Steve Jobs reportedly spent years designing a massive, sleek yacht and after he died, his family continued to work on the project. The yacht was recently unveiled and its details are only suitable for the founder and former CEO of Apple. 

The 250-foot yacht named Venus is steered from the boat's control room, which is an all-glass cabin topped with a bridge, by a group of 27-inch iMacs, according to Business Insider. It is 80 meters long and its exterior is all white, with large square windows and a "minimalist" sun deck.

Fox News said that being built entirely out of aluminum as well as coming with its own speed boat, Venus is though to be "both lighter and faster than your average yacht."  Inside, Venus has a jacuzzi, 10-foot high window panels and 40-foot long cabins, according to the report. Additionally, whose to helped work on the ship each received an iPod shuffle with the name of the yacht engraved on the back of it and a thank-you note from Jobs' family for their "hardwork and craftsmanship."

See photos here. 

"When you take a step back, squint a little and turn your head to the left, it sort of looks like an iPhone 4 with the strip of windows around the middle and the clean lines," Yahoo noted. The yacht was designed by Jobs personally along with some help from French designer Phillipe Stack. 

Walter Isaacson wrote about the yacht in his biography of Jobs, who had been working on the project alone for six years. Isaacson wrote that during one of his meetings with Jobs, the visionary showed him models and drawings for Venus. Isaacson described them as follows:

"As expected, the planned yacht was sleek and minimalist. The teak decks were perfectly flat and unblemished...As at an Apple store, the cabin windows were large panes, almost floor to ceiling, and the main living area was designed to have walls of glass that were forty feet long and ten feet high. He had gotten the chief engineer of the Apple stores to design a special glass that was able to provide structural support."

Isaacson also stated that Jobs came to the realization early on that he might not be alive to see the completion of Venus The Apple founder said he knew he would die and leave behind "a half-built boat, "But I have to keep going on it. If I don't, it's an admission that I'm about to die."