Wow.... This makes me feel a couple of different things. First, as someone born and raised in St. Louis, MO -- I'm thinking "Wow.... cool. I didn't even know we HAD a photography museum!!?" I haven't been back to St. Louis for a few years now, but I'm not sure how this one got past me without knowing it existed!



And second, that reminder that Jobs passed away in October, 2011? Man, time flies and life is short.... It really doesn't seem like it's already been close to 5 years since I saw all the magazine front covers with his face on them and all the Jobs/Apple stories everywhere, upon his death.



In the field of computers and I.T., things really tend to happen in "dog years" to begin with. Things are "ancient" after less than 10 years pass, and feel really "outdated" in 4 or 5. (As just one example of this? I decided to install the Fallout: New Vegas game on my Mac Pro, under Windows 10 in a Boot Camp partition, so I could finally play it. I already finished Fallout 4 a while ago but hadn't played the other games in the series. I didn't really want to go all the way back to the first or second one with its 2D design... so I went with "New Vegas" as the last one released in the series before 4 came out. It kind of shocked me how dated the game felt. Graphics were clearly inferior to what 4 offered, and interaction with the other computer-generated characters felt a lot less sophisticated. I had to fight just to make it run properly under Win 10, configuring the game to run in "Windows 7 compatibility mode" first. And this was a game released less than a year before Jobs passed away.)



So yeah, whatever else good or bad you can say about Steve Jobs, he was definitely one of the people who was able to keep up with the pace needed to keep a technology-related business at the front of the curve.