A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR, MASTERS OF TRIVIA
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—— ON THIS DAY ——
FEBRUARY 24, 1955
San Francisco, California, USA
71 years ago
On February 24, 1955, Steve Jobs was born in San Francisco. In hindsight, it’s tempting to reduce his story to Apple’s biggest hits. But Jobs’ real historical footprint is how he helped change expectations: what a computer should look like, how it should feel, and who it should be for.
He pushed the idea that design isn’t decoration; it’s the interface between complexity and everyday life.
—— MARQUEE EVENT ——

When technology stops being a tool for specialists—and becomes a mirror of identity.
The Personal Computer Becomes a Consumer Object
Jobs co-founded Apple (with Steve Wozniak and others) and became closely associated with the personal-computer revolution—helping drive products and product thinking that made computing accessible, intuitive, and culturally magnetic.
The lesson isn’t “he was a genius.” It’s that he treated technology like storytelling:
simplify the message,
obsess over the experience,
and make the future feel inevitable.
—— WHY THIS MATTERS ——
Because Jobs helped rewrite three rules of modern life:
Computers could be for everyone, not just engineers.
Design could be a competitive weapon, not a luxury.
Product launches could be cultural events, turning engineering into shared anticipation.
—— THE TAKEAWAY ——
February 24, 1955 marks the birth of a figure who made the personal computer era feel—well—personal. Jobs’ legacy is the expectation that powerful tools should also be beautiful, understandable, and emotionally legible.
At Masters of Trivia, with our MOT utility token, we turn turning points like this into daily interactive learning, so curiosity becomes a habit, and history becomes something you can use.
—— QUOTE OF THE DAY ——
“Stay hungry, stay foolish.”
— Steve Jobs.
—— OUR QUIZ OF THE DAY ——
Today’s Daily Quiz explores Jobs’ origin story, Apple’s early breakthroughs, and the ideas that turned computing into everyday culture.


