A True Yunatic
Some people don’t just invent products – they redesign how we experience the world. Steve Jobs, co-founder of Apple, wasn’t just a tech entrepreneur – he was a creative force who blended design, intuition and rebellion to shape the digital age.
From the garage to the keynote stage, Jobs believed technology could be beautiful, personal, even poetic. He fused art with engineering and dared to say that great tools should feel like magic. Jobs didn’t just want to make computers – he wanted to enchant reality.
“The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are the ones who do.” – Steve Jobs
The Inner Child
Jobs’s inner child was restless, stubborn and wide-eyed. Inspired by Zen simplicity, calligraphy and the counterculture, he kept chasing purity of experience. That child hated compromise. He wanted things to feel right – in your hand, to your ear, in your soul. Even as a CEO, he still followed curiosity, emotion and instinct like a kid taking apart a toy to understand how it really works.
Tribbles
Steve’s tribbles reshaped our digital universe:
- Stanford Commencement Speech (02005) – A cultural artifact on intuition, mortality and purpose.
- Apple Inc. – From the first Mac to the iPhone, he created the most human tech brand in the world.
- The Macintosh – A revolution in user-friendly design.
- The iPhone & iPad – Devices that redefined how we communicate, work and create.
- Pixar – He helped turn it into a storytelling powerhouse (Toy Story, Up, Wall-E).

Connected with the Yuniverse
Jobs believed in intuition as intelligence and in design as a spiritual act. He trusted that the universe leaves clues – if you stay curious and connected, dots will connect in ways you never planned. He didn’t separate tech from soul. He saw both as tools for awakening.
Spiritual
His minimalism, mindfulness and obsession with essence came from inner stillness and a love for clarity. He believed death was life’s greatest motivator.
Steve Jobs reminds us that creativity isn’t just about making things – It’s about making them matter.