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Steve Wozniak "Steve Jobs Played No Role In My Designs For the Apple I & II"

mikejuk writes: In a recent interview with very lucky 14-year old Sarina Khemchandani for her website, ReachAStudent, Steve Wozniak was more than precise about the role of Steve Jobs. "Steve Jobs played no role at all in any of my designs of the Apple I and Apple II computer and printer interfaces and serial interfaces and floppy disks and stuff that I made to enhance the computers. He did not know technology. He'd never designed anything as a hardware engineer, and he didn't know software. He wanted to be important, and the important people are always the business people. So that's what he wanted to do. The Apple II computer, by the way, was the only successful product Apple had for its first 10 years, and it was all done, for my own reasons for myself, before Steve Jobs even knew it existed." He also says a lot of interesting things in the three ten minute videos about life, electronics and education.

44 of 440 comments (clear)

  1. oops by greenfruitsalad · · Score: 5, Funny

    i hear hissing sounds from the apple camp.

    1. Re:oops by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Basically.

      Although I'm not a fan of Apple or Jobs, I am a fan of Woz.

    2. Re:oops by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a chapple.

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    3. Re:oops by GrahamCox · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Not at all. He's quite right. Jobs was important, but simply wasn't the technology guy. It's got to the point where you ask young people (10 year-olds, say) today who Steve Jobs was, you'll quite often hear laughable stuff such as "the inventor of the computer".

      Without Jobs, Woz's designs would have been brilliant one-offs. Without Woz, Jobs would not have had anything to make a company from. So both were needed to create Apple. As Jobs said, "Great Artists Ship".

    4. Re:oops by FranTaylor · · Score: 3, Funny

      The prevailing wisdom was that the *case* was Jobs' idea.

      apparently before steve jobs, computers did not have cases

    5. Re: oops by Pseudonym · · Score: 3, Informative

      The original bearded nerd.

      Uhm... no. The Bell Labs "neck beards" (Brian Kernighan, Dennis Ritchie, Ken Thompson, Jon Postel, etc) were there first.

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    6. Re:oops by NicBenjamin · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not really.

      Prior to 1977 the case was frequently something a hobbyist made himself. Since you had to custom-build everything, including most of the boards, yourself anyway it was not hard to sell something like the Altair.

      Jobs didn't really invent the concept (three or four machines released that year had cases, and apparently some earlier machines with tape output also did), but it definitely was not standard before '77 and I sincerely doubt the Woz wasted brain space figuring out whether the damn thing was pretty.

    7. Re:oops by SomeoneFromBelgium · · Score: 4, Informative

      I remember it a little differently. I thought the Lisa project was no success and that macintoch was the product that got apple out of the garage to the second largest PC maker for the next decade, until windows 95 arrived.

    8. Re:oops by harrkev · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Woz is AWESOME!

      I was playing around with putting an Apple 2 on an FPGA (yeah, I know. Been done before). I design ASICs for a living. But staring as hit clock generation circuitry, I could not make heads or tails of how the darned thing actually worked!

      Given the specifications, I have do doubt that I could make a circuit that would do the same thing in a more straightforward way, but it would probably be bigger and cost more.

      Waz is extremely clever in optimizing things. FYI. If you have not heard the story, reading how the floppy drive controller was developed is an extremely interesting story.

      I am NOT an Apple fanboy. I do not own a single Apple product except an Apple 2. I hate the way that the current Apple locks everything down.

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  2. Good for him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure we already all knew it, but it is good to hear it come from him for once.

    1. Re:Good for him. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      And then show me another CEO who has taken a company 30 days from Bankruptcy to the biggest company on earth.

      Largest company by capitalization value, not by revenue. That just means the stock is way overpriced.

      By revenue, Apple is ranked 17th.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    2. Re: Good for him. by Karlt1 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not about how much you make (revenue) , it's about how much you keep (profit).

      http://fortune.com/2015/06/11/fortune-500-most-profitable-companies/

    3. Re: Good for him. by Solandri · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's not about how much you make (revenue) , it's about how much you keep (profit).

      Which flies straight in the face of the common (mis)belief that Apple hardware is better because it's more expensive.

      Remember the quarterly smartphone sales numbers earlier this year which showed Apple making something like 90% of the profit in the industry? Most of the press spun it as Android phones having a profitability problem (they don't - their profit margin is exactly the same as the rest of the computer industry). Nobody bothered to crunch the numbers. If you do (profit / units sold), you'll find the "Apple tax" for buying an iPhone is $18.8 billion / 74.5 million = $252 per phone. That is, $252 of your purchase price doesn't pay for any better hardware or software or industrial designers or artists or even the guy in the mail room. It goes straight into the bank accounts of Apple and its stockholders as profit.

    4. Re:Good for him. by mikeabbott420 · · Score: 4, Informative

      August 6th, they've been paying regular quarterly dividends since 2012

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  3. Steve by Tsolias · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think that's obvious. As a developer you have my respect and my sympathy for crossing paths with such assholes like Jobs.

    1. Re:Steve by Billly+Gates · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Devils advocate.

      How was the Apple II better or superior to the Commodore, TRS 80, Sinclaire Pet, or whatever the hell was out during the 1980's? Jobs provided much success so people could use the Apple II and bring in the revenue.

      I am a fan of Steve Jobs for marketing and his CEO abilities. If it were not for Steve Jobs the Mac would not still be here. Actually Apple finally killed the floppy drive and gave us USB. The original iMacs were so popular it finally got the peripheral makers on board which benefited the PC.

      Steve also saved us somewhat from a more evil MS. When the iPhone came out WindowsCE finally died! Remember you could only buy something from the carrier store like $4 for a crappy .mid syntthasized ringtone etc? Windows improved and pricing became better for those stuck on the PC side. Google helped too with making Windows 10 and VS community edition free.

      Yeah I would probably admit I would not want to work directly for him. I am a PC user in the camp of not hating Apple but acknowledge his move to perfection did help move the PC and mobile industry over and people love his products whether you do or not.

      Long term it was healthy for computing ecosystem. Even Intel today is making each new i5/i7 use less and less power which really started from Jobs perfection in the days of the Ipad which Intel wants in. How is this a bad thing?

    2. Re:Steve by grouchomarxist · · Score: 4, Informative

      The Apple ][ originally competed with the Commodore PET (and a number of other early personal computers). The Apple ][ had color and good sound support, while Commodore didn't have that until the Commodore 64, which was released in 1982. (The Apple ][ was released in 1977.) The Apple ][ also had a good, fast, inexpensive and reliable floppy drive while Commodore released a number of slow and expensive floppy drives.

  4. Common Knowledge by sycodon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As someone who programmed and used an Apple II and III and original owner of a Fat Mac...this is all common knowledge. Essentially Steve saw what Woz had and said, "hey, we should sell this."

    --
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  5. It takes two... by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The best product is meaningless if you don't have someone like Jobs shoving it down people's throats to get them to buy. Same with Woz, if you don't have something really cool to sell, then no one would have listened to Steve for very long. Two sides of the same coin. I'm not an Apple or Jobs fan, but obviously Steve did a lot of things right for a long time.

    I doubt Woz was very good at sales. I doubt Steve was very good at building computers. No product "sells itself", and anyone who really believes that is an idiot.

    --
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    1. Re:It takes two... by c4757p · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Plenty of computer manufacturers manage to sell product without you ever hearing the names of any of their marketing workers. Apple's janitors were also essential to their success as a company, but unless we start giving everyone praise, it's not fair to give any to someone like Jobs. It's the engineers who made the product, everyone else was auxiliary.

    2. Re:It takes two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Given the cult of personality around Jobs, it stands to reason that his actual contributions need to be put into perspective. Nobody is denying that he was a savvy businessman, or at least a savvy product marketer. Some people want to believe he was a messiah of sorts, others a pariah. But the actual workers who made Job's vision a reality tend to be completely overlooked in this fight, and it's high time their contributions were given their due share (and not just by nerds who already respect them).

    3. Re:It takes two... by Nemyst · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Of course, but if you listen to the narrative being peddled by a lot of people (including prominent media and websites), you'd think Jobs was nothing short of a one-man company genius, able to do tech design, aesthetic design, management, logistics, sales and marketing all by himself. The Steve Wozniaks and Jonathan Ives of this world tend to be quickly forgotten when attempting to create the new messiah, which Jobs entirely embraced, and fuck the ones who helped him. As with most large success stories, it involves a talented team and lots of luck rather than a single person magically doing everything perfectly.

      It doesn't help that Jobs leveraged people like Woz, who's very candid and even humble, while being a total arrogant prick himself, even as the media try to portray him as an aspirational model.

    4. Re:It takes two... by techno-vampire · · Score: 4, Interesting

      When you let techies build things you get Linux which is great. But I'm not installing it for my 70 year old mother.

      My older sister was in her late 60s and not at all tech savvy when she first encountered Linux. It only took her five minutes with a live version of Ubuntu to decide that it was what she wanted. I helped her install it, dual boot with Windows, and with access to her Windows partition so that she could get at much-needed files. It's been years since she's needed to boot Windows, and after the first few weeks of getting used to Linux, her tech-support questions to me dropped to less than 5% of what they were under Windows and have stayed that way ever since. (Most of her questions I can solve in just a few minutes and the rest go to the Ubuntu forum.) You don't need to be a computer geek or a Unix guru to run Linux; you just need to select a distro that's designed for average people, such as Ubuntu.

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    5. Re:It takes two... by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sometimes people forget that Linux has their own "asshole with a vision" as well. In fact, I'd say Linux actually had two. Both of those individuals had a very strong presence (along with contentious personalities) and helped to shape Linux into what it is today during it's formative years, and not only from a technological standpoint.

      --
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    6. Re:It takes two... by povel.vieregg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is a difficult subject to deal with. Because on the one hand you got those people who worship CEOs and think they deserve their fat bonuses and salaries. They tell anybody who complains, that CEOs deserve it because they work harder than you etc. Yet people like Steve Jobs would be nowhere without people like Woz. On the other hand there is another equally cynical group of people who claim Steve Jobs made no contributions and was just leeching of the work of others. That is an equally wrong perspective. You can even read Woz's own accounts that Steve was influential even for the early Apple computers. He was the one who pushed them to start a business. He was the one who pushed for professional looking chassis. He pushed for silent power supply etc. With the Mac it is even more clear how he influenced its development. While he didn't sit there and do the nitty bitty details. He provided lots of feedback all through development steering it in the direction of his vision. His feedback was usually far more detailed than what a regular CEO would give. The other strength of Steve Jobs which should not be belittled was that he had a talent for spotting talent and trusting it. Lots of great people like Jonathan Ive were never really allowed to make great things until they worked under Steve Jobs. They would get their smart ideas shot down by narrow minded leadership. Steve Jobs would get out of the way and let them do their Job. Even though I think Steve Jobs contributions should be acknowledge as well as the contributions of those who worked for him, that doesn't necessarily mean I think he was a good person. He was an asshole. I would never aspire to treat people the way he did. Of course he wasn't an asshole all the time to everybody. He was quite selective about it.

  6. Re:Been saying this for YEARS now... apk by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Steve Jobs" who invented ZERO getting headlines like that

    au contraire mon ami... He invented a style that makes billions. Do not be so hasty in judgement.

    --
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  7. Re:Oh sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yes, we knew Jobs had an over-inflated ego. That came out long before his death.

  8. Thank you. by Cafe+Alpha · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am so sick of the cult of authority worship.
    It's part of the worship of the wealthy.
    It's part of the denigration of work, as the executives go around saying that engineers are and should be interchangable, we're fry cooks, and working us to death is slightly more efficient than allowing us lives. And so we should all be worked to death.

    1. Re:Thank you. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's part of the denigration of work, as the executives go around saying that engineers are and should be interchangable, we're fry cooks, and working us to death is slightly more efficient than allowing us lives. And so we should all be worked to death.

      This a very worthy topic of conversation on Labor Day. I don't know if you're in the US, but "denigration of work" is what's been for dinner for at least the past 35 years.

      It's worth quoting Abraham Lincoln here (yes, this is a real Lincoln quote):

      http://www.brainyquote.com/quo...

      "Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration." Lincoln's First Annual Message to Congress, December 3, 1861.

      --
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  9. I have always felt ill by Cafe+Alpha · · Score: 4, Insightful

    because of the media's worship of Jobs. What's he anyways? An executive? The man famous for bullshit? "Reality distortion field"

    For bad decisions like making the first macs impossible to expand?
    For bad decisions like not making products where you can change a battery that's lost half it's capacity in six months?
    Don't you feel a bit cheated?

    1. Re:I have always felt ill by jklovanc · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Those "bad" decision make sense if you think of it in the context of planned obsolescence. Jobs wanted you to keep buying new toys as he made more money that way. Jobs had one objective in life; make money for Steve Jobs. He was an excellent flimflam man and many people fell for his "reality distortion field".

  10. Been saying this for YEARS now... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Mr. Wozniak, like most real doers got wrongfully overshadowed by a BIG TALKING BLOWHARD BULLSHITTER named Steve Jobs.

    * I do NOT like "speaking ill of the dead" but it's only FACT... my fellow polish descended U.S. Citizen got screwed for a big mouth bullshit artist - a fucking LEECH who hung onto Mr. Wozniak's coattails since he lacked what it REALLY took (technical know-how) since ANY damn fool can do P.R. work!

    APK

    P.S.=> It's always that way - & it ALWAYS makes me laugh when I see things like "The 'great inventor' Steve Jobs" who invented ZERO getting headlines like that... apk

  11. Re:stave jobs sucks by Grishnakh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Considering how Apple nearly died when Steve was gone, and became the most profitable company on the planet after he returned, it's obvious that he did something.

    Basically, Jobs was no engineer at all, he was a salesperson, the kind who could sell ice to eskimos by dressing it up somehow. A technology company needs both. Most companies aren't going to get far if they can't figure out how to sell stuff to customers, but a tech company also needs technology to sell, meaning you need engineers to make it.

    I don't think any of this stuff is a revelation. Steve was obviously gifted with being able to market and sell stuff, and probably also at being able to know what kind of things *would* sell well and what wouldn't, and maybe some very high-level direction for changes to be made to sell things. The engineers like Woz are the ones who actually made everything happen though.

  12. When did Jobs claim to be the tech engineer? by Uberbah · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Quote is addressing a wee bit of a straw man. Still, it's a good drop of blood in the water for the Jobs haters to turn out.

    Which was no doubt the idea behind posting it in the first place.

  13. They were both exceptional by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    This is hardly news for anyone, but reminded me of an anecdote from when both Steves were in their early twenties that summarizes the dynamic between them nicely:

    When Steve Jobs worked at Atari, the company was working on creating the arcade game Breakout, which required 80 Integrated Circuits (ICs). The less ICs there were, the cheaper the games would be to produce, so Nolan Bushnell (Atari's president) offered $100 for every IC that could be knocked out of the design. Jobs brought Woz the challenge, and over four days and nights at Atari they put together a design that only required 30 ICs. Bushnell gave Jobs his $5000 bonus, which Jobs "split" with Wozniak by telling him it was a $700 bonus, giving him "half," or $350.

    They were both exceptional. Woz an exceptional engineer, Jobs an exceptional sleazebag.

  14. Someone has to sell what you make though by brantondaveperson · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Steve Jobs played no role at all in any of my designs of the Apple I and Apple II computer and printer interfaces and serial interfaces and floppy disks and stuff that I made to enhance the computers.

    No doubt true. But if were not for Steve Jobs, we wouldn't be having this conversation, Woz probably wouldn't be uncountably rich, and no-one would have heard of the Apple I and Apple II (they probably wouldn't have even been called that).

    Why do tech people consistently dismiss the contribution of people who actually market what they make?

  15. Re:emperor sans clothing by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Funny

    but with fruit

    I don't think it's fair to call Steve Jobs a fruit. His sexual preference should not be an issue.

    Now, if you're referring to Apple customers... ..you still get points off for the homophobic slur, but gain points for accuracy.

    --
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  16. Re:Been saying this for YEARS now... apk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Correct. I did the engineering brain work to design the Apple ][ but Jobs productized it and sold it. His productization, like a plastic housing, was very important to the usability of that product. He did excellent marketing of it. Even though it wasn't his conception, it was his only major business success at Apple until his return. The monies it earned allowed Jobs to create the Apple ///, LISA, Macintosh and NeXT cube. I think the marketing and execution errors of those products were largely due to Jobs wanting to make himself a leader and often rushing products out too fast with poor marketing judgements, despite the fact that he spokes as the marketing genius. When he returned he took time and didn't share the iPhone with Bill Gates in advance. He got the product done the right way and it was very good because it was for himself too, not outsiders, a market that would make him money. It had to be good enough for him to use.

  17. Re:stave jobs sucks by MacTO · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Apple would have collapsed even if Jobs stuck around. It was a company that grew too big, too fast. It was a feeding ground for people with grand ideas and even more grandiose egos. Like many of it's contemporaries, it was doomed to fall.

    Jobs' return was a different story, but a lot can still be attributed to luck. To Jobs credit, he was a more mature businessman and he reentered at a time when Apple realized that it had to be more humble. He probably would have saved the company regardless of what happened. Yet there was a lot of luck. Things like the iPod were initially directed at Apple's existing customers. The growth that it triggered and the products that it enabled were far from a bygone conclusion.

  18. there is no genius here by FranTaylor · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The vacuum of consumer demand for computers was created and Steve Jobs was in the right place at the right time.

    He's no more special than any other lottery winner.

  19. Re:This now removes all doubt... by erp_consultant · · Score: 5, Informative

    NeXT was a flop. They couldn't sell anything. It was vastly overpriced and hardly world class. The only reason that Jobs ended up back at Apple was because the OS that Apple was using at the time was hopelessly outdated and unstable and Scully was running the company into the ground. Obviously they couldn't use Windows so they needed something and the UNIX based system that NeXT was using fit the bill.

    Mind you, the first few iterations of OSX were pretty bad as well. Slow, buggy and crash prone but it was a start. Apple stuck with it and got it right. I'll give Jobs credit for switching to Intel based processors. That was probably the smartest thing he did. And I'll give him credit for the whole "vertical stack" thing where Apple builds the hardware and designs the software. That was smart.

    But Woz was the hands on guy. He was the guy that got it done and I don't think he gets enough credit for the overall success of the company. I'm not anti Apple or anything. I like their products. I just tend to think that Jobs gets more credit than he deserves.

  20. Met Steve at the Apple booth ... by perpenso · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As someone who programmed and used an Apple II and III and original owner of a Fat Mac...this is all common knowledge. Essentially Steve saw what Woz had and said, "hey, we should sell this."

    Apple ][ dev here as well. My recollection from those days was that Woz was the engineer and Jobs was the salesman. From Mac days onward Jobs was the salesman and the designer in the look-and-feel sense, not in any technical sense.

    While sales and look-at-feel are certainly important, when at a '83 trade show as a developer and returning to our booth and telling my buddies I just talked to "Steve" for a few minutes over at the Apple booth, they were excited. Then I confessed it was Jobs not Woz and the mood shifted to, eh, ok.

    We certainly recognized that Jobs was essential to Apple's success, its just that we were engineers and the business/sales side held little interest for us. Again, post-Mac, our appraisal of Jobs improved due to his look-and-feel design work.

  21. Re:Oh sure by perpenso · · Score: 5, Informative

    Now this all comes out after his death..Sounds like an over inflated ego to me

    That thought crossed my mind as well. Since Jobs ain't there to contradict him....

    Speaking as a former Apple ][ dev, this was all common knowledge. Jobs was the salesman, Woz was the engineer. That said, sales was certainly a very important and critical role. Both Steves were absolutely essential to Apple's success. Jobs got an upgrade in our view post-Mac due to his look-and-feel design work, but still he was never thought of as a hands on tech person.

    Woz is the hero of the Apple story to engineers, Jobs is the hero to wall street. The mainstream news and the public at large merely lean towards the wall street perspective.

  22. Lisa was usable ... by perpenso · · Score: 4, Informative

    Apple also had at least two internal Mac OS replacement projects over the years. Neither getting close to where NeXT was.

    What killed Lisa more than anything else was the $10K price tag. I got to use one a bit and it was quite useable, at least to an Apple ][ and very early Mac user.