@StartupArchive_: Larry Ellison on what made Steve Jobs great “Steve was my best friend for about 25 years. We were neighbors in Woodside…
Summary
Larry Ellison shares anecdotes about Steve Jobs' obsession with perfection, citing his refusal to settle on Toy Story until it was perfect, and describes what made him great.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 05/17/26, 01:36 PM
Larry Ellison on what made Steve Jobs great
“Steve was my best friend for about 25 years. We were neighbors in Woodside and his peacock wandered onto my property and woke me up. His girlfriend had given him a peacock and I came over to complain.”
Steve replied: “You don’t like that bird either?”
Larry recalls how Steve made him watch 73 different versions of Toy Story:
“I said I’m not coming over if you make me watch Toy Story again… Now I know the new version is 4% better than the one I saw last week, but I’m not watching this thing again. And he’d say: ‘Larry, you won’t believe how different the shadows look.’ But that was Steve. Until it was perfect. And then once it was perfect, he moved onto the next problem.”
Larry believes obsessing over a product until it was perfect was a huge part of what made Steve Jobs great:
“If you want to know you’re like Steve Jobs, it’s very simple. You’re unable to think about anything other than serious problems at work. That’s all you can do, and you obsess about it until you solve it. And then you move on to the next thing. And you obsess about that until you solve it… If you have that kind of obsession combined with Picasso’s aesthetic and Edison’s inventiveness, then you are the next Steve Jobs.”
He continues:
“Apple became the most valuable company on earth and it wasn’t even one of Steve’s goals. He wasn’t trying to be rich. He wasn’t trying to be famous. He wasn’t trying to be powerful. He was obsessed with the creative process and building something beautiful.”
Source: @WSJ (May 2012)
Similar Articles
Steve Jobs Next Computer: His Forgotten Exile Years
An interview with author Geoffrey Cain about his book 'Steve Jobs in Exile,' which examines Jobs' overlooked years at NeXT Computer (1985-1997) and how that period shaped Apple's later success.
@StartupArchive_: Perplexity founder Aravind Srinivas explains the “user is never wrong” philosophy of Larry Page Aravind recounts a stor…
Perplexity founder Aravind Srinivas discusses Larry Page's 'user is never wrong' philosophy, arguing that future AI products should prioritize seamless, 'lazy' user experiences over requiring complex prompt engineering.
@StartupArchive_: Naval Ravikant: “Try to be one of the people who creates things” “You should actually go out and build the thing you wa…
Naval Ravikant advises investors and entrepreneurs to actively build and bet on seemingly impossible dreams rather than just competing for existing opportunities, citing examples like SpaceX, Tesla, OpenAI, and Apple.
@StartupArchive_: Peter Thiel on the importance of a powerful story When asked what he looks for in an entrepreneur to back, Thiel respon…
Peter Thiel explains that he looks for entrepreneurs with a powerful narrative to attract top talent and build great companies, emphasizing that a compelling story is often enough to secure investment.
@StartupArchive_: Jeff Bezos explains how he decided to quit his job and start Amazon At 30 years old, Jeff Bezos had great Wall Street j…
Jeff Bezos recounts how he used a regret-minimization framework to decide to quit his job at D.E. Shaw and start Amazon, prioritizing avoiding future regret over fear of failure.