Did You Know – Who Was The College Dropout Who Changed the World.
Welcome back to Did You Know — where untold stories become unforgettable.
Today, we’re diving into the life of a young man who walked away from college, stared down failure, and rewrote the rules of innovation. His name? Steve Jobs. You may know him as the co-founder of Apple — but the road he took to get there was anything but straight.
Born in 1955 and adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs in California, Steve showed early signs of being both curious and rebellious. He was captivated by electronics but disenchanted with conventional education. He often clashed with teachers, questioned authority, and saw school more as a prison than a playground.
After high school, he enrolled at Reed College in Oregon — a prestigious liberal arts school. But six months in, he dropped out. It wasn’t that he wasn’t smart. In fact, he kept attending classes unofficially, sleeping on friends’ floors, and collecting soda bottles to afford meals. He sat in on calligraphy, not because he had to, but because he loved it. That class, he would later say, influenced the elegant typography of the first Macintosh computers.
Jobs was always chasing something deeper — a kind of spiritual and creative harmony. He traveled to India, experimented with psychedelics, and practiced Zen Buddhism. But beneath his spiritual search was an intense drive to build something that mattered. Something that fused art and technology. And in 1976, in a garage in Los Altos, California, that something began.
Steve Jobs, along with his friend Steve Wozniak, built the first Apple computer. They sold Jobs' Volkswagen van and Wozniak’s calculator to fund it. The Apple I was primitive by today’s standards, but revolutionary at the time. It was personal, compact, and — most importantly — designed for the masses, not just computer geeks.
Then came the Apple II, a game-changer. It was one of the first highly successful mass-market personal computers, and it catapulted Apple into the business stratosphere. Jobs, the dropout, had become a Silicon Valley visionary.
But the climb wasn’t smooth. Jobs could be brilliant, but also abrasive. His perfectionism made him a demanding leader. In 1985, after internal power struggles, Jobs was forced out of the very company he founded. He was just 30 years old.
Most people would’ve been crushed. But Jobs? He started over. He founded NeXT, a new computer company focused on higher education and business. Around the same time, he bought a struggling animation studio from George Lucas — and transformed it into Pixar.
Pixar’s first feature film, Toy Story, was a critical and commercial smash. It changed animation forever and proved Jobs wasn’t a one-hit wonder. Meanwhile, NeXT's software caught the attention of… Apple.
In 1997, Apple bought NeXT — and just like that, Steve Jobs was back. Older. Wiser. And ready to reinvent everything. Under his leadership, Apple launched the iMac, then the iPod, iTunes, iPhone, and iPad. Each product was sleek, intuitive, and disruptive. Each blurred the line between technology and art.
Jobs didn’t just build gadgets — he built an ecosystem. He saw what others didn’t: that people don’t just want tools, they want experiences. He focused relentlessly on design, simplicity, and storytelling. "Design is not just what it looks like and feels like," he said. "Design is how it works."
In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer. He continued working through treatments, even as his health declined. In 2011, he stepped down as Apple’s CEO and passed away shortly after. He was just 56 years old.
But his legacy? It lives in every pocket and on every desk. In the sleek lines of your phone. In the swipe of your screen. In the idea that a college dropout with a garage and a dream could, in fact, change the world.
Jobs taught us that success isn’t always a straig