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'Nobody has one button': Steve Jobs opera sings Apple founder's praises – and flaws

The Guardian

When San Francisco bay area-based composer and electronic music DJ Mason Bates recently visited the childhood home of Silicon Valley entrepreneur Steve Jobs, he was in awe. "It all started in that garage," Bates said in a hushed, reverent voice, as we pulled up in the composer's 1970s Alfa Romeo outside the nondescript bungalow at 2066 Crist Drive in Los Altos. Located on an un-trafficked suburban street, the building's only distinguishing feature was the "no trespassing" sign on the austere patch of lawn out front. "That's where he built the early Apple computers," Bates said, hesitant to get out of the car to take a closer look, lest we disturb the occupants. "That's where the world's most valuable company began. The fabled garage was designated a historical landmark in 2013. It's been eulogized in films like Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999) and Jobs (2013), as well as books such as Walter Isaacson's expansive 2011 biography of the Silicon Valley entrepreneur.