Apple CEO Steve Jobs is ready to start working at the company after a six-month break related to a health problem, although he will be working at home for some part of the week.
His return to the office should put an end to the empty talk about his state of health and his future in the company he founded more than 30 years ago. The diagnosis of pancreatic cancer was made to Steve Jobs back in 2004, and in January of this year, the company's shares collapsed when he announced that he was temporarily leaving his post as a manager due to hormonal imbalances. During his "vacation", 54-year-old Jobs, who gave rise to Mac computers, iPods and iPhones, and thus gave a new life to a dying Apple, had a liver transplant, and is now ready to start work. news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8125542.stm