CUPERTINO, Calif.
–
Apple leaders, employees and pop culture stars celebrated the life of Steve Jobs in a tribute Wednesday to a computer visionary who changed the world when he incorporated music, media and lifestyle into a sleek line of products
The service at company headquarters here drew hundreds of employees. They crowded into an outdoor amphitheater to reflect on the legacy of the company co-founder, who died Oct. 5 at age 56 after battling pancreatic cancer.
Across the U.S., Apple stores shut their doors for several hours so retail employees could watch a live webcast. The ceremony was closed to the public, and media handlers shooed reporters away from the famously private company.
Despite the best efforts at keeping the 90-minute ceremony private, music drifted across the campus when Norah Jones and British rock band Coldplay performed. And employees took to Twitter to relay some of the scene. Helicopter footage showed banners splayed on the building walls surrounding the amphitheater with pictures of Jobs. One banner showed Jobs sitting cross-legged cradling the first Macintosh computer. Employees crowded balconies overlooking the stage.
The mood at the service was festive, not somber, employees said. Speakers reportedly included CEO Tim Cook, Apple's chief designer Jony Ive and former U.S. vice president Al Gore.
Elsewhere, Apple customers found shuttered stores but rarely an explanation for the closure. Most who visited didn't mind the inconvenience.
"Jobs is a visionary. He is basically the core of Apple. So it makes a lot of sense," said Stephanie Desanges, 25, who works in finance and lives in New York. She had gone to the store to get her laptop fixed.
Carol Badger only had one complaint after she showed up at a store in San Francisco to find it closed. "I was just a little bit disappointed that it was not simulcast around the world so people could gather in cities and take part."
Analyst Stephen Baker, who tracks consumer electronics sales for research group NPD, said Apple doesn't stand to lose a lot of sales by closing its stores for a few hours.
Wednesday's service follows a memorial at Stanford University last Sunday for friends and family. That service at Memorial Church reportedly brought out Oracle chief Larry Ellison and Microsoft's Bill Gates, as well as politicians including Bill Clinton. U2 frontman Bono and Joan Baez reportedly performed.





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