Technology | Steve Jobs Steve Jobs Has 141 Patents —Since Dying His name keeps coming up on new inventions By John Johnson Posted Dec 1, 2014 4:36 PM CST Copied In this Jan. 24, 1984, photo, Steve Jobs leans on the new "Macintosh" personal computer in Cupertino, Calif. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File) The MIT Technology Review unearths a stat that it thinks is a pretty good indicator of Steve Jobs' legacy: The Apple founder has received 141 patents since his death in 2011. An example of one of these post-death patents is the glass-cube design outside the Apple Store in Manhattan. The volume largely can be chalked up to two things, explains the Review: Apple is aggressive about patenting even the smallest of inventions, and Jobs' name appears even if he played a small collaborative role—offering feedback to designers, for instance. His name is on 458 patents so far, including one in 1983 for something called the "personal computer." Expect that number to keep growing. Read These Next Merchants could slap new surcharges on certain credit card purchases. Here's where things stand in the House ahead of shutdown vote. The 8 Democrats who bucked party on shutdown have something in common. Trump is responding to MTG's increasing criticism of GOP. Report an error