Loved it. It's a brilliant movie, which in my opinion foreshadows what Tim Cook will have to overcome to keep Apple Inc. where it is - the most valuable company on this planet.Obviously, turning your company into the most valuable company on this planet can't be easy, it is even more difficult when this move follows a near bankruptcy experience. It is probably fair to say that only a ruthless, dedicated, maniac person, like Steve Jobs, could do it.Though Jobs may have never searched for accolades like "Apple Inc. being the most valuable company on this planet," he aimed for better - he wanted to change the world.The movie brings out how Jobs went about it.Truly appalling is the early story of how as a young man Jobs cheated his best friend Woz out of $3,150; especially appalling because Jobs himself/alone could not have done this project. He bit the hand that fed him, which was also his best friend's hand.How could a man who did this over and over again, get away with it and get celebrated for it?This is where this movie shines. Jobs does not lie about Lisa being his daughter or cheat Woz out of money because he is a bad guy, he does what he does because he has only one goal - to change the world. People, who don't understand or don't play along, go conform and support, will be declared enemies. Jobs does not hang around to do harm to them or whatever, he only gets rid of them so he can follow his "higher goal."It is the intellectual puritans' dream to be able to focus so intently on whatever we need to do, that success becomes a logical conclusion. It is Jobs' tragedy that he could not overcome cancer.That's why we still love him and will always love him. Somehow he was a God (a supernatural genius), who was mortal. This gives us hope that we could became geniuses, too.GREAT MOVIE! I'll watch it again.Gisela Hausmann, author & blogger