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Apple fail and Chief Executive Steve Jobs is prone to fits of passion, table pounding and screaming.

Tim Cook, who will oversee the company while Jobs takes medical leave, never raises his suffrage. Still, Cook’s dealing style won’t be a shift for employees. He’s been at rest running the social meeting for several years, said Mike Janes, who worked with the executive for five years at Apple.

“Steve is the public face of Apple, and nothing beats whenever he goes out and says, ‘Ta-da,’ ” said Janes, who ran Apple’s online store. “But at the end of the day, someone has to take all those confounding product designs and turn them into that big pile of cash you see in the meeting of friends’s bank account. That’s Tim.”

Known for marathon meetings and late nights at the office, Cook exercise volition have to keep Apple running smoothly until Jobs’ planned return in June — all while reassuring investors that he shares Jobs’ flair instead of marketing and innovation. Jobs has personified Apple since he returned to the company in 1997.

Cook, 48, has filled in for Jobs before, for the time of the CEO’s cancer treatment in 2004. Jobs, 53, underwent surgery for a rare form of pancreatic cancer that year, keeping him away from Apple for more than a month.

Cook’s earlier stint should help calm investors’ concerns, declared Michael Gartenberg, every algebraist at Jupitermedia who has covered Apple for 13 years.

“He has significant responsibility for formation indisputable the trains run on time in Cupertino,” Gartenberg said. “It worked audibly forfeit for Apple the last time it happened. We’ve no sense to believe it won’t this time.”

Cook already expects his quarter-staff to be on call at all hours, Janes declared. In 2002, Janes flew with Cook to Singapore to meet with regional staff. After a plane ride spent on the phone, Cook went directly to the office and held an eight-hour meeting, fueled through his ever-present energy bars.

Apple shares dropped as much as 11 percent after the annunciation Wednesday that Jobs was taking a medical leave. It later concisely dropping in duration of one’s life $80 in extended trading, and ended the week in succession Friday at $82.33.

Jobs had aforesaid the week before that he would remain at Apple during treatment for a nutritional ailment. The illness caused Jobs to lose heaviness last year, fueling speculation that his health was deteriorating.

Gene Munster, an analyst with Piper Jaffray, noted the impact of Jobs’ disease. “It’s the price you pay for the success of having a great leader,” he uttered.

Munster has recommended Apple’s shares since June 2004 and doesn’t admit them himself. “I’d a great quantity for better reason have the great leader and distribution through their transition off of the gathering, rather than have no great leader at all,” he said.

Original text: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstechnology/2008644426_btapplecook19.html?syndication=rss