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"He is the happiest millionaire
I know--probably because he is out of the business." --Rick Doherty, president, Envisioneering
He is "the other Steve." The brilliant,
understated, humble, shy prankster half of the dynamic duo that created Apple
Computer Inc.
Steve Wozniak was the engineering genius who before his 30th birthday developed
the hardware and software that comprised the Apple II, which paved the way for
the computer for the rest of us--the Macintosh. And Steve Jobs was the sell, the
sizzle, the marketeer extraordinaire who made sure the rest of us desired and
bought it. Wozniak, who likes to be called "Woz," is often called Jobs' polar
opposite, therefore considered the perfect complement to the mercurial,
charismatic showman.
HOW LONG AT
COMPANY: 1976-1985
BORN:
Aug. 11, 1950
EDUCATION: B.S., Computer Science, Electrical Engineering,
University of California Berkeley
ACCOMPLISHMENT
Co-founder Apple, developed the hardware and
software for the Apple II
And while Jobs may still be gracing the covers of business magazines for his
recent efforts to polish Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple's image and bottom line,
Wozniak is out of the limelight and likes it that way.
Wozniak claims "the notoriety, the fame, made it hard for me to be the engineer
and person that had created all of this. I'm shy and afraid to ask questions
about technologies and products at shows, for example, because of the way people
think of me as much more than just an engineer asking the questions."
But Wozniak is hardly just an engineer. He is widely considered to be one of the
greatest engineers of his generation. He has accomplished a feat unlikely to be
repeated--he is the only person ever to design both the hardware and the
software for a platform that became a huge commercial success.
By contrast, the original Windows 1.0 development team had two dozen
programmers. The current Windows development team--excluding various marketing
and management types--has close to 1,000 programmers. And the hardware for those
platforms was developed elsewhere.
The Apple II is considered by many industry watchers as one of the most
important developments in computer history. It was the first time that the power
of a computer was made available to individual users.
Wozniak's design of the original Apple system was brilliant because of its
simplicity, said Bob Frankston, who did some of the software coding for
VisiCalc, the electronic spreadsheet that transformed the Apple II into a
business product.
"I give Steve Wozniak credit for what he didn't do," said Frankston, a veteran
programmer who has worked for Lotus Development Corp. and Microsoft Corp. "One
problem when you start to [create products] for the commercial marketplace is
you err on the side of overengineering vs. high value."
Wozniak seems to approach all aspects of his life differently. He dropped out of
U.C. Berkeley in his senior year to earn money, returning to earn his
undergraduate engineering degree even after he achieved fame and fortune at
Apple.
Wozniak continued to work as an engineer designing calculators at
Hewlett-Packard Co. while simultaneously developing the Apple II. He enjoyed
working at HP and had to be prodded by Jobs to leave and start Apple.
He cared little about success and monetary compensation. Wozniak was simply
doing what he loved. He calls designing computers his life's passion.
During high school, Wozniak, clearly a technical prodigy, had designed about 50
computers--but only on paper--and had his ham radio license at 11. "My life was
fun electronics projects. I was motivated by any chance I got to build things of
my own design," he said.
He claims he got little feedback about engineering and programming from pal Jobs
but relied on his own ideas and things happening elsewhere in the industry to
create the Apple II. He also wrote the Basic programming language for the
computer.
Jobs took care of the nuts and bolts, such as securing financial backing,
arranging manufacturing, scamming for parts, finding housing, recruiting
employees, getting the plastic casing designed and cranking the marketing
machine into full gear.
Wozniak admits to designing the Apple II for himself and his engineer buddies
but said he hoped that it would be well-received. "I envisioned the project as a
minor commercial success because back then the first computers were mostly
designs and chips on a board, and I knew how superior ours was compared to any
others," Wozniak said. "I did not think that personal computers would become so
huge as to lead to a start-up company being worth $500- million in five
years."
After that kind of growth, Wozniak lost interest in running a company or
managing people. And as employee No. 1 at Apple, Wozniak still receives an
annual $12,000 paycheck.
Even though Wozniak has long been out of Apple, he is hardly forgotten. When he
speaks in public--at such events as the semi-annual Macworld trade show or any
number of education conferences across the country--it is not unusual for him to
get standing ovations that often last in excess of five minutes.
The man who constantly downplays his long list of amazing accomplishments
eagerly boasts to confidants of his prowess at the game of Tetris. "He claims to
be the world's greatest Tetris player," one source said.
Several of his loyal friends said Wozniak, who is extremely proud of his Polish
heritage, has referred to himself as the "second most famous Pole after Marie
Curie."
Surprisingly, Apple does not top the list of Wozniak's greatest accomplishments.
He lists them as: "Having children of my own. Closely followed by the U.S.
Festivals, the Apple II, the floppy drive for the Apple II, Dial-a-Joke, my Core
remote control."
After leaving Apple, Wozniak created Core--a universal remote control device.
Married three times, Wozniak lost close to half of the $150 million to $200
million he made at Apple in his first divorce. He lost $25 million more on two
U.S. Festivals--the failed music concerts that teamed him with famed Bay area
rock promoter Bill Graham.
Having wealth has allowed Wozniak to pursue things that are interesting and
enjoyable to him.
"He is the happiest millionaire I know--probably because he is out of the
business," said Rick Doherty, president of Envisioneering, a Seaford, N.Y.,
consulting firm, and a close friend of Wozniak's for more than 15 years.
Now Wozniak's business is teaching. Since 1990 Wozniak has been teaching
elementary and junior-high-school students in the Los Gatos school district
about computers.
Wozniak claims he has always been good at tutoring and explaining things. When
he was in sixth grade, his father, who was an engineer at Lockheed, asked him
what he wanted to be. "I was already quite advanced in electronics so I said,
'An engineer, like yourself, but secondly, I would want to be a fifth grade
teacher.' "
In college, Wozniak was inspired by a psychology student friend talking about
the development of a child's mind. "I decided that I wanted to give a lot of
myself to helping young people's minds develop."
Wozniak even recalls a time just before Apple started when he and Jobs had some
fun entertaining kids. "Steve Jobs needed money and found [us] a job at a local
mall dressing up as the Mad Hatter and White Rabbit for young kids there."
While it may be hard to picture the poised Jobs in such a costume, Wozniak's
easygoing, fun demeanor makes it easy to imagine him in his bunny suit.
Despite his fame and fortune, Wozniak's life has few of the trappings associated
with money, fame and power.
"He has no jets--instead he has personally touched the lives of hundreds and
hundreds of children and educators," Doherty said.
OK, so the guy drives a Hummer.
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