This article is more than 1 year old

Apple's Jobs undergoes cancer surgery

Like the iMac, back to work in September

Apple CEO Steve Jobs went under the knife this weekend, undergoing a medical operation to remove a cancer tumour from his pancreas.

In post-op email to employees, Jobs said that though the operation been successful, he would be away from Apple throughout August for recuperation. In his stead, he leaves worldwide sales and ops chief Tim Cook.

According to the email, Jobs' cancer was a "very rare" form. Diagnosed early, Jobs' doctors were able to remove the tumour without the need for harsher procedures, such as radiotherapy or chemotherapy.

Jobs was keen to stress that he had not suffered from the more common - and well-known - variety of the disease. This form is incurable and kills the sufferer typically within a year of diagnosis.

US comedian Bill Hicks passed away in 1994 after suffering from the disease.

Jobs said he will return to work in September. We wish him a speedy recovery. ®

Related stories

Apple to ship next-gen iMac in September
Real fires back at Apple in DRM dogfight
Apple blasts Real DRM translator
Apple licenses iTunes to Motorola
Apple 'launches Longhorn' with better search, graphics
Microsoft, Apple snub consumer freedom coalition
Apple: no 3GHz G5 'any time soon'
Apple signs key indies to iTunes

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like