What constitutes tech savvy today? An alchemy of intellect, ambition, and that uncanny ability to peer around corners. Some of our choices may surprise you.
By Jessi Hempel and Beth Kowitt
"The empires of the future," Winston Churchill once said, "are the empires of the mind." Those words have never held more weight. Our greatest technological advances come not through physical might, tools, or cash but through intellect and imagination. As Fortune gets set to acknowledge these advances at our annual Brainstorm Techconference in Aspen (July 22–24), we think it only fitting to introduce you to 50 of the field's brawniest brains. These are the people whose collective intelligence propels us into a future that looks nothing like the present. They've dreamed up phones that let us surf the Net, websites that help us feel more connected, and movie characters who step off the screen.
So what do we mean by smart? We salute intelligence, but also impact. Accel partner Jim Breyer is a bright guy, but he is worthy of inclusion on Fortune's list because he applies his mind to investments that have the potential to change lives -- or at least lifestyles. We're most concerned with the present. Thus, you won't find the Polish polymath Nicolaus Copernicus on our list, nor will you find Bill Gates. And this is not a ranking based on pure IQ. In the ecosystem that leads to commercializing technological advances, thoughtful business executives are just as important as engineering geniuses.
To arrive at this list, Fortune reached out to nearly 100 trusted advisers and experts to solicit nominations. Then we relied on analysts to help vet our list, evaluating candidates according to their contributions in 2010.
We learned a good deal about brilliance in the process: None of Fortune's smartest get by on brains alone. They are disciplined, hard-driven perfectionists. James Cameron (Smartest Hybrid) spent 15 years on his Academy Award–winning film Avatar. Likewise, they maintain the courage of their convictions, even in the face of great skepticism. When Mark Zuckerberg (Smartest Founder) introduced Facebook's News Feed, users revolted; now they consider it a core element of their online experience.
For every whiz in our survey there are many more who deserve consideration, and many we don't even know about. We've profiled a number of these future candidates along with the leaders in their fields. Let us know in the comments whom we missed. Perhaps they'll end up on next year's list.
Smartest CEOs
Smartest designers
Smartest analysts
Smartest founders
Smartest engineers
Smartest academics
Smartest hybrids
Smartest investors
Smartest scientists
Smartest executives
Smartest CEO: Steve Jobs
CEO, Apple
When Steve Jobs returned to Apple in 1997 after a 12-year exile, the company was close to bankruptcy. Thirteen years later it has a market cap of $250 billion and is the world's most valuable tech company, transforming whole industries along the way. iTunes reinvented music. Pixar, now part of Disney, elevated animated films. The iPhone changed telecom. And the new iPad has other computer makers scrambling to respond. Rocking one industry could be luck, but upending four? That's smart.
He is a visionary, a micromanager, and a showman who creates such anticipation around new products that their releases are veritable holidays. And Jobs is a pop culture icon like no other business executive: An episode of The Simpsons a few years ago featured a Jobs-like character named Steve Mobs.
His dictator-like control can cause havoc for partners: Jobs, 55, has decided, for example, that Apple products won't support Adobe Flash, the code most video-heavy websites depend on, leading designers to switch to new tools. But Jobs' vision is also what gives these devices their elegance, causing consumers' hearts to flutter. --Jessi Hempel
p.s. attached file of Apple Music Event 2001 - The First Ever Ipod Introduction