. jumped into the personal computer market.
In 1984, the company released the Macintosh, which was the first
commercially successful computer to have a graphical user interface that
mimicked a physical desktop. It was eventually copied by IBM-clone
computers, which became far more dominant.
A year later, Jobs left Apple following a struggle with the company's
board. He cashed in some Apple stock and formed another computer company,
NeXT.
But NeXT took too long to release its ``mainframe on a desk,'' and once
it was available in 1989, it was criticized for its $4,000 price. Within
four years, NeXT abandoned the hardware market and announced it was
focusing on operating system software.
By then, Apple was struggling and efforts to upgrade its operating system
were going nowhere. In 1996, Apple bought NeXT. In 1997, Jobs was brought
back as an interim chief executive. In 2000, ``interim'' was dropped from
the title.
He made a splash in 1998 with the release of a revamped and stylish iMac,
which was followed by new lines of laptops as well as professional-grade
computers and servers. In 2001, Apple jumped into the digital music
player business with its iPod, which is now the most popular.
And last year, Apple launched the iTunes Music Store, which allowed legal
music downloads after Jobs persuaded music companies that his technology
was secure.
It also helped that Jobs also owned an entertainment company.
Before his return, he also had paid $10 million to buy a special effects
computer business from filmmaker George Lucas. The company eventually
became Pixar and released such classics as ``Toy Story,'' ``Finding
Nemo'' and ``Monsters, Inc.''
Associated Press reporter Juliana Barbassa contributed to this report
from San Francisco.
(SUBS 12th graf to correct year in which Jobs dropped 'interim.')

Jeff Slyn, Owner
SLYN Systems & Peripherals
(502) 426-5469
serving Kentuckiana clients 7 days a week since 1985!
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