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| | If Jobs were not so talented, if he were not so visionary, if he were not so canny in determining where others had failed in producing great products and what was necessary to succeed, his pushiness and imperiousness would have made him a figure of mockery.
Meanwhile, his dad, Paul a machinist who had never completed high school had set aside a section of his workbench for Steve, and taught him how to build things, disassemble them, and put them together. From neighbors who worked in the electronics firm in the Valley, he learned about that field and also understood that things like television sets were not magical things that just showed up in ones house, but designed objects that human beings had painstakingly created. It gave a tremendous sense of self-confidence, that through exploration and learning one could understand seemingly very complex things in ones environment, he told the Smithsonian interviewer.
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