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Wozniak's Comments on "Pirates"

webslacker wrote in to tell us that Steve Wozniak has posted his commnts on the TNT Movie, Pirates of the Silicon Valley. He notes several things and clarifies other things. As many of you noted, the movie made him out to be one of the coolest guys ever to live. I'd say thats very deserved. And I'm not saying that just because we had an Apple ][ (on a cart wheeled from class to class!) in my elementary school.

275 comments

  1. Re:That may be true, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As I see it, starting a corporation and selling it actually got it out into the hands of more people than giving it away for free, didn't it?

  2. Re:Pirates Comic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy's site is hilarious!!!
    Check it out!

  3. Man from another era? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From how I see it, most respected those days lived and breatehd open source / free software/hardware. (Woz mentioned giving away free schematics) The concept wasn't was well defined as it is now, they took it for granted, and it was only money grubbing bastards like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates that ruined it for the rest of us in this day and age. Fortunately, bastions of the good old days of freedom exists in BSD and FSF (you may not love RMS, but you have to thank him for FSF).

    BTW, has anyone forwarded this slashdot column to Woz yet?

    1. Re:Man from another era? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I perhaps will not sound in-line with most, but those "bastards" created the market, they made companies value people who work and pay them big $$$. Would you like getting pay something like in McDonalds? If so, how would you buy new gears? I respect Woz a lot, but flaming BG and Jobs for everything is wrong. Of course you won't make billions, but they created conditions in which you (by doing job you love!) can make at least $100k.

    2. Re:Man from another era? by Croaker · · Score: 2

      I think, more importantly, that Jobs made the PC accessable to people who couldn't build their own my his "crass commercialism." If it just remained Woz handing out schematics for free to his buddies in the homebrew computer club, how many PC would have been made? Very few. Only the hardcore EE nerds would have built them. By selling them, Jobs actually spread Woz's vision of a PC to the masses. I think many people who got into computers in the late 70's and early 80's, and later went on to get jobs in the industry, have to thank Jobs as well as Woz. Well, OK, we'll thank Woz a whole lot more than Jobs ;)

      The same can't be said of Gates. Granted, Microsoft did create an early monitor system for one of the first PC's, but that didn't really trigger the PC revolution. By the time he scored his major coup, tricking IBM into buying his non-existant DOS, the PC revolution was set to happen anyway. Whether he or someone else (such as Gary Kildall) supplied the DOS was irrelevant.

  4. Schematics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, if those are still out.. does that mean I can build my own Apple I?

    1. Re:Schematics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you write Woz and ask him? Maybe you'll be listed under his next comments page. Hehe.

    2. Re:Schematics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like the beginnings of a kickass WM theme...

    3. Re:Schematics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i don't recall the name (apple // revealed, maybe?), but at my university library i found a book on the apple //e, complete with schematics, timing diagrams, and in depth discussion of the major functional blocks.

    4. Re:Schematics by TerryMathews · · Score: 3

      Hey, if those are still out.. does that mean I can build my own Apple I?
      I don't know this for sure, but I think the chips that the Apple I used are hard to come by anymore (Like memory chips, processors, etc.) I'd imagine that your best chance would be to partially redesign it to use modern-day, easily available parts. That might be something worth writing to Woz about.
      Oh, wait a sec, it might violate US Supercomputer Export laws... Sorry, couldn't resist.

      --
      -- Terry
    5. Re:Schematics by Shadowcaster · · Score: 1

      You should post the schematics for the ][ in a printable (high-res graphic) format for us. :)

    6. Re:Schematics by Didel · · Score: 1

      I don't see why not, I have an original Apple II reference manual that has the schematics in the back, as well as some source code.

  5. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do most modern American women HAVE recipies anymore? I'd imagine that the listing would be something like this:

    1. Order out.
    2. Microwave something.

    I'd say that the computer use for people over 35 is very limited (aside from people who must use them for work and the technicially inclined). Under 35, most users use computers for:

    1. Typing papers.
    2. Playing games.
    3. Email/Web...

  6. Re:Coolest ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Next to the Threshold bar (1-5, oldest/newest, etc) Next to the "Change" button.

  7. slashdotted again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wish i could read it

  8. Re:Pirates Comic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O.K., kids, this is proof that crack kills brain cells.

    If you want to see something funny, try:


    www.theonion.com

    This site ranks a 4.2 on the Kevin Murphy Scale, by the way.

  9. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Watch it! I'm currently 33, and I expect to play games and use email/web for at least 6 decades. Sadly, it seems like I'll have to type papers for just as long as well... :(

  10. Re:Can you imagine ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunatly it will be an industry where people would work for (almost) free. Well, you would make some money on services (like RedHat), but you would have to agree that those sky-high salaries and bonuses wouldn't be possible, would they? Closed-source/proprietary and open-source will and have to co-exist. FYI, hardware and software industry developed so rapidly because of great investments, which were in turn triggered by high profitability of this business. Say thanks to those "greedy bastards" like Gates, Jobs et al, who made possible that YOU is in great demand and companies are happy to shell out big $.

  11. Re:Also check this out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Back when US$100M used to mean something..."

    ah, the truth of it all. check out the new Forbes richest list. (link not available at press time).

    ~jawad

  12. The way I see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The way I see it, if a company were to invest in a free OS like Linux instead of paying hundreds of dollar per seat for Windows, there would be more money spend on "YOU". Especially since a real OS like Linux needs a real system administrator and not some point-and-click administrators (who get paid just as much in today's industry).

    1. Re:The way I see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, just because more money left, doesn't mean they will be used for YOU. No fscking way. In shareholders world as it is now, money would go to other way. So far I have not heard that companies that installed Linux saved money AND increased salaries of their employees. Quite contrary give up-time of Linux, which blows Windows, managers might be tempted to fire system admin and get part time. I by no means advocate trouble creating OSes to pay big bucks, BUT what I am saying is quite the fact you can't ignore -- these guys created the highly profitable industry as it is now.

      But, it's not that I am pro-Win or something, it's just people should not flame everything blindly, these well paid jobs were created by the above mentioned people, luckily including Woz.

    2. Re:The way I see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anyway, in todays world you generally hear that the most expensive single component of the comp. is win
      ---
      No, it's TOC - total cost of ownership. This might be low for servers, but for desktops, linux is still expensive. You need to take into account that the $ amount per employee/day adds up a lot more for training, etc.

      Right now nobody bothers so much about rebooting for data entry operators and clerks. But training them on linux, plus the lack of apps. still makes it less attractive than windows.

      You also need to realise that IT managers don't give a shit about OS wars. They're also pretty dumb, though, and susceptible to publicity.

    3. Re:The way I see it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey guys, don't forget to factor in the training costs of windoze. Theie was a fascinating study done by the IT head of a 50 person research lab in Ann Arbor. He calculated the costs of upgrading from Windoze3.1 to Windoze 95 as $1 million for that 50 person shop. Not only did he convince his company's brass that they should not upgrade to 98, he also proved that many of the PC's could be replaced by dumb terminals.

    4. Re:The way I see it by joekool · · Score: 1

      win NT approx 300$ which is > 100$
      (unless you know how to buy it--then you can get it for 40$ :-} )

      anyway, in todays world you generally hear that the most expensive single component of the comp. is win. remember, computer's are cheap now ;-}

      --

      Slackware: old school feel, new school gear.
    5. Re:The way I see it by fete · · Score: 1

      The cost of the operating system is just a fraction of the total cost of having the machine on an employee's desk. The hardware costs, the network costs, the time-the-worker-spends-futzing-around costs, the help desk costs. All in all, the operating system itself is a tiny part of the cost of the machine. Particularly if averaged over a three or four year life of the machine.

      The whole package costs thousands. The OS at most a hundred. Going to a 'free' OS, with retraining costs, etc., would be greater.

  13. Re:yet another slashdotted site. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.woz.org is running WebSTAR/3.0.1 ID/58006 on MacOS

    They obviously weren't prepared for this kind of traffic; this must have been a pretty low profile site before. There aren't *that* many /.'ers...

    Too bad. looked like it would have been a good read :(

    ... waiting for the obligatory flames about how much *better* it would be if it was running Linux, or how much *worse* it would be if it were running NT....

  14. Something I cannot agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I cannot agree with you that those "blowhards" that you mentioned DO NOT deserve the wealth they have.

    I think everybody who has concretely contributed to his/her business deserves the wealth he/she receives. The quantity is just another measurement of this.

    If you think that someone does not deserve the wealth if he/she didn't write a code of line, then this is your own prejudice

    1. Re:Something I cannot agree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "blowhards" saw what they could do with the personal computer and software. They then proceded to take full advantage of the ignorance the corporations showed these new technologies. Who would ever want a personal computer? The "blowhards" and every other geek out there at the time. I know that My father paid some $1500 for a dos box when I was 8 yrs. old. I learned BASIC and began writing my own games and other silly stuff. Ever since then I was hooked. Actually I loved DOS and never really liked working with the old Mac's. I found them to be awkward and didn't like how the box and monitor were one unit. I now own a Linux, Win98, WinNT and Mac boxes. Love them all.

    2. Re:Something I cannot agree by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Atheists For Jesus, for those who like Jesus but not the "belief in God" or religious fundamentalism stuff =)

    3. Re:Something I cannot agree by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1
      I think everybody who has concretely contributed to his/her business deserves the wealth he/she receives.
      How could they possibly deserve the wealth they have? Is any one person worth that much more than another?

      You should appreciate the scale of their wealth. This is not like making $20,000 a year vs. $100,000. The wealth is astronomical.

      A very well paid person could make $100/hour. If they work hard -- an average of 16 hours a day every day -- they can reach Bill Gates' wealth within a mere 150 millenia. I'm not sure how much Larry Ellison is worth, but that same honest person would still have to work several millenia to match his wealth.

      Now, did either of these men really work that hard? Is it even possible for one person to work that hard?

      Any sane person would say no. Any reasonable person would say their wealth is beyond justification. Even Wozniak, though he has the soul of a hacker, did not earn his wealth.

      (and don't give me any of that "risk" bull either -- I've yet to see one destitute executive)

      It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God. (Matthew 19:24)
      I'm not myself a Christian, but things like that which make it somewhat seductive. Would that there were any Real Christians left, or at least that fundamentalists would concern themselves with social issues outside of homosexuality and abortion. But that's another issue entirely...
    4. Re:Something I cannot agree by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1
      Your being rather semantic with that first comment. But anyway...

      Sure, some executives have a certain amount of risk. And some businesses fail. But that doesn't leave the execs destitute. When it goes really bad they have to live the middle-class lifestyle, instead of the upper-class lifestyle they were used to or aspired to. Oh, despair.

      But I'm not sure about calling a small-time entrepreneur an executive is quite right. Anyway...

      It's the last bit of wealth that counts most. The drop from upper-class to middle-class is hardly traumatic. It's not hard to regain your position. All you are really losing is a bit of comfort and a bit of ego. It's not that big a risk.

    5. Re:Something I cannot agree by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

      I'm not myself a Christian, but things like that which make it somewhat seductive.

      Trust me, there's plenty there to turn you off.. How about the Crusades? The Spanish Inquisition? The history of corruption and greed?

      I'd say stick with the ideals but don't let them draw you into the Organization or the Dogma..

    6. Re:Something I cannot agree by Eric+Savage · · Score: 1

      (and don't give me any of that "risk" bull either -- I've yet to see one destitute executive)

      Sorry to flame you like this, but this is one of the more retarded statements I've seen on ./ in a long time. You don't see destitute executives because they GOT FIRED AND ARE NO LONGER EXECUTIVES! I don't see anyone that got killed from smoking, because they are dead, and thus I can't see them. Executives make alot of money, true. Is it justified? Who knows. But they do run a high risk. Most have thier personal wealth tied up in thier company, and for every golden parachute you read about, there's probably 1 or two execs that lost everything. Get a clue.

      --

      This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
    7. Re:Something I cannot agree by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Yeah - this is true. The first company I worked for as a programmer was a "mom-and-pop" style operation dealing in insurance management software. Anyhow, the president/owner of this company went from having a huge office and a new corvette every six months (or so it seemed), to losing the company and being a lowly paid programmer again.

      I feel sorry for the guy - he had a dream die in his face (and I know it was a dream for him, after sitting many times in his office chatting about certain things). I can't say that is something I would want to happen to me. He was also kind and generous with his money (at least toward his employees). I got around $6000 worth of loans for computer equipment, interest free. Paid off every dime - even after I was laid off (during the end days).

      Yes, there are destitute execs - you just don't see them (though, every once in a while, look at some of the bums in your city carefully - you may see an executive amongst them)...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    8. Re:Something I cannot agree by olu · · Score: 1

      Do you remember that wall street executive a few years back that lost almost 25 billion dollars in the japanese market and went into seculusion because of it? It ruined him for ever because he took a chance.

  15. Re:Old Woz stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >I think that Steve Jobs is a brilliant visionary who honestly wants to create cool stuff (as opposed to Bill
    >Gates who just wants to be rich), but I lost quite a bit of respect for Jobs as a person when I heard about this >story.

    I'm sorry, I just can't picture Jobs as a brilliant visionary. A ruthless exploiter of Woz's engineering genius maybe. Granted, Apple Computer would never have gotten off the ground without Job's business skills, but brilliant visionary? Mmmm, no.

    ---
    Apple Computer, going out of business for the last 20 years.

  16. Yeah, but not THAT great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, Woz may be a cut above the archetypal greedy bastards, but, c'mon, gimme a break. If a great, down-to-earth guy like him had the money that the bastards have, couldn't he be putting it towards good purposes (you know, that whole "end world hunger" thing). Goodness, yes, but simplistic and boring goodness.

    1. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by tzanger · · Score: 1

      I mean dropping out of HARVARD with a 1600 on the SAT's, nobody drops out of the best school for an idea that might never work.

      I did. Well not Harvard per se, but I did skip going to Univeristy of Waterloo and Wilfrid Laurier for computer science, engineering and Hons. Computing and Computer Electronics, respectively. Everyone told me I was stupid but at 23 I'm married, have a little one on the way and make a tidy little salary doing what I love without having to go through all the bullshit and propaganda that University shoves down your throat.

      Sure I could have had a great education and a fun time, and in the end have learned a little and spent a lot. Instead I skipped that, am obtaining a great practical education, having tons of fun and getting paid to do it. Not many people my age own a couple cars and a home, nor do many people my age have a career they love.

      No, I'm not comparing myself to Wozinak, there are people far smarter than I, but saying nobody does it is just plain false.

    2. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by Eric+Savage · · Score: 1

      Do you really think Bill Gates is in it for the money? Sure, he started MS to make money, but if he was in it for the money, he would have gotten out after a few billion. There isnt much you can do with 90 that you couldn't do with 50 billion. I think his aim is to influence and improve the world in the way he sees fit (whether he is accomplishing this is another discussion). From what I read, he is frighteningly normal (for a geek). He doesnt use his money to run for office, he doesn't run around with a Michael Jackson style entourage. He runs a software company like thousands of other people out there. He just happens to run the largest one. This applies to many of the top billionaire execs (possibly excepting egomaniac Ellison). If I had Gates' wealth, I don't think I would do much different than he does.

      --

      This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
    3. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by TerryMathews · · Score: 1

      couldn't he be putting it towards good purposes (you know, that whole "end world hunger" thing?
      The last time I checked, teachers are paid very little for what they do, which may be one of the most important jobs on the planet. C'mon, give the man a break. He is trying to instill in our country's youth a love of computers. What greater good can their be than to try to train your successor, for lack of a better phrase? If I had to deal with Gates and Jobs, I wouldn't want to build computers anymore either. I'd imagine they ruined it for him.

      --
      -- Terry
    4. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by olu · · Score: 1

      Look at it this way: If you had 90 BILLION Dollars would you worry about world hunger or about trying to keep your 90 BILL. And I am not sure that they are greedy remeber this : They took a serious chance, risks that some of use would never take, I mean dropping out of HARVARD with a 1600 on the SAT's, nobody drops out of the best school for an idea that might never work. These guys made out so well because they took the chance, but now it is just business, they have to keep the money that they worked for. And remember Goodness is Goodness no matter what, and do you help to end world hunger like you ask of him?

    5. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by olu · · Score: 1

      I do recognize my mistake, and I do apologize for that. I see your way, and that is the way that I was basically talking about. Taking the chance that many do not take, a risk where people call you crazy and stupid but in the end you come out a cut above the rest. You enjoy your job because you put so much into it, it is a part of you.

    6. Re:Yeah, but not THAT great by olu · · Score: 1

      I never thought that Gates was in it for the money. I had my first computer when I was 7 I am now 17 years old and I have grown up with this company and many others. Of all people in the world he drives a lexus to work in stead of being chauffered back and forth in some starwars like limo. He is very down to earth and loves computers. And he has changed the computer world in so many ways. I dont think I could do much difference with the same amount of money

  17. Engineers will never rule the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Steve Jobs was as close to a visionary as you get in the computer industry. It would have taken considerably longer for computers to enter normal homes and offices had Jobs not existed, 'cuz brilliant guys like Woz would have stuck to giving out free schematics at the local computer club. It's like Open Source without the Internet: I don't think so. And what about PARC? Those idiots at Xerox were gonna let GUI die because they couldn't find a market for it. Jobs didn't engineer it, but he saved it from an ugly death and brought it to the masses.
    Engineers look at the small picture, in terms of inventions and such, but don't think in terms of the effect on society, missing the big picture. Jobs ONLY saw the big picture. To have an effect, you gots to be havin' both. So don't undersell Jobs.

    1. Re:Engineers will never rule the world by Davorama · · Score: 1
      OK, I'll take the bait.

      Engineers get the big picture. Some of them are just too honest and moral to do what needs to be done to make it happen. Jobs obviously does not suffer from these imparing traits and the world is a better place for it in my opinion. I don't know if he's a hero or a demon.... a hero as long as you don't actually get to know him maybe?

      --

      Davo -- Free speech, free software, AND free beer.

  18. RMS personality type by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Having met and talked to RMS, I'd speculate that he's an INTJ, like myself, but with more extreme ratings in each of those categories.

    ESR is probably ENTP, I'd say, but it's less obvious.

  19. It ain't braggin... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if you can do it, fella.

  20. Re:'im just a humble guy with my own domain name' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if everyone around was getting rich off of your inventions and hard work, i'd be doing the same. he doesn't have vast fortune (relatively) so at least let him promote his technical accomplishments. i bet you tend to sneer at professors' curiculum vitae.

  21. Suck's sucky design. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ugh.. who designed that site? I get a headache from reading that thin width centered bold text in their articles.

    Nice artwork, though.

    1. Re:Suck's sucky design. by Opaque · · Score: 1

      What? Lynx not good enuf for ya? ;)
      --
      Aron Burrell - ronnie@cflug.geeksanon.ab.ca

    2. Re:Suck's sucky design. by zagmar · · Score: 1

      Actually, Suck is considered to be one of the better examples of web design ever. And why would reading it give you a headache? Maybe you need coffee.

    3. Re:Suck's sucky design. by tmhsiao · · Score: 1

      "better examples of web design" is probably the opinion of graphic designers who don't know a single thing about interactive design for websites.

      That single page is hideous, and whoever decided that centered text down the middle of a column was a good way for users to read a long article, needs to read a text on typographic style.

      --
      "My God...It's full of ads!" -Fry, about the Internet, Futurama
  22. Re:Apple I by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I saw this also. It would not surprise me after seeing and reading how Jobs is such a jerk. He actually made Woz buy it. I would tend to believe Woz on this, he really does seem like a good guy.

  23. Re:Another Woz story... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, you're both wrong. The chip is officially known as the "Integrated Woz Machine." (Source: Technical Introduction to the Macintosh Family, (New York: Addison-Wesley, 1987), 192.)

    Later Macintoshes used a revised floppy control chip called SWIM ("Super Woz Integrated Machine").

    AC

  24. Re:Apple II by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I gave away my atari 800, the Basic cartridge was busted bad anyway...would puke on IF THEN ELSE statements ;(

    I still have an Apple][+ tuked away with a printer and 2 disk drives :P You have to really mess with it to make the keyboard type the right letters but besides that it still works.

  25. Re:Old Woz stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I love Davis' music but I'm not sure it'd've been easy to be friends with him.

    Brilliant use of a double contraction. Seriously, I love it. :-)

  26. Re:Locksmith, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Deja vu. I remember wading into those things with hex editor and a disassembler. They had some gnarly copy protection back in the day. Remember the disks with the weak magnetic region, would flip polarity every time it was read? Stuff written in between tracks, past the normal end of the disk, etc?


    never ran into the weak magnetic area disks, sounds pretty cool..

    my alltime favorite though was the spiral track RWTS loaded into the keyboard buffer at page 2. it started at the outer edge, pulled in the arm half a track for each 1/3 rotation of the disk read, and then the keyboard routines in ROM nuked it before you were up and running to look at it :-)

  27. Re:I hate to demean the guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that he just lacks the guile to present the false front of modesty that American society wants. It seems obvious that what he values is engineering skill. I'd guess that after hearing folks go ga-ga over Gates and Jobs for years just for making truckloads of $$$, he's saying that it's the engineering that really matters and that he out-engineered those guys.

  28. Re:well, it is all true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's nothing compared to say, Eric Raymond, or larry ellison.

  29. Re:Coolest ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Ahh yes - just as with Apple, there are all kinds of cool stories about the early days of Amiga Inc - at that time High Torro or whatever. I just wish there was a pictures somewhere of the big, center wired triangle of breadboards that were Agnus, Dinese, and Paula before the custom silicon. That would make for a cool desktop picture Im sure ;)

  30. Re: [really off topic] Can't speak for American W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't speak for American women but according to a swedish study, young women in Sweden knows less about cooking and recipes than young men in Sweden.

    If I remember correctly this had a couple of reasons:
    - Some kind of "rebellion" against older values. This started in the 70's so their mother in some kind of (misguided ?) feminist crusade refused/didn't think it important to learn thier girls the basics.
    - Nowadays all daily papers have wine sections and also hints about recipes to go with that wine. Earlier this was comfined to womens magazines.

    Or maybe it was just how the questions were formulated and that young women want to be seen as "independent".

  31. Re:Economics isn't your strong suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The haircut analogy is stupid. One person can only cut one head at a time. So although I might cut two heads of hair, and indeed, double the money I'd have gotten for doing only one haircut, I haven't multiplied the ouptuts of my effort. Both haircuts took 10 minutes to do, and I had to do them linearly. So there is no efficiency gain there. Choose something else, ANYTHING else, like the person who invented, say, the tortilla maker, or the Krispy Kreme(tm) doughnut machines... Now, if I can figure out how to give a million people haircuts AT THE SAME TIME (or even two people), then I've done something better...

    The tricks in economics are multipying output from effort, and externalizing costs.

    So, no, I'm not much of a boohooer for logging families in the PNW when Logger Bill loses his feller job because there's not much old growth trees and it's cheaper for the company to mow the logs down with feller-bunchers and export the raw logs to Asia for further processing...

    The argument about "Huge wealth, unless taken by force", could also be argued, if you count coercion and manipulation (advertising and sales techniques) as acts of force...

    But of course, the most common effort multiplier for people is to get other people to help with the work. Which is another whole can of worms that armchair economic theorists like to dismiss...

    Me, I guess I almost look at "value" anymore as sort of being like energy. "Value" is about as created and creatable as energy is. In other words, value can be extracted from one form and transformed into others (but if you look at the system holistically, there's gotta be some losses, so that the sum of the parts is less than the sum of what one started with...back to that externalizing costs issue...), but it all ends up in the landfill or back in the ground eventually...

  32. Re:Woz. - Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strange how the world changes. In those days apple where the good pro open specs guys and Atari were the evil microcomputer empire.

    Alan

  33. for those who like embeded links.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  34. Now, now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Modern American women can't cook, but it's impolitic to point it out. They can't clean or mow the lawn either, but that's another rant.

    Computer use for the over 35 crowd limited? I manage mailing lists, compose proposals, do the budgeting, and answer mail for the nonprofits I volunteer for. I really think you need to get out more.

    And a good way for you to get more real world exposure is to volunteer for Habitat for Humanity or the Red Cross or any number of other worthwhile orgs and help them do something useful with their computers. You could set up Apache/php/Postgres for the lists, so they don't have to spend their hard won dollars on MS crap.

    This is called SERVICE, something the Woz talks about on his web site. You should try it sometime.

  35. Re:Old Woz stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I recall correctly(from S.Levy's 'Hackers'), his assumed name was Rocky Clark. Rocky from one of his hamsters/rats & Clark from his (then)wife's maiden name.

  36. Re:Coolest ever? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Amiga -is- coming back.

    http://www.amiga.com

    Or, if you can't wait just get UAE, the Amiga emulator. You'll have to web search for that. I only have links to the pages about the Window~1's verson and I know how people here don't like links to micros~1 stuff.

  37. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He said "WROTE" not "INVENTED". Can you say COMPREHENSION"?

  38. SWIM chip by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, I think it's called the SWIM chip--"Super Woz somethingorother"

    1. Re:SWIM chip by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      I thought SWIM was the version that was in the Mac, and IWM was the version in the Apple ][GS.

      Or am I smokin' clovers?

      --Joe

      --
    2. Re:SWIM chip by jjeffries · · Score: 1

      The SWIM chip is a version of the IWM that can handle 1.44meg 3.5" disks, which the IWM couldn't do. IIRC.

  39. SWIM- Super Woz Integrated machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .

  40. ...and reality isn't yours. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you have presented is the typical school book example illustrating how capitalism works and modified it to make it fit into a new situation. It definitely proves that you have understood the ideas behind the capitalistic model and the free market model, which absolutely is more than the average John Doe expressing himself the matter.

    However, this is not the reality I'm living in.

    The best way to make loads of money is simply to follow these simple steps:

    1. Identify a product/service that people might want. You will hardly never find something they really need, since that is too obvious and therefore most likely allready covered by someone else. Hopefully you might find something that mihgt be usefull to them, but normally you just find something that they might be interested in buying as an impulse act.

    2. Identify someone who are prepared to produce that product/service. The cheaper the better.

    3. Find someone who is prepared to sell the product for you with the least possible addition to the price.

    4. Start producing the product and launch a campaign to boost peoples interest in it. The more you can boost it, the higher the price you can get. Make sure to pleed to their fundamental needs like friendship, happiness and love and give them the impression (without promissing anything) that they might get a bigger slice of all that by buying your product.

    5. Sell the product and maintain the interest.

    6. (the crucial part) Make sure that you keep the margins down for both the sales channels and producers. The less they get, the more you get. Make sure they never meet and give them the impression that you don't get much, it's the sales channel/producer that is very expensive (depending on who of them you talk to). Stay as the middleman at all cost and make sure that they believe that you only take a tiny part in it all and they won't be so inclined in finding other middlemen.

    7. If the product never was really usefull, the interest will fade away after a while. Make sure to pull out before you start making losses. When the producer will have to fire people because you stop ordering the product you have your back free: There is simply no more demand for his product and that is not your fault. They should have anticipated it and prepared themselves, despite your earlier promisses and the fact you talked them into cutting all margins and investing into expensive machinery (which they still have to pay off) in order to cut down the price/product. Start all over again from point 1.

    8. If the product really was usefull or got appreciated by your customers, competition will come and threaten your big income. Try to cut them out using patents and name recognition as your main weapons. Make sure that people "know" your product is different, that it is the original, that it's got soul and that they get happier and become more successfull persons if they buy your product instead of the other "cheap immitators".


    The key trick is to make sure that those who produces the product thinks that what they do is less valuable than it really is and that the consumers thinks it's harder and more expensive to produce than it really is.


    What I have introduced to you here is the MIDDLEMAN, a factor not accounted for in your example (or most of the school book examples either) but which is very real and makes your example not applicable on any other circumstances except when the producer (of product or service) and consumer meets eye to eye and both have a pretty good understanding of the cost of producing the product and the value it provides to the customer.

    "Nobody else's opinion matters, because it was THEIR money. They presumably valued their own money, but they demonstrably valued the haircut even more."

    I understand your point, but often it's very hard for the customer to value what the product will provide you, especially shrinkwrapped software on a shelf.


    "Huge wealth, unless it is taken by force, is evidence of a lot of people having received a lot of value, in their own opinion. How hard YOU judge the wealthy to have worked couldn't be more irrelevant."

    You're quite fast to make your conclusion...
    As I said before, the buyer rarely knows the real value the product will give him when deciding how much he is prepared to pay for it. He most likely thought that he would get a wordprocessor that he could use at least ten years when he bought MS Word. He didn't know that he would have to upgrade in just a year (or even months) because MS updated the product and changed the fileformat so he can't read some important letters he receive.

    To my experience have most people who have made themselves moderately rich done so by providing value. But most people who have made themselves incredibly rich haven't really deserved that money. They have just found a way to move themselves (either as persons or as a company) into a keyposition that they could take advantage of in a way not expected by their surrounding.

    Therefore I think it's very refreshing to see people like Woz, who get where they are through hard work without losing their head.

    / Tord.

  41. Re:INFP/INTP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So am I. I wonder if this is a common denominator for Free/Open Source type people. Maybe that should be the next /. survey?

    sschaper@home.net

  42. nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i think you are right.. hes all high and mighty
    as though he is a squeaky clean angel
    in an ocean of heathens. which of course
    is how most slashdotters and most engineers
    think of themselves. which is of course
    why there are so many shitty products out there.

  43. copyright law? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what the fuck?

  44. in other words,he is becoming more like Jobs&G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    same thing happens with strippers.
    give too much, feel hurt, decide to become
    an asshole too.

  45. if he had any brains, he wouldnt be so bitter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    its not my fault he fucked up and let some
    asshole steal all his shit. maybe if he
    had some people skills like RMS he wouldnt have got
    his ass kicked so bad by the man.
    i dont find it admirable to get shit on for
    30 years and then in the end decide you need
    to promote yourself on a website.

    1. Re:if he had any brains, he wouldnt be so bitter by stew1 · · Score: 1

      How ya' like that mutton there?

      Better make sure you're in your cave by dawn. Wouldn't want ya' to turn to stone, you TROLL!

  46. "Right political side" has nothing to do w/ score by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He didn't get a +1 as opposed to the AC because he was on the "right political side". He got it because all AC's have a default score of 0 and all non-AC's have a default score of +1.

  47. Illogical? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, it's hard to find places in the Bible where Jesus himself explicitly claims to be God, but that's beside the point.. There's nothing "illogical" about liking Jesus but not the "belief in God". There's nothing illogical about liking a liar or lunatic, either, if he had good things to say. And anyway, I'm not sure that believing you're god is all that much crazier than believing in god, but I don't go around calling all theists lunatics.

  48. Re:Something I cannot agree (now off-topic) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Jesus claimed to be God. If God does not exist, Jesus is either a liar or nuts.

    Or misquoted.

  49. How much recognition do you expect?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know about you (you could be 12 years old) but Woz is a celebrated and highly recognized figure. I mean, he was just on the cover of Wired!!! He had hundreds of millions of dollars. Apple finally named a special edition ][ after him. What do you want?!

  50. You cynical F*CK! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Save one child and you save the world."

    Need I say more, you pathetic chump.

  51. Correct me if I'm wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But didn't the movie just portray Jobs as an arrogant SOB that did nothing? They just showed him getting pissed off a lot, and having a lot of mood swings. He wasn't a PR person, per se. He wasn't a hardware guy (as told by the movie). He wasn't a software guy (as told by the movie)...
    So what exactly did he do?
    I've always had the utmost respect for Mr. Wozniak, but where does Jobs fit into all of this?

    1. Re:Correct me if I'm wrong... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read _Steve Jobs: The Journey is the Reward_.

      Published in 1988. Excellent, balanced account
      of what Jobs did to & for Apple.

      In the very early days it was Jobs that
      pulled together the resources and made
      the non-engineering decisions necessary
      to make Apple take off.

      e.g. upon getting the multicolor logo,
      he insisted that it be printed on
      everything, even though it cost lots
      of bucks to do so.

      Getting into computers in 1982, I was
      quite impressed upon seeing the color
      logo on the tape cassettes and floppies
      -- it provided Apple that unnameable
      cachet of QUALITY that persists in
      some degree to this day.

  52. Woz is INDEED the man... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I also had an Apple II on a cart wheeled around
    from classroom to classroom. Even then, I was
    ahead of my classmates. ;D I still scorn that
    evil woman for never answering my question about
    what it meant by "BROKEN BY A SOFT SECTOR" on the
    LOGO bootup menu. :/ But ooooh, the memories...
    I fear what kids must have to work with today.
    There was a certain innocence attached to the
    Apple II and it's kin...:~(

  53. There's a second page of comments! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I hope you guys didn't miss, there's a second page with comments that were way more interesting

    http://www.woz.org/woz/commets.html

    http://www.woz.org/woz/commets1.html

  54. Woz is a wizard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Cool is ok praise.
    Calling him ethical is nice.

    But, the best praise I can think of:

    Woz is a wizard.

    (for you youngins, wizards are hardware AND software gurus. The height of the profession.)

  55. Can you imagine ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    what the industry would look like if Woz had managed to keep the hardware open.

  56. Re:Old Woz stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I was a student at Berkeley in 1987 when Woz graduated with a degree in electrical engineering/computer science. He was the class valedictorian, not surprisingly.

    I don't remember the assumed name he used, but *NO ONE*, at least no one I knew, had any idea who he really was.

    At the graduation ceremony, he gave a nice speach and then casually tossed of at the end that he really was not who he had claimed to be, his real name was Steve Wozniak.

    You could have heard the jaws dropping a mile away. It was a great day, and not one soon forgotten.

  57. Economics isn't your strong suit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...but being on the right side politically earns you a "score:1" while the sensible AC you responded to got zilch.

    People don't "deserve their money" for "working harder". They are given money in exchange for something that someone else considers to be of even greater value. If you can provide something of value (say, a good haircut, for example) to somebody, he'll give you somewhat less money than he thinks the haircut is worth TO HIM. How hard you work, what it's worth to you, and all other such considerations are irrelevant to the person who pays you. If he thinks that he'd rather have the money than the haircut, you won't get the money. Simple as that.

    If you provide the same haircut to two people, you'll get twice the money. That's because you've created twice the value, not because you've worked twice as hard. How hard you worked to do it isn't what gets them to pay you. It's solely the sum value you have provided to those two people, IN THEIR OWN OPINION.

    Now, if you can figure out a way to snap your fingers and provide the same haircut to a million people, you'll get a million times the money. Not because you worked a million times as hard, but because you have created a million times the value, as judged by the people who owned the money that was given you. Nobody else's opinion matters, because it was THEIR money. They presumably valued their own money, but they demonstrably valued the haircut even more.

    Huge wealth, unless it is taken by force, is evidence of a lot of people having received a lot of value, in their own opinion. How hard YOU judge the wealthy to have worked couldn't be more irrelevant.

    There. Now the moderators can give me my score:-1 for my politcal shortcomings and we'll be done with it.

    1. Re:Economics isn't your strong suit by Geoff · · Score: 1

      People don't "deserve their money" for "working harder". They are given money in exchange for something that someone else considers to be of even greater value.

      I recall, several years back, an article about the annual "top 10 highest-paid entertainers" lists, and Michael Jackson was on top as a result of his Thriller album. (I told you it was a while back.) Jackson had made a few bazillion dollars that year. "No one's worth that kind of money!" is the typical response. The author of the article talked to an exec from Jackson's record company. He wouldn't divulge how much money had been made off of Thriller, but did admit that the few bazillion dollars they paid Jackson was "a bargain."

      That's the point. Jackson contributed more to the economy than he took out. Same with Bill Gates. Are they "worth it"? In an economic sense, yes. In a philosophical sense, we can debate.

      --

      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. -- Pablo Picasso

    2. Re:Economics isn't your strong suit by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1
      My post wasn't about economics. My post wasn't about describing how things work -- that's what economics tries to do.

      I just asked: do these people deserve the money they've made? My claim was that they could not have deserved it. There's no way that their contribution could have been that much more than the average (or even above-average) person's.

      Did they make a lot of money? Obviously, I cannot dispute the facts. The difference between what people deserve and what they get is what distinguishes a just and unjust system. I imply only that this system must be unjust by looking at what it creates.

      Maybe your interpretation based on value and subjective judgement is correct (I don't think it is). Either way it is still unjust if it creates an unjust ends. It is certainly no justification.

    3. Re:Economics isn't your strong suit by A+Big+Gnu+Thrush · · Score: 1

      Whatever other comments are made in response to this, I think you're absolutely correct.

      To add my thoughts: How can a person ever deserve money? Who makes that judgment and by what criteria?

      As an example, say that an evil and stupid man purchases a plot of real estate at a very low price, then, months or years later, demand for that land increases and he sells it for a lot of money. Does he deserve that money?

      As another example, let's say that an evil and stupid man writes a mediocre operating system and begins to sell it to computer manufacturers. He becomes the richest man on the planet. Does he deserve that money?

      In both cases, my answer would be "no." Clearly, I deserve more money. I would spend it wisely and use my wealth to be with my wife and daughter more often. My wife would do endless hours of charity work, because she's into that.

      The problem, what I think is irrelevant to their wealth.

      You don't need to get anyone's permission to get rich.

      BTW, for all his faults, I would not describe Bill Gates as either evil or stupid.

  58. Hey! by Gleef · · Score: 2

    SimonK wrote many things I agree with, but he also wrote:

    Give it a few years and you'll be joining the libertarian party, reading Ayn Rand and being beseiged by the FBI in some compound in Montana.

    Hey, painting the stroke of Libertarianism a little broad are we. While many Libertarians admire and agree with Ayn Rand, she does not speak for all Libertarians. Many do not follow her Objectivist philosophy.

    Secondly, those people who form anti-government anti-conspiracy militias have nothing to do with Libertarians. Libertarians generally feel that there is a place for government, it just should be a much smaller place than the one we have now occupies.

    --

    ----
    Open mind, insert foot.
    1. Re:Hey! by SimonK · · Score: 1

      I know most libertarians are not also conspiracy nuts, and that objectivists and libertarians only overlap slightly (and argumentatively). Many libertarians also have a less slavish view of capitalism to the guy I replied to. There is an intersection though - and the slightly paranoid tone of the post I followed up suggested that this person might be in it.

      I actually was quite close to being a True Believer in the Libertarian thing at one point, but I always though Ayn Rand was silly, and I never touched the conspiracy stuff except in jest. I still think a libertarian world might be a good thing to try - but I do not have the same conviction that its the only morally justifiable world that some people have.

    2. Re:Hey! by humanerror · · Score: 1

      Hey, painting the stroke of Libertarianism a little broad are we. While many Libertarians admire and agree with Ayn Rand, she does not speak for all Libertarians. Many do not follow her Objectivist philosophy.

      And some (at least one) who agree with Ayn Rand may also agree with some tenets of Libertarianism. We also may not agree with everything Ms. Rand had to say. In her own writings, she notes that for every effect there is a cause. The writings of Ayn Rand are not the cause of objectivist thought, they are an effect thereof.

      Libertarians generally feel that there is a place for government, it just should be a much smaller place than the one we have now occupies.

      As someone who was held hostage by the government for the last week (in jail without arraignment or formal charges) for defending my property with deadly force, I will say that it should be a much smaller place.

      --
      "We're an apex predator with the fecundity of a base level herbivore... We're a virus with shoes..." RazorJAK
  59. Hmmm by Skamille · · Score: 1

    I have mad respect for the guy for all that he did, and put up with, etc. But he has no shortage of ego. Maybe it's just me, but I would find him a lot more charming if he let his accomplishments speak for themselves (which they do, hell, they SCREAM for themselves!). He's a cool guy, but certainly not quite as humble as the show seemed to portray him.

    Alright, now I get flamed. Wooooohooooo.
    C

  60. Re:clarification, and FREE APPLE ][ TRIVIA! by Bill+Currie · · Score: 1
    Bonus Apple ][ command sequence trivia: What does THIS do? (Hint: Either Language Card or both sets of BASIC ROMs required.)

    ] INT

    > CALL -151
    * F666G
    !

    Mini Assembler!!
    ] CALL -151
    * FAA6G
    Dunno. I'm not ever sure if your still in integer basic or not.
    --

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --
    Leave others their otherness. -- Aratak

  61. Re:Another Woz story... by farrellj · · Score: 1

    Acutally, The Woz didn't design the drive, he used an off-the-shelf drive...but custom circuits and controller was his. And the IWM is actually know as the "Infernal Wozniak Machine"

    He also used a "unique" way to get the drive to find track 0 to read the boot code...since they had 33 tracks, they backed up the stepper motor 33 times to make sure it was a track 0, no matter where the drive head was! That is what what gave the Apple ]['s their distinctive sound upon booting.

    ttyl
    Farrell
    (Long time Apple ][ Hacker, LOGO Teacher and GraForth fan)

    --
    CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
  62. Woz. by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    I'd have to agree, Woz rocks. It seems he was into Open Hardware way back in the 70s, giving out free schematics =)

    1. Re:Woz. by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Most products back then came with schematics (although I think Apple was the only company to include source to a portion of the system). I remember that my TRS-80 CoCo had schematics - so did my Monkey Wards TV. Just about all large consumer electronic items came with the schematics - if not the whole service manual (I gave my TV to Goodwill - something fried in it bad, and it wasn't worth getting fixed - gave them everything, including the service manual, so if they wanted to fix it)...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  63. Re:well, it is all true by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    But we all know ESR is the only person in the world capable of giving speeches in favor of Open Source.

  64. Re:You have to wonder... by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    I got that impression too. Wozniak reminds me of RMS, only less dogmatic. They both have (or at least had) beards too, and look/looked like hippies.

  65. Re:Woz is the Brian Wilson of computerdom by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Well he did suffer mild brain damage (amnesia) in that plane accident. However, he seems like an intelligent person today (albeit not doing much technically-related anymore).

  66. Re:INFP/INTP (Off-topic) by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Hmm, if you go look through that site, the list of Presidents who are Idealists says "There are None!"

    Perhaps that's part of our problem.

    FWIW I'm INTP/INFP, depending on my mood.

  67. Re:INFP/INTP (Very Off-topic) by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    Hmm, when i retake that test thinking of what I'm like online, I get ENTP. The same, except the I (introverted) switches to E (extroverted). Interesting.

  68. Gerald makes it to Slashdot! by Eric+Green · · Score: 2

    Good ole' Gerald Holmes. You must admit that he's a mildly talented satirist (grin).

    -E

    --
    Send mail here if you want to reach me.
  69. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by The Incredible Mr. Limpett:

    AFAIK,
    The Altair had the metal switches and the brushed metal front.

    The IMSAI 8080, an Altair clone, had the red and blue plastic buttons and looked much nicer (It was shown in the movie War Games.)

    BTW this is way before my time, my first computer was a TI99/4A in the early/mid 80's.

  70. Re:Coolest ever? by gavinhall · · Score: 2

    Posted by 2B||!2B:

    I totally agree. If only it were possible! But it's probably about 5 years too late. At Phase5 in Germany (www.phase5.de) they used to have lots of info on their A\\Box project, which is a modern (and just as leading-edge for its time) version of the Amiga they planned on creating. But the info has gone away, which means it probably won't happen. Gateway makes a bunch of promises about reviving the Amiga, but I'll believe it when I see it. My guess is at best they'll do a faster (PPC) version of the 4000.

  71. Re:Not in PA by Kev+Vance · · Score: 1

    Hrm... I suppose that would be why you must take the Windows Applications course to graduate from my high school. Microsoft influence at the highest levels of my school!

    Once you take that, you never have to use the PCs again and the other classes (no programming, just graphics) use the mac labs. Not that they're any better or more stable, I think I'm just spoiled since I use linux at home.

    --
    F0 07 C7 C8
  72. US Festival, anyone? by RatBastard · · Score: 1

    Anyone else here remember the US Festivals in 1982 and 1983? Woz made thos happen. I got to work at the 1982 US Festival. 10 bands a day for three days. Wanna guess how much the tickets were? $10.00 (ten dollars) per day. That's a dollar an act. And these were not second string acts, they were headliners; The Police, The Kinks, The Grateful Dead, Jerry Jeff Walker, Fleetwood Mac, and amny more I can't remember.

    If you got bored with the music there were exposition tents with all kinds of fun computer and technology goodies in them.

    It still amazes me that there were 250,000 people at that show.

    My understanding is that the low ticket prices meant that Woz lost (if you want to use that term) a lot of money on the US Festivals.

    ObComputerComments: I always liked and respected the Apple II but I hated the Mac on sight.

    --
    Boobies never hurt anyone. - Sherry Glaser.
  73. Just plain interesting by mackga · · Score: 1

    With the rampant spread of the cult of personality in the 'puter biz and other areas, it sure is nice to see someone as level-headed as Mr. Woz. He actually did something good for folks, made a good chunk of change, and opted out for a real life. Now that's something I'd like to do. I don't know that much about the man, other than what I've read here and anecdotes from time-to-time. But he sure seems to be a nicer fella than that Gates boy or Jobs or Larry E.

    --

    "shop smart:shop s-mart" ash

  74. Re:what kids today work with by PHroD · · Score: 0

    yeah and at my old HS, Los Gatos High (silicon valley), Woz dontaed tons of PowerPCs to the school...Woz rules :) (tho he HAD to donate them for the year AFTER i left...at least i got to play computer net games on grad nite ;) )


    "There is no spoon" - Neo, The Matrix

  75. Re:Old Woz stories by pb · · Score: 1

    Give me the Commodore, X, and the Amiga any day. The Apple II was very overpriced at the time, as are most of Apple's products. NeXT was a very bad (read: incompatible, shoddy standard tools) UNIX.

    ...and any of your examples are better than the iMac. If you sell a computer that's integrated with the monitor, isn't upgradeable, (we haven't gone far since the Apple II) doesn't have a floppy drive (that was at least standard with the Apple II... :) and costs more than an equivalent real computer, then putting in a network card instead doesn't make it "the first viable step towards a network computer". I think the vt100 did that better than the iMac ever will, and for graphics, X Servers did even better. I don't think desktop machines with network cards are anything new, and if Apple does it, that doesn't suddenly make it a 'network computer' any more than all the other ones were.

    Jobs does try to make sure that ideas and people are exploited, and he is ruthless. If Apple were on top, he would be basically a hipper version of Bill Gates. There have been many stories here of Jobs's ruthless exploitation, of Woz in particular. He may have popularized some ideas that caught on, and we might have him to thank for that, but past that, please don't give Jobs any more credit than you absolutely have to... Proprietary software is bad, but proprietary hardware is worse. If you can't release your source code, at least get it to run on more than one platform...

    --
    pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
  76. I got the same impression by crayz · · Score: 1

    But I try to judge people by what they do less than what they say. And he seems to have done good things in the past and continues to, so I'll choose to attribute his puffiness to
    1) the fact that he really did do some amazing things
    2) that he didn't realize how it sounded

  77. Old Woz stories by zonker · · Score: 0

    'Apple - graphics, keyboard, and BASIC'

    those weren't his ideas... they were Woz's...

    1. Re:Old Woz stories by eshefer · · Score: 1

      the kissinger story is true, and that friend was the other steve. I don't know the story about the spreadsheet. But I remember reading that he actualy wrote a version of visicalc that run faster then the original.. Maybe that's what you refare too.

      As for why he was worring about getting fired from apple.. Hmmm.. look what happened to that other founder.
      --------------------------------
      ( my music)

    2. Re:Old Woz stories by delmoi · · Score: 1

      I think what your refering to was a deal for a circut board for Atari.

      Atari told Jobs that he would get $4000, $7000 if he used less then 40 chips.

      Jobs told woz that he would get $500 (or somthing like that, the $ amouts I'm not sure of, but there was about an order of magnintude diffrence) if the board was less then 36 chips, $700. Woz spent night after night optimizing the board, but he could only get it to somthing like 38 chips.

      Woz got $250, jobs got $6750

      Atari could not figure out how the f*sk the board worked, and had to design another one :)


      _
      "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

      --

      ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    3. Re:Old Woz stories by alanh · · Score: 1

      One of my favorite memories from my Nintendo Power days was from looking at the high score list for GameBoy Tetris. One month, the highest score was from a Steve Wozniak....

      --
      - AlanH
    4. Re:Old Woz stories by razorwire · · Score: 3
      One more story I've read (and I don't know if this is true) is that during their early days together, Jobs told Woz they'd split a payment 50-50. But he lied about the amount and told Woz it was $500, when it was actually twice that, while pocketing the rest himself. Apparently Woz found this out, and things were never the same between them again. (Can somebody confirm if this is true?).

      The full story was published in Next Generation magazine a few months back. Jobs was working for Atari at the time, and the company was designing the mainboard for the Breakout arcade game. Breakout was a pre-microprocessor machine, built with discrete logic, so it was to Atari's advantage to optimize the design to use as few chips as possible. Jobs took the problem to Woz, who did a phenomenal job of optimizing the board in exchange for half of Jobs' bonus. Jobs told Woz that he got $500 out of it and paid him accordingly... but Jobs really got $5000! Woz literally cried when he found out, several years later, what his friend had done.

      The punchline (if you can call it that) was that Woz's changes worked, but were totally incomprehensible to the engineers at Atari, so his design never went into production. Sad but true.
      --

    5. Re:Old Woz stories by notyou · · Score: 1
      Funny you should mention GameBoy Tetris and Woz. i live in Sunnyvale and go to a lot of shows at the nearby Mountain View Shoreline Amphitheater.

      Woz has box seats there (i believe he was one of the early investors in the Amphitheater, maybe back in the days of the US Festivals?). [They're mostly owned by Valley companies. The placard on his box just says "Woz". Too cool. :-} ( Box Seat #17 if you care to look.)]

      Anyhoo, a co-worker said that she had often seen him there at Lilith Fair, and that during the slow moments in the show, he would be playing Tetris with a friend of his, the two Gameboys linked together.

      A few months later, at the Bridge School Benefit, he actually was down in the seats near us to get a closer look at/listen to Fastball, and then the Barenaked Ladies. Of course i had to have my friend pass Pilot to him and got him to autograph it.

      --Darryl

    6. Re:Old Woz stories by stew1 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the story is true, although I think you got it mixed up a bit. The deal is that Jobs sold his VW minibus and Woz sold his HP calculator and they used the money to start Apple. Jobs sold Woz's calculator, lied about how much he got for it, and pocketed the difference. I read an interview with Woz last year somewhere on the web where he confirmed this story.

      I think that Steve Jobs is a brilliant visionary who honestly wants to create cool stuff (as opposed to Bill Gates who just wants to be rich), but I lost quite a bit of respect for Jobs as a person when I heard about this story.


      Jon

    7. Re:Old Woz stories by stew1 · · Score: 1

      Couple things about NeXT (from what I understand about them):

      1. Their Unix is pretty much just NetBSD without X-windows.
      2. Their software was/is highly portable. So, to a certain extent, one could argue that Jobs maybe understands that hardware dependence is a bad thing. Still, don't expect Apple to move towards "open" hardware anytime soon (why is x86 hardware more "open"? Just because there are more parts available? It's something I've never understood); Rome wasn't built in a day.
      3. While everyone else talked about how high level OOP libraries would change the world, NeXT built 'em. NeXT didn't exactly set the world on fire, but NeXT's customers (eg. USPS) seem satisfied, and most seem like tough customers to please.

      The iMac - So you want a workstation. Great. I do, too. I want to be able to put on a bigger monitor and play around with the motherboard and other such things. But most people don't. Most people != Slashdot computer geeks. And if you've ever been a computer lab monitor at a school, you'll know that floppies are a scourge sent from Satan... The iMac makes you start thinking in terms of data centralization, always a good thing.

      Jobs is ruthless, yes. Jobs is probably not someone I would want to go mountain climbing with. And Jobs is a visionary. He comes pretty close to being a Romantic Hero (like Young Werther), and no one ever said that's a great thing in and of itself.

      Jon

    8. Re:Old Woz stories by stew1 · · Score: 2

      Ruthless exploiter and brilliant visionary are not necessarily mutually exclusive. I'm not arguing that Jobs was more than a mediocre techie (although, he was hireable by Atari...). But consider:

      Apple - graphics, keyboard, and BASIC
      PARC - limited GUI, mouse, computing by metaphor
      NeXT - microkernel, advanced OOP libraries
      Pixar - digital media done well
      Apple - iMac - the first viable step towards a network computer

      Jobs seems to have a pretty good knack for seeing something cool and then imagining how it could be even cooler, and exploited more fully. He's tried to articulate his ideas and sell people on them. That's what a visionary does, and it's hard to think of anyone else in the computer industry who does it better than Jobs. Contrast Jobs' ventures with Microsoft, which has shown itself to be a purely reactive, paranoid corporation.

      To a certain extent, Jobs reminds me of Miles Davis. He's restless, demanding, smart, and temperamental. I love Davis' music but I'm not sure it'd've been easy to be friends with him.

      Btw, he's only come of his business skills of late. He's learned those the hard way and I think he's still probably learning. And if he cared so much about business, he'd be worth a lot more than he is now (ie. he gets paid $1/yr. by Apple and he dumped off all but one of his shares of Apple stock long before they rebounded; not that he isn't a billionaire...).

      So, y'know, don't want this to be a stereotypical "Macs suck!" thread or anything; this is just how I see things.

      Jon

    9. Re:Old Woz stories by jlcooke · · Score: 1

      Yes it's true. And it was teh famous game "Breakout". remember? Littl paddle on the bottom moving back and fourth bouncing a ball up to knock blocks away and every once in a whole it would get stuck up top and bouce really fast and make music like noises? Steve sold it to Atari or Colleco. I forget which, for 5000$ Steve said it was 1000$.

      So steve gets 4500, Waz gets 500. Woz the brillent inventor, Steve who knows how much it's really worth.

  78. no bones about it... by zonker · · Score: 0

    okay here's how it happened...

    the woz bone is connected to the jobs bone. the jobs bone was temporarily connected to the atari bone. the atari bone paid the jobs bone big bucks to make a bone for the atari bone. the atari bone couldn't figure out how to use the woz bone. jobs bone got paid big bucks which in turn made the woz bone cry. the jobs bone connected to the NeXT bone and then to the pixar bone, and now to the apple bone. woz is teaching young bones.

    okay... that didn't make any sense. bye.

  79. emulate it! by zonker · · Score: 0

    what i would like to see is someone in the emu community get there hands on an apple i and emulate it. put in pdf the schematics and what not, and lots of detailed pix and distribute it. that would be cool :)

  80. here's how it is... by zonker · · Score: 0

    not full of himself, but maybe a little elated at the fact that most people nowadays don't really recognize the amount of work and love he had for his projects. where jobs and others saw dollar signs, woz saw a challenge. his accomplishments were not valued by monetary worth, but technical elegance. for that, we must praise him. he is of a dying breed, not of chance, but of circumstance. the truth is, for this industry to become as big as it is... for people to have the capability of owning their own computer... for computers becoming blaise... these were all achieved by people like The Woz. The computer revolution would not have happened though if it weren't for people like jobs and gates who saw the money in it. hippy ideology and hacker ethics are not marketable to common people, unless you have a businessman as a point man. They are the ones that can push prices down and make things more affordable. so, it is a situation where we need both sides... like it or not.

  81. Apple didn't specialize. Microsoft did. by heroine · · Score: 1

    The movie showed the distinct difference between a company which split its resources between building hardware and writing the software for it and a company which specialized only in software. The company which split its resources drove its employees 50 hours at a time, and virtually drove itself out of business for less than 5% of the PC market. Apple's biggest problem is that they kill themselves building the hardware and software themselves.

    We can only assume Steve really interrupted interviews, put his feet on the table, and asked candidates if they had sex before tearing them apart. It's a perfect explanation for the "think different" campaign. One can only wonder if the intensely competitive computer industry just demands that nihilistic personality of any entrepreneur.

  82. Locksmith, eh? by spun · · Score: 1
    Deja vu. I remember wading into those things with hex editor and a disassembler. They had some gnarly copy protection back in the day. Remember the disks with the weak magnetic region, would flip polarity every time it was read? Stuff written in between tracks, past the normal end of the disk, etc?

    I had an Apple II+, my friend won an Apple IIe in a contest from Computerland. We were 14 years old, always dialing in to pirate bulletin boards, downloading programs, which took forever, and 4 out of five times, didn't work right. My dad introduced me to software piracy and the online world several years before that, with a TRS-80 Model 1 and a CompuServe account. At that point, piracy wasn't even illegal!

    The Apple IIe was definitely the coolest computer, until the Amiga came out. I had a Commodore 64 & a 128 for a while, but I could never afford an Amiga. I remember when my friends dad got one of the original IBM XT computers for work (he was an accountant) & we thought it was such crap, no graphics, no good games. It was years before the IBM compats were anything but a joke.

    Anyway, all that early piracy led to a sincere interest in how computers worked, hardware & software, a degree, and some nice, high paying jobs. And it all started with a little software pirates club and a Trash 80 [sniff]

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Locksmith, eh? by ivan_13013 · · Score: 1

      "Fair use" restrictions have been modified a bit over the last 20 years. Used to be you couldn't really get busted for piracy unless you made money off of it. Nowadays it's fully illegal, for instance, to make a "mix tape" from your legal recordings and give it to a friend.

    2. Re:Locksmith, eh? by Another+MacHack · · Score: 1
      My dad introduced me to software piracy and the online world several years before that, with a TRS-80 Model 1 and a CompuServe account. At that point, piracy wasn't even illegal!

      Hate to interrupt the reverie, but copyright law has been around a lot longer than computers.

  83. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by tzanger · · Score: 1

    Do most modern American women HAVE recipies anymore? I'd imagine that the listing would be something like this:

    1. Order out.
    2. Microwave something.


    my wife cooks wonderful delicious meals that I wouldn't have clue how to make. Mind you I make some pretty decent meals that she can't fathom, either. :-)

  84. Re:Woz: a hacker's cook by tzanger · · Score: 1

    actually something I've done before that is unfarkingbelieveable:

    - skinless boneless chicken breasts (3 or 4)
    - 1 can of cranberries (whole berries is much better than just jelly, but either works)
    - calorie-wise french dressing
    - 1 package onion soup mix

    get a casserole dish and dump the cranberries in. take the can and pour the salad dressing about 7/8 or so (damn near full) into the can and then dump that into the dish. (the dressing should be almost gone)
    dump the onion powder into the mix.

    At about this point you'll be wondering what you've let me talk you in to. you gotta mix it all up (wooden spoon works great) to get this orangey mess with little lumps of cranberry jelly and mushy cranberries and little crunchy bits from the onion soup mix... when it's all consistent it'll look like someone's got a REALLY bad ulcer problem.

    Dump the chicken into this and cover the chicken with the sauce. throw it in the fridge for 30 minutes, flipping once.

    then put it in your oven at like 275-350 (whatever everything else goes in at) for 45 minutes. flip 'em and put in for another 45 minutes.

    when you go to flip them you'll notice the smell... it will REALLY get you hungry (this part is not sarcasm) -- by the time the second 45 minutes goes 'round you'll be aching to eat this. it doesn't look so good to prepare but GAWD if it doesn't taste awesome! Goes well with beer and if you reheat it the next day it's even better!

    Serve over rice or noodles. My wife couldn't believe what I was doing when I went to make it, but she sure pigged out! :-)

  85. Woz is the Brian Wilson of computerdom by pedro · · Score: 1

    What the hell happened to this guy? DAMN!
    If any of you weenie hacker wannabies ever read any of his code, you would see the clear, cool mind of a fscking GENIUS!
    MAN his stuff was elegant! You could sit, pass it around, and just ADMIRE it!
    He got nuked by something. Something REALLY BAD happened to him.
    I went to his site, and his comments don't have any continuity. He keeps repeating how he was the originator of the apple architecture (which is true). If he was as serene as he says he is, he would not complain. I think he's somewhat (justifiably) bitter about the dismissal of his role in mainstreaming computing.
    He does not now seem to remember the warrior he was. That is sad.
    Pete.

    --
    Brak: What's THAT?
    Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!
    1. Re:Woz is the Brian Wilson of computerdom by pedro · · Score: 1

      I'm rather ashamed not to know that. I love his work with kids, dont get me wrong. I just love his work as a great coder. He made that world his. He was a fscking van halen of coding.
      So was Bill Budge. Wonder where he is. He truly hacked. No more? I don't get it. A natural math prodigy. I would've loved him as a friend. BIG PICTURE. He got it, somehow.

      --
      Brak: What's THAT?
      Thundercleese: A light switch.. of TOTAL DEVASTATION!
  86. Arrogant? by Muck · · Score: 1

    After reading some of his comments I got a feeling of arrogance from him... Maybe he's just honest.. its hard to tell sometimes with really smart people if they're arogant a$$es or just being honest...

    --
    -- "I feel a strong disturbance in the for.."\*Segmentation Fault*\ (core dumped)
  87. Actually, yep. by cirby · · Score: 1

    The "MS investment/QT settlement" thing happened at about the same time. The lawsuit was going on for some time before that, but a "smoking gun" turned up in the QT trial, and Microsoft was going to lose bigtime (eventually). But it was in the Bad Days at Apple, so Apple gave MS another option... keep selling Office for Mac, and invest $150 million in non-voting stock, along with licensing the QuickTime code for Windows.

    The QT licensing is the largest part of it overall, and a big reason that Apple keeps making about $50 million more profit per quarter than everyone expects.

    1. Re:Actually, yep. by Locutus · · Score: 1

      Thankyou for that info, I'm glad to see that Apple is getting some real value from that settlement. This generally doesn't happen. Microsft usually steals technology and puts the owner under so much financial pressure (lost sales) that they have no choice but to sell/settle out of court for a fraction of the potential sales.
      If any one of us patented an idea that would put $10, for every computer sold, in our pocket
      do you think we would ever get close to that value from the product? No way! Microsft would tell the world your idea sucks then come up with something pitifully resembling it. They would force it into Windows, on OEMs, and tell the press to thrash your product. You would take them to court on patent infringment but you would have little money to fight them. You walk away with all your employees out of work and maybe you get a small fractional percentage of your ideas REAL potential. The innovators of the world aren't rewarded in this model.
      I wonder if Microsft has a virtual graveyard somewhere on their campus that represents all the people and businesses they have put under in this manner?

      --
      "Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus
  88. world hunger will never be solved with money by Nathaniel · · Score: 1
    World hunger is a social problem. It will never be solved by throwing money or technology at the problem. It will go away when we adopt a social system which doesn't allow world hunger. Not until then.

    Same thing with homelessless and poverty.

  89. What a bunch of pseudo-economic laissez-fair crap! by maynard · · Score: 2

    An Anonymous Coward wrote:
    People don't "deserve their money" for "working harder". They are given money in exchange for something that someone else considers to be of even greater value. If you can provide something of value (say, a good haircut, for example) to somebody, he'll give you somewhat less money than he thinks the haircut is worth TO HIM. How hard you work, what it's worth to you, and all other such considerations are irrelevant to the person who pays you. If he thinks that he'd rather have the money than the haircut, you won't get the money. Simple as that.

    In a world where hair stylist are plenty, hair grows on (most) every head, and it's the norm for folks in the workforce to tailor their image through hair style, you're certainly right. Given this there's implicit demand for hair styling, there's many small shops providing a popular service among the community, and in this situation a free market works quite well.

    But your analogy here in comparison to Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs, and the many other would be technological Robber Barons of the late twentieth falls quite short.

    If you provide the same haircut to two people, you'll get twice the money. That's because you've created twice the value, not because you've worked twice as hard. How hard you worked to do it isn't what gets them to pay you. It's solely the sum value you have provided to those two people, IN THEIR OWN OPINION.

    In a free market, where many barbers provide similar services, one gets competition by price and quality of service. I'm all for this, and find this model of many small shops competing on product and service value quite appealing. By no means do I support government management of production either in the Fascist or Communist model. But by that very token, neither do I support single corporate producers either. This is no different from a single air carrier like Delta monopolizing the Cincinnati airport, locking flyers in to their pricing scheme.

    In this example those wishing to fly into Cincinnati airport don't choose which air carrier based on some imaginary quotient of "value", but simply based on who can sell them the ticket. That is, one air carrier, Delta, who gets to choose the ticket price based on their local monopoly. Where have we seen this kind of behavior in the software industry? Don't you find it relevant to note that Office2000 will be sold at over $800 per license when it's released?

    That's value for you.

    Now, if you can figure out a way to snap your fingers and provide the same haircut to a million people, you'll get a million times the money. Not because you worked a million times as hard, but because you have created a million times the value, as judged by the people who owned the money that was given you. Nobody else's opinion matters, because it was THEIR money. They presumably valued their own money, but they demonstrably valued the haircut even more.

    Ironically, as far as software distribution goes this is exactly the case! It costs almost no more money to distribute 1000 copies as it costs to distribute 1 copy... especially if we're talking about Internet distribution. By arguing that buyers have the economic power to refuse the sale you're simply blinding yourself to the obvious power a proprietary standard can impose upon a whole society, thus forcing us into economic bondage.

    This is no different from how speculative investments ravage our world economy by moving capital without productivity gains across local economies to exploit minor price differentiations. Bill Gates is betting you, the buyer, would rather pay an exorbitant fee in order to stay up to date with his ever changing document format standard, rather than attempt single handedly to overthrow his standards control... but do you honestly think Gates is providing real value to the economy as a whole by these means? I sure don't.

    MIT economist Lestor Thurow discussed a similar issue in last months Atlantic Monthly, where he published a long article on the "New Economy", and how it relates to the monopoly economies of the late nineteenth/early twentieth century. It's a well written and informative article, I encourage others to go to the library and check it out. Anyway, the point I'm pulling from this article is that there's a huge difference between someone who creates a new thing which generates real economic value in the traditional sense, and those who use differences in market evaluations of any arbitrary good across markets in order to generate a false profit through speculation.

    Of course, you're also under the false pretension that people act as rational buyers, which one look at a all the junk for sale at most supermarket checkout counters should dissuade you of such silly ideas.

    Huge wealth, unless it is taken by force, is evidence of a lot of people having received a lot of value, in their own opinion. How hard YOU judge the wealthy to have worked couldn't be more irrelevant.

    Or evidence that those buyers had no choice but to buy from a single source. In that event the monopoly holder must use a form of economic coercion to force buyers and choke out potential competition. This is a form of either gambling or graft and corruption, because such a situation cannot last forever in an economy which favors equilibrium through competition.

    Now, how does this relate to open competition, Free Software, and Steve Wozniack? There are plenty who have argued that the Free Software and Open Source model support competition through meritocracy. While this isn't the same as competition by price and service, it is a foundation for competition among the developers which creates a fitness function allowing for an evolutionary model of development. And how different is this from a traditional economic model, except that what's exchanged is not monetary tokens, but the value of peer support and recognition.

    And Woz most certainly deserves the recognition of his peers for having created many useful things, and also for having behaved responsibly in our community. His support of schools and children stands head and shoulders above anything of "value" the like of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs may have ever created over the course of their lives.

  90. What a bunch of pseudo-economic laissez-fair crap! by maynard · · Score: 2

    An Anonymous Coward wrote:
    People don't "deserve their money" for "working harder". They are given money in exchange for something that someone else considers to be of even greater value. If you can provide something of value (say, a good haircut, for example) to somebody, he'll give you somewhat less money than he thinks the haircut is worth TO HIM. How hard you work, what it's worth to you, and all other such considerations are irrelevant to the person who pays you. If he thinks that he'd rather have the money than the haircut, you won't get the money. Simple as that.

    In a world where hair stylist are plenty, hair grows on (most) every head, and it's the norm for folks in the workforce to tailor their image through hair style, you're certainly right. Given this there's implicit demand for hair styling, there's many small shops providing a popular service among the community, and in this situation a free market works quite well.

    But your analogy here in comparison to Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, Steve Jobs, and the many other would be technological Robber Barons of the late twentieth falls quite short.

    If you provide the same haircut to two people, you'll get twice the money. That's because you've created twice the value, not because you've worked twice as hard. How hard you worked to do it isn't what gets them to pay you. It's solely the sum value you have provided to those two people, IN THEIR OWN OPINION.

    In a free market, where many barbers provide similar services, one gets competition by price and quality of service. I'm all for this, and find this model of many small shops competing on product and service value quite appealing. By no means do I support government management of production either in the Fascist or Communist model. But by that very token, neither do I support single corporate producers either. This is no different from a single air carrier like Delta monopolizing the Cincinnati airport, locking flyers in to their pricing scheme.

    In this example those wishing to fly into Cincinnati airport don't choose which air carrier based on some imaginary quotient of "value", but simply based on who can sell them the ticket. That is, one air carrier, Delta, who gets to choose the ticket price based on their local monopoly. Where have we seen this kind of behavior in the software industry? Don't you find it relevant to note that Office2000 will be sold at over $800 per license when it's released?

    That's value for you.

    Now, if you can figure out a way to snap your fingers and provide the same haircut to a million people, you'll get a million times the money. Not because you worked a million times as hard, but because you have created a million times the value, as judged by the people who owned the money that was given you. Nobody else's opinion matters, because it was THEIR money. They presumably valued their own money, but they demonstrably valued the haircut even more.

    Ironically, as far as software distribution goes this is exactly the case! It costs almost no more money to distribute 1000 copies as it costs to distribute 1 copy... especially if we're talking about Internet distribution. By arguing that buyers have the economic power to refuse the sale you're simply blinding yourself to the obvious power a proprietary standard can impose upon a whole society, thus forcing us into economic bondage.

    This is no different from how speculative investments ravage our world economy by moving capital without productivity gains across local economies to exploit minor price differentiations. Bill Gates is betting you, the buyer, would rather pay an exorbitant fee in order to stay up to date with his ever changing document format standard, rather than attempt single handedly to overthrow his standards control... but do you honestly think Gates is providing real value to the economy as a whole by these means? I sure don't.

    MIT economist Lestor Thurow discussed a similar issue in last months Atlantic Monthly, where he published a long article on the "New Economy", and how it relates to the monopoly economies of the late nineteenth/early twentieth century. It's a well written and informative article, I encourage others to go to the library and check it out. Anyway, the point I'm pulling from this article is that there's a huge difference between someone who creates a new thing which generates real economic value in the traditional sense, and those who use differences in market evaluations of any arbitrary good across markets in order to generate a false profit through speculation.

    Of course, you're also under the false pretension that people act as rational buyers, which one look at a all the junk for sale at most supermarket checkout counters should dissuade you of such silly ideas.

    Huge wealth, unless it is taken by force, is evidence of a lot of people having received a lot of value, in their own opinion. How hard YOU judge the wealthy to have worked couldn't be more irrelevant.

    Or evidence that those buyers had no choice but to buy from a single source. In that event the monopoly holder must use a form of economic coercion to force buyers and choke out potential competition. This is a form of either gambling or graft and corruption, because such a situation cannot last forever in an economy which favors equilibrium through competition.

    Now, how does this relate to open competition, Free Software, and Steve Wozniack? There are plenty who have argued that the Free Software and Open Source model support competition through meritocracy. While this isn't the same as competition by price and service, it is a foundation for competition among the developers which creates a fitness function allowing for an evolutionary model of development. And how different is this from a traditional economic model, except that what's exchanged is not monetary tokens, but the value of peer support and recognition.

    And Woz most certainly deserves the recognition of his peers for having created many useful things, and also for having behaved responsibly in our community. His support of schools and children stands head and shoulders above anything of "value" the like of Bill Gates and Steve Jobs may have ever created over the course of their lives.

  91. Woz: A Compassionate Hacker by maynard · · Score: 5

    Just as Woz says:

    I designed the computers just to do it and show the world that it could be done and help them happen. Later Steve Jobs suggested starting a company to make money from it. I'd been giving out schematics for free at the Homebrew Computer Club. That's what I believed in. It was hard for me to even start the company when it looked like there might be real money in it.

    He is the proverbial compassionate hacker. He was perfectly happy to just give out the schematics, and found ethical dilemma in building a business which might turn into a serious money maker. This is no different from the likes of rms, Linus, Eric Raymond, Larry Wall, and the now very large number of people out creating such wonderful things as gnome and KDE, GIMP, Python, Apache, and the list just goes on.

    Doesn't it just blow your mind that this guy is out teaching high school instead of finding new ways to make himself richer? Don't you wish you could have been lucky enough tp have taken classes from this guy? He does these things because he enjoys the labor, and wants to help others enjoy the success of creating new things! What better lesson would you want your children to learn?

    That he made enough money to comfortably live in ease for the rest of his life may be blind luck -- but don't you think he deserves it more than Gates, Jobs, Ellison, and all the other blowhards who probably haven't written a line of code in 20 years?

    Woz is a man I can respect.

  92. Re:Old Woz stories - Correcting the correction by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1
    I recently read Infinite Loop, which is a great book on Apple's history, although there are a couple of factual errors. It also makes Jobs look like a total jerk, but that's no error.

    Anyhow, in sections 3.4 and 3.5 the story of Breakout is related. According to the author, Jobs was a technical moron; he could learn things rapidly if he needed to, but had only gotten the job with Atari by using the Woz's resume, more or less. The only reason he didn't lose his job was probably due to force of personality. And in designing Breakout, he puttered around during the day, then had the Woz come in at night (note that the Woz had a day job as well at this time!), fix Jobs' mistakes and then work on getting the board made.

    Eventually the Woz finished, and Jobs (who was thought by his bosses at Atari to have done the work single-handed) got a $7000 bonus. He told the Woz that it was only a $700 bonus, which they then split 50-50. The Woz ultimately got on $350 out of his rightful $3500 (or more).

    Where the book shines though, is in connecting this event to the creation of the Apple I. He says that the Intel 8080 was the microprocessor of choice at that time, especially after having been used in the Altair. Well, they were fairly pricey, and the Woz was somewhat familiar with the Motorola 6800, which was a little cheaper and perhaps easier to work with. But the 6502 was a knock-off version of the 6800 that sold for $20. The Woz went straight for it.

    So, one can imagine that if the Woz had had a few extra grand, he might have splurged on the Intel chip. And while I don't want to get into a debate over the relative merits of different chip families, it probably would have helped out Apple to have worked extensively with the Intel cpus, given that IBM started using them not too far down the line with their first desktop. Sure, no one could have forseen it, but still, it would probably have helped out Apple quite a bit.

    Anyway, it's a good book, and I heartily suggest it to people. But maybe get Where Wizards Stay Up Late to counter the depressing effect of Infinite Loop

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  93. Re:/.'d, give it a rest + evt drag&drop by dieman · · Score: 1

    Speaking of which, a pal back at work showed me a bit of a component library for VB. IMHO the concept was way cool. Now *nix is all about components laying around like legos in kids' rooms, but if we'd be able to provide a consistent visual interface for combining events, that would provide the end users with something useful


    Your describing GNOME :). take a look at it sometime! theres the control stuff, and some people are programming a kind of control-panel-ish type thing for system stuff.

    --
    -- dieman - Scott Dier
  94. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by Yakko · · Score: 1
    In the back of the Apple ][ Reference Manual, they published the source code for the system monitor.

    Had "S JOBS" at its head, afaik. . . I think both Steves wrote the monitor, tho...

    I had to suffice with the "What's Where" book.

    I'd love to have a copy of _What's Where in the Apple_ again... very nice reference.

    Lack of inner workings for the "PC" class of computers turned me off to hacking on it, as I was used to scraping the bare metal. Only now am I getting into programming again (Thank You, Linux!).

    --

    --

    --
    Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
  95. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by Yakko · · Score: 1
    1.What was did "20 ED FD" do?

    Printed a character via CSWL.CSWH (an indirect JMP to wherever $36.$37 pointed to, in fact, usually $FDF0)

    Disassembled, it's "JSR $FDED"

    2.What routine was at $FCA8?

    Waited an amount of time based on what was in the Accumulator. Forgot the quadratic equation for the wait time, but. . .

    3.What were the RESET interrupt vectors?

    $3F2.$3F3 is the actual place jumped to when CTRL-RESET is pressed. $3F4 is a checksum (EORd with $A5) of $3F3 that makes CTRL-RESET reboot if it's wrong.

    --

    --

    --
    Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
  96. Personality type? by cthonious · · Score: 2

    I would wager Woz is an INFP ... a rare type of person. He seems very cool, perhaps even uninterested in things unless he can give it an ethical purpose. I just kind of pick that up from him; the way he was uninterested in the business, and the fact that he teaches children now.

    I wonder what his take on OSS is.

    Stallman .. what do you think? INFJ? INTJ? INTP?

    --

    support gun control: take guns from cops
    1. Re:Personality type? by expunged · · Score: 1

      I feel so lonely in here... I'm an INTJ ;o)

      From what I remember, an INTJ is one of the most rare types... guess I should feel special after all.

      -nicole

    2. Re:Personality type? by Andrew+Gilmore · · Score: 1

      E/INFP... yep, I'll ring in as one more.

      Pretty cool to see us 5%ers posting.

      --
      ------ Nope, Not me, you can't prove I said that!
  97. Another Woz story... by John+Fulmer · · Score: 1

    The story goes that for the Apple ][, Woz wanted a floppy drive to go with it, instead of using cassette tapes. He was strongly discouraged, since everyone knew that floppy drives and controllers were really expensive, and would cost several times the cost of the Apple ][ sold for.

    He didn't listen and completely designed the first 5 1/4 floppy disk drive and controllers for personal computers . The reason he gave for his design, which was much faster and cheaper than anything previously available, was that he didn't know how to build a floppy drive, and didn't know that what he was doing was 'impossible'.

    I always think of this when I start any project. The way everyone else has always done it is not necessarily the best way.


    Note: I remember reading this in an A+ magazine some years ago. The only actual "proof" that I have is that the floppy chip in the Apple ][gs and most pre PowerPC Macs is called the IWM, or "Incredible Woz Machine", which he also designed.

    jf

    1. Re:Another Woz story... by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      Actually, the drive recalibration you refer to was pretty common amongst alot of floppy drives. Every hear a PC recal the drive when it can't read a sector? Brrr-RRRRt!

      The IWM (which I heard expanded to the "Incredible Woz Machine") was little more than a state-machine driven by some TTL gates and a PROM on the old Apple ]['s. (Somewhere in my vast collection of 'stuff', I have the schematics and PROM dump for upgrading from the 13-sector '5+3' format to the 16-sector '6+2' format.) But, it was a heck of a lot cheaper than the microcontroller-driven floppies of the day.

      One drawback, of course, is that your CPU had to run at exactly NTSC colorburst divided by 3.5 in order for it to work. The various CPU speedup chips that came later all slowed down to this speed (1.023MHz) when accessing the disk. :-)

      Another legend has it that the infernal Apple ][ memory map was much, much closer to being linear in the original design, but it required a couple more chips. Woz, interested in saving some $$, designed these chips out, introducing the world to the Venetian Blind fade effect so common in Apple ][ programs.

      Ahh, the memories come rushing back... I could babble for hours on the intricasies of the Apple ][ hardware (but I won't).

      --Joe

      --
    2. Re:Another Woz story... by firewood · · Score: 1

      Woz's original disk controller used only 5 off-the-shelf TTL chips and 1 ROM, no custom circuits. The IWM chip came several years later.

      Somewhere I have a copy of the original spec of the Mac and Apple IIe IWM disk controller chip. "IWM" stands for "Integrated Woz Machine". Two vendors developed prototypes of the chip from that specification, Synertek and AMI. The IWM spec was derived from a TTL prototype breadboard designed by Wendall Sander in early 1982.

  98. Coolest ever? by dpg · · Score: 1

    Coolest ever is a matter of opinion :)

    Bring back the Amiga.

    --
    daniel
    1. Re:Coolest ever? by amit_kr · · Score: 0

      hmmm... can't locate a way of posting a "root" comment :-(

      anyways, is it just me or is there a pun in the post? Rob posted his "commnts" that are linked to "commets.html"...

      hmmm....

      amit

  99. Apple II by fireproof · · Score: 1
    I remember learning typing in our school's lab -- we had several Apple IIs hanging around. I was so lazy, I coded Basic programs to help me complete whatever typing excercise we were doing at the time if I could . . .

    The teacher thought I was amazing. I told her that I had learned how to type coding on my dad's old Atari 800 (later 800XL) at home.

    Come to think of it, that actually IS how I ended up learning to type . . .

    --

    /* "A fool does not delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own mind." */

    1. Re:Apple II by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      Remember the magazines with the programs you'd type in? That was good typing practice. For not having any concept of the "home row" and other stuff you'd learn in a typing class (which I eventually took in high school, though I had already been pounding away at the keys for four or five years before that), I had gotten up a pretty good speed by keying in programs from magazines such as Nibble, Rainbow, and Hot CoCo. (Yes, I know the magazines are for different computers...Nibble was for the Apple IIe that my parents bought in '85, while the other two were for my grandfather's Color Computer that I used before then.)

      (The typing class used IBM Selectrics, though, instead of computers...kinda hard to cheat when you're using one of those. :-) )

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  100. Woz wrote Integer BASIC by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    Woz wrote Integer BASIC.

    Applesoft BASIC was written by Microsoft. Part of Apple's deal w/ MS was to rename the Microsoft basic to Applesoft. Dunno if they had to pay extra for that, but considering that most of the machines of the day had MS basic but few proclaimed "Microsoft" directly, this makes some amount of sense.

    --Joe

    --
  101. clarification, and FREE APPLE ][ TRIVIA! by Mr+Z · · Score: 1
    ...infernal Apple ][ memory map ...

    I meant, of course, the infernal Apple ][ display memory map, which was interleaved 3 or 4 different ways depending on which mode you were in.

    (And, there were 8-byte holes every 120 bytes that you could use for program variables. How nice.)

    Bonus Apple ][ command sequence trivia: What does THIS do? (Hint: Either Language Card or both sets of BASIC ROMs required.)

    ] INT
    > CALL -151
    * F666G
    !

    Or this?

    ] CALL -151
    * FAA6G

    --Joe

    --
  102. INFP/INTP by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    It'd be cool if he were INFP. Then we'd have something cool in common (aside from a love for hacking, that is).

    I'm INFP/INTP ... depending on mood or situation. More INTP in work matters, INFP in daily life.

    The confused can go to www.keirsey.com to be suitably enlightened. (Or, if you're into the more traditional Meyers-Briggs (sp?) tests, you can find out there too. I think there's a x-based version called xmbti, but I don't remember for sure.)

    --Joe

    --
  103. INFP/INTP by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

    It'd be cool if Woz were INFP. Then we'd have something cool in common (aside from a love for hacking, that is).

    I'm INFP/INTP ... depending on mood or situation. More INTP in work matters, INFP in daily life.

    The confused can go to www.keirsey.com to be suitably enlightened. (Or, if you're into the more traditional Meyers-Briggs (sp?) tests, you can find out there too. I think there's a x-based version called xmbti, but I don't remember for sure.)

    --Joe

    --
  104. Trivia Answers, and more Trivia! by Mr+Z · · Score: 1
    • F666G, w/ Integer BASIC enabled: Mini Assembler. You are correct.

    • FAA6G. You weren't sure whether I was in Integer or Applesoft BASIC. The prompt was an Applesoft BASIC prompt, although it doesn't matter. FAA6G reboots the Apple.

    And now some 6502 trivia... What does the hex sequence 2C 30 C0 assemble to, and what does that instruction do on an Apple ][?

    --Joe

    --
    1. Re:Trivia Answers, and more Trivia! by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      What does the hex sequence 2C 30 C0 assemble to, and what does that instruction do on an Apple II?

      BIT $C030, which pings the speaker.

      One neat trick was to turn the speaker on and off at a fast enough rate that the speaker cone couldn't move in/out all the way. This allowed you to change the volume. You could also use it to play digital-audio files with a fair amount of fidelity. (I wrote some code to do this...on a IIe, it played 8-bit mono audio sampled at 11.025 kHz, using just the upper 3 or 4 bits of each sample. I think it only took 73 bytes. Try writing anything useful in just 73 bytes on a more "modern" system. :-) )

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  105. Truth... by pqbon · · Score: 1

    I have a friend (a family friend) who is very important at Mac World. He regularly gets yelled at by steve jobs when MW publishes i'll towards apple. I have heard from friends of lisa (she grew up with some of my friends from school...) that he can be a jerk (although all kids think their parents can be jerks.) From every romur/story I have heard steve jobs is a jerk and woz is a hacker in the MIT sence of the word.


    "There is no spoon" - Neo, The Matrix
    "SPOOOOOOOOON!" - The Tick, The Tick

  106. woz is so cool.. by DarkClown · · Score: 1

    i remember in the very early eighties when the only online community i participated in was 'the source' and people were using this apple II program called locksmith to un-copyprotect apps and trade them - he wrote in to some journal about how he favored such practice, as it led to people learning about decryption and whatnot. these days (as back then) i purchase apps that are used for mission critical purpose that have have a license that dictate that this is the Only Legal Way, but increasingly i find this isn't the case. the mission critical apps are more and more open. beer and a shot for everyone!

  107. People in glass houses by SimonK · · Score: 2

    There is a difference between economics the sort-of-science and the normative interpretation of capitalism you are relying on to disparage people.

    Economics says nothing about whether people deserve their wealth or whether they have any control over other people's. It is a science, and therefore makes no value judgements. It is not a very good science either, and therefore does not seem like a good basis for your morality.

    Nice to see you've got a good persecution complex going there as well. Your post is a +1, insightful, which I have to say is not where I would have put it, since it has no relevance. Give it a few years and you'll be joining the libertarian party, reading Ayn Rand and being beseiged by the FBI in some compound in Montana.

    To get back to the subject in hand, Economics says nothing about whether people 'deserve' their wealth. It most certainly does not say that people's wealth corresponds to 'how much value they've provided' (which incidentally is pretty close to being as daft as saying it corresponds to how hard they've worked). Thats a conclusion you can only reach by assuming all markets are perfect, which they domonstrably are not, and that people judge value correctly, which the do not.

    The economic system, and most especially the stock market by means of which most fabulously rich people get that way, is a human construct, and as such we can change it. If we want to change so people are rewarded for working hard, so be it. Personally I don't, but I can see the appeal of the idea.

  108. /.'d, give it a rest + evt drag&drop by korpiq · · Score: 1

    His hose is seemingly full of us by now :I
    Shall we give it a rest?

    Shame, I was hoping to find out what he's up to now except for the teaching and stuff. Would he like to do something for free software movement for instance?

    Speaking of which, a pal back at work showed me a bit of a component library for VB. IMHO the concept was way cool. Now *nix is all about components laying around like legos in kids' rooms, but if we'd be able to provide a consistent visual interface for combining events, that would provide the end users with something useful.

    I got the idea from the festival speech synthesizer I installed today. If there was an easy way for lusers to combine such events as arriving email with noisy notifications, that'd wake up some stir about what *nix can do for you on the desktop.

    Required would be a linuxconf-style centralized event control panel with interfaces to such things as procmailrc, crontab, irc client, write (yes, the command), widget sets (add a visual widget builder), A/V players and speech synthesizers. Let people connect signals to responses with drag&drop. Add a, say, XML RPC service for remote connections and you'd get something a perl kiddie can build any day, just finally available for the average luser.

    Gosh. Maybe I'll just sign in for KDE one of these nights...

    --

    I think, therefore thoughts exist. Ego is just an impression.
  109. Check them out... by Tuor · · Score: 1

    Woz's comments are very good! I agree, Woz seems to be one of the coolest people, and he is shown well in the movie. It's good to see him get some recognition.

    We must form a "WozClub" :-) Of course I submitted this last night... no hard feelings. Just want my 2p. :-)

    --
    I love my computer -- You make me feel alright (Bad Religion)
  110. Re:It was related to Quicktime... by VValdo · · Score: 1

    I recall reading on Slashdot maybe a year back that the 150 million deal was an under-the-table type agreement having to do with a Quicktime-related lawsuit Apple was going to file (or had filed).

    If I remember right, it had to do with either quicktime code appearing in microsoft products, or maybe something about microsoft making it so that quicktime movies wouldn't play well in Windows...

    Anyone know the exact deal?
    W

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    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  111. Woz inventions...like ClearText? by VValdo · · Score: 1
    they didn't really say much of anything about his technical innovations.

    Like remember six months ago when Microsoft was puffing itself up over that "font smoothing" technology it "invented" called (I think) ClearText...

    I haven't heard anything about it since it was pointed out on SlashDot that "prior art" existed using the same technique years earlier on the Apple II...

    And let's see... who invented it first?
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    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  112. Copy ][+ by VValdo · · Score: 1

    Of course! Shoulda been on my list...

    That thing could copy ANYTHING... and fast!

    Now who remembers Caztle Smurfenstein?

    Or Dung Beetles? ("We Gotcha!")

    W
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    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  113. Thanks Woz! by VValdo · · Score: 3

    Haven't seen _Pirates_ yet, but just wanna reminisce just 1 sec about the late 70s/early 80s, being about 10 years old, using my friend's Apple II, and knowing my life would never be the same. I'd later get a Franklin Ace 1000 (Apple II clone w/lower case & 64k!!) and that was it, I was hooked. Jobs may have been running the business, but to us kids "Woz" WAS Apple.

    Woz had an attitude which, I can't fully say how, sublimated itself into my young conciousness. He was a cool, almost fatherly role model who set an example of what it meant to do the "Right Thing"... A crazy, bearded silicon Jedi Knight, a Wizard...I'll never forget going to the computer store to check out the IIgs "Woz" limited edition and seeing his handwriting...thinking "how cool!"

    Oh, and YES, who can forget (in no particular order) Locksmith, Dalton's Disk Disintigrator, The Beagle Bros., H-Wings in Sneakers, The Novation Apple Cat, Castle Wolfenstein, 80-column cards, GBBS, Ruski Duck, Cat-Fur, G-files, Space Eggs, The Wizard and the Princess, peeks & pokes, "cracked by" splash screens, Ascii Express, Lemonade Stand in lo-res, call -151, 300/202/212, tape drives... ah, those were the days.

    Thanks Woz!
    W

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    --
    -------------------
    This is my SIG. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    1. Re:Thanks Woz! by richnut · · Score: 1

      I used Copy ][+, Locksmith and Disk mucher. :-)

      Man that was a fun computer. The Big Iron guys out there can talk about toggling in assembly code on the front panel and making IBM 360's draw pictures with the lights on the console, but just as cool IMHO was us 9 and 10 year old kids writing BASIC code on the only computer in our school durring our lunch breaks. Using nibble editors to ..uhm... backup software, playing all those cool MECC games.... what a fun time.

      -Rich

    2. Re:Thanks Woz! by Grimoire · · Score: 1

      Am I the only one who used Copy ][ Plus?

      And who can forget Moonpatrol (Pig-DOS no less!)

      --
      To misquote Churchill, never has an operating system (FreeBSD) used by so many been administered by so few. - NetCraft
    3. Re:Thanks Woz! by MrSparkle · · Score: 1

      You forgot the biggest one of all:

      Eaglesoft.

      Brought to you by the U.S. Postal service

      Jesse

  114. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by Croaker · · Score: 1
    iPS. Can anyone else think of a another M$-developed product that was burned into ROM?

    Well, there's the aptly-named WinCE, the early versions of which were ROM, rather than flashable. I'm not sure if whatever Microsoft wrote for the... (Altair? I've gotten my early PC history mixed-up, I think) was ROM or just paper tape or disk.

  115. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by Croaker · · Score: 1
    PS. Can anyone else think of a another M$-developed product that was burned into ROM?

    Well, there's the aptly-named WinCE, the early versions of which were ROM, rather than flashable. I'm not sure if whatever Microsoft wrote for the... (Altair? I've gotten my early PC history mixed-up, I think) was ROM or just paper tape or disk.

  116. Re:The show is right... Woz really is the sh*t by Alex+Zepeda · · Score: 1

    Wow, this whole thing makes me want to go out and buy either an iMac or one of those nifty new B&C G3s (alas I don't have that kind of money). 'Course I almost feel bad having this Mac SE in the corner. If only Woz (or anyone for that matter) was charitable enough to donate some RAM, a mouse, and a floppy drive...

    As much as everyone but Woz and Balmer were portrayed as jerks, at least Jobs was a jerk with flair (and Balmer a thick necked moron with a sticky stack of Playboys).

    --
    The revolution will be mocked
  117. Re:Pirates Comic by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2


    Pretty good Linux advocacy parody!
    --

    --
    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  118. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2


    Microsoft Multiplan for the TI 99/4A on cartridge.

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    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  119. Not exactly "burned into the ROM" by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2


    Microsoft also made a 8080 card for the Apple II that allowed you to run CP/M. That and the old Bus Mouse adaptor card is the only internal MS hardware I know of.
    --

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    Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
  120. yet another slashdotted site. by eshefer · · Score: 1

    Yes,

    history in the making: Slashdot users crash Steve Wosniak site.. :-|

    Maybe rob will be the pirate in the sequal.. :-)

    (can anyone mirror the thing, or post it as a comment?)
    --------------------------------
    ( my music)

    1. Re:yet another slashdotted site. by delmoi · · Score: 0

      nothing is worse then MacOs, nothing

      (exsept maybe windows 3.1....)
      _
      "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

      --

      ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  121. the Beagle Bros.. by eshefer · · Score: 1

    ahh the memories come back too me..

    the peeks and pokes the one line BASIC programs.. ahhh.

    Anyone know who exactly were the Beagle Bros, btw?
    --------------------------------
    ( my music)

  122. Re:Old Woz stories - Correcting the correction by A+Big+Gnu+Thrush · · Score: 2

    I guess we'll all know who's a MacBigot now...

    Quoting from my copy of "The Mac Bathroom Reader" (now renamed "Apple Confidential" by Owen Linzmayer:

    "I was on a plane going to a user group club in Fort Lauderdale to promote the Mac, along with some other members of the Mac team," recalls Wozniak. "Andy Hertzfield had just read Zap, a book about Atari which said that Steve Jobs designed Breakout. I explained to him that we both worked on it and got paid $700. Andy corrected me, 'No, it says here it was $5,000.' When I read in the book how Nolan Bushnell actually paid Steve $5,000, I just cried."

    I don't doubt this story for an instant, but still, it's apocryphal at best. The fact that it has been butchered so many times in so many ways says a lot. It's like all of those quotes that have been attributed to Bill Gates ( e.g. "No one will ever need more than 640k" ).

    What kind of authority is Zap! anyway?

  123. Spelling by UnkyHerb · · Score: 1

    I just noticed something wierd, comments was mispelled "commnts" and the name of the file its linked to is spelled commets. Something weird there, or am I being paranoid. Anyway, do I get brownie points for pointing out this oddity, or just flamed?

    --
    Your Momma's so fat she makes emacs look like nano!
  124. Slashdotted? by Spud+Zeppelin · · Score: 1

    It looks like woz.org is down this morning... hmmm... did we /. the woz himself?





    This is my opinion and my opinion only. Incidentally, IANAL.

    --

    MOO;IANAL.
    There used to be a picture linked here.

  125. Not in PA by kabrakan · · Score: 1

    Thats not ture for(most) Pennsylvania residents! Nope, good ol' Microsoft paid off the state 20 million dollars so public schools can be filled with wintels! We use an advanced NT network that is always stable for us pupils!(sarcasm but got the facts straight note).

    --
    Slartibartfast:"Is that your robot?"
    Marvin:"No, I'm mine."
    1. Re:Not in PA by ivan_13013 · · Score: 1

      This is really ridiculous. I don't understand why the parents and administrators aren't outraged that MS is using programs like this to ensure their monopoly -- by keeping kids from learning about "computers" in favor of learning about "Windows". And they get a tax cut for the SOFTWARE LICENSES they donated, too, I bet.

      Don't get me wrong, I think corporations like MS supporting education is great. But MS assisting with rollouts of Microsoft-product-only facilities is not the right way to teach our children about computer technology. Microsoft products do as much as they can to hide the underlying technology, and almost all of them run on only Microsoft operating systems. I'm in favor of kids being able to learn about Microsoft products in schools -- they may need that knowledge! But they shouldn't be taught that Microsoft=computing.

  126. MECC Software: Was: Re:Thanks Woz! by BeBoxer · · Score: 1

    Ahhh, good old MECC software. Would you belive that when I was a young one I got paid to dupe MECC software? It was all on the up and up. My mom used to work for a place called The Learning Exchange, and we would make copies of the MECC software for local schools, helping to keep costs down for MECC and the schools. He he, I had an Apple IIe with 11 disk drives on it. One drive for the master, 10 drives for the 10 disks on a box of floppies. I'm amazed it didn't catch on fire or something. It could only write to one drive at a time, of course. But by having 10 drives, I could be opening a new box of blank floppies, feeding them into the drives, pulling the copies out, putting labels on them, putting them back in the box, and labeling the box, while the program was making copies on other disks. Those were the days.

  127. You have to wonder... by grappler · · Score: 2

    If Wozniak and RMS would get along well. Both are brilliant, and both have made incredible contributions to the field of computer technology. Both dislike suits that are in it for greed. But Woz is like a more docile, fun loving version or RMS.

    RMS: "ALL SOFTWARE MUST BE FREE FOR EVERYBODY OR I WILL BE (am) ONE VERY UNHAPPY CAMPER. IF YOU'RE NOT WITH US, YOU'RE AGAINST US!!!"

    Woz: "Wow! This is cool! What would happen if i tried doing this? Neat! Heay, come check this out! What would be a cool practical joke I could pull off using this?..."

    --
    Vidi, Vici, Veni
  128. Re: What the hell is this? by webslacker · · Score: 1

    Haw haw, you're joking, right? You're not serious about loving Microsoft, are you?

  129. Re: You're both a little wrong by webslacker · · Score: 2

    Steve Jobs got an assignment from Atari to design the circuitry for the sequel to Pong, which would be called Breakout. After a while, Jobs decided he was in over his head, so he asked his friend Woz to help him finish. Jobs told Woz that if they could design it with less than 50 chips, they'd get $700, and if they could design it with less than 40 chips, they'd get $1000. After four days of work, they got it down to 42 and decided sleep was more important than the 300 extra bucks they would've gotten. Jobs turned in Breakout, and wrote Woz a check for his half of the $700.

    It wasn't until 1984 that someone showed Woz a chapter in Zap! (a book about Atari) where Steve Jobs got credited for making Breakout. Woz explained to the guy that he and Jobs worked on it together and they got paid $700. The guy says no, it says right here in the book that it was for $5000.

  130. Re: Nope. by webslacker · · Score: 2

    The quicktime lawsuit was settled beforehand for an undisclosed sum. People estimate it at $400 million, but that's just speculation.

  131. Also check this out by webslacker · · Score: 3
  132. Re: Contract doesn't expire in 2001 by webslacker · · Score: 3

    AFAIK, the commitment was that for 5 years, Microsoft would publish Office for Mac on parity with Office for Windows. Since the commitment was made in 1997, it follows that it'll expire in 2002. And yeah, I also wonder what'll happen after that...

  133. MS doesn't really "own" a part of Apple by Maktoo · · Score: 1

    This is the one thing that really seems to be coming out of PSV that is completely untrue. When Steve Jobs and Bill Gates announced, two years ago, that Microsoft would be investing $150 million in Apple it wasn't a "buy out". It's only an investment. A deal signed by the two companies for mutual gain.

    Apple got a commitment from Microsoft for developement of their products (mainly Office)for the Mac platform. Since then, Microsoft has created a completely seperate division especially for development of Mac products (which is why the Office release dates between Mac/Win are not simultaneous). They also got the monetary boost of Microsoft investing $150 million in their stock... remember, Apple Computer has Billions in the bank, so it's not like MS bought up half the company.

    In turn Microsoft got the assurance from Apple that they would not sue MS (for millions) for infringment on any patents (GUI or whatever). It was very much a mutually benefinial contract, some say (including myself) that it was a MUST for Apple to get but I think that MS is still better for it as well.

    That contract expires in 2000 or 2001 I believe so it should be interesting to see what happens then.

    Pheww... just thought I'd clear that up as best I could ;=)

    1. Re:MS doesn't really "own" a part of Apple by shadrack · · Score: 1

      Similar situation with Borland. MS was on the verge of even more legal trouble. So they bought their way out of it.

    2. Re:MS doesn't really "own" a part of Apple by Lucius+Lucanius · · Score: 1

      The key point is that it was non-voting stock. Essentially, it was a symbolic gesture that underlined the new relationship.

      150 m. is pocket change to MS, with 12 (or is it 15 now?) billion in surplus liquid cash reserve. It's not that big an infusion of capital for Apple either, though it was making a loss at the time, so it certainly helped.

      It helped Apple tremendously more as a gesture from MS of "we are now behind them and won't let them fail".

      Of course, if Apple had gone bankrupt, I suspect Bill would be pretty pissed off at throwing all that money away. :)

      L.

  134. Nice by Straker+Skunk · · Score: 2

    Wow... for someone who had such a big part in personal-computer history, he sure looks like a pretty down-to-earth guy.

    Of course, with a name like Woz, you just can't help but be lovable :-) I, for one, can attest to having encountered a great many hamsters named after him.

    P.S.: Sharp-looking site, too!

    --
    iSKUNK!
  135. Re: Contract doesn't expire in 2001 by Anonymous+Freak · · Score: 1

    Of course, Microsoft DOES own a part of Apple, so it would at least be wise for them to make SOME effort in keeping it alive. (Especially since it's the only reason MS hasn't been dismantled by the FTC.)

    --
    Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
    The purpose of that site was not known.
  136. Re:I hate to demean the guy by Tardigrade · · Score: 1

    No you're not. But he seems to be considerably less full of himself than Gates or Jobs. At least he seems to be honest. Wouldn't you also say something similar if he was completely humble? It's probably a good compromise between being humble and egotistical.

  137. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Evro · · Score: 1
    You gotta respect a guy who single-handedly did so much to start the microcomputer industry. He made the computer *and* wrote the BASIC...

    Do you mean invent BASIC for the Apple? BASIC was invented at Dartmouth by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurtz.

    -----BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH-----
    Blah.

    --
    rooooar
  138. This is more readable if you view source.. by Evro · · Score: 1
    This is more readable if you view source. At least it is for me. I'm not good with huge blocks of text.

    I find it sad that Woz acknowledges that Jobs really is that much of an asshole. I had just chalked it up to Hollywood exaggeration.

    He was such a jerk that my girlfriend, when the movie was finished, said "I'm never going to buy another Mac again!" I laughed and said, "What do you mean another Mac?", to which she replied, "Well, I'm glad I just threw that one out!" (referring to the old Mac Classic she trashed last week).

    -----BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH-----
    Blah.

    --
    rooooar
    1. Re:This is more readable if you view source.. by Evro · · Score: 1
      hey, I wasn't complaining. Just offering some advice. Thanks for the service!

      -----BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH-----
      Blah.

      --
      rooooar
    2. Re:This is more readable if you view source.. by delmoi · · Score: 1

      next time, try posting as plain text, or using the tag.... if its avaliable....
      _
      "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

      --

      ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    3. Re:This is more readable if you view source.. by Didel · · Score: 1

      yeah, sorry about the readability issue, but I figured, better than nothing.

  139. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Evro · · Score: 1
    Well, I don't know what you're trying to say. He might have written BASIC for the Apple. I am saying that he did not invent BASIC, which is what I thought you were trying to say. If that is not what you were trying to say, I apologize. If you ARE trying to say that he invented BASIC, you're wrong.

    Here is one source. Search for basic.
    http://www.irn.pdx.edu/~ke rlinb/myresearch/timeline.html

    Like I said before, if I am misunderstanding you, I apologize.

    -----BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH BLAH-----
    Blah.

    --
    rooooar
  140. You had an Imsai. by AJWM · · Score: 2

    You're misremembering.

    The MITS Altair (the original) had the metal toggle switches. The one with the red and blue plastic switches (which I thought looked cooler, because they looked like the switches on the front of a PDP-8 or PDP-11) was the Imsai, a different company. (And perhaps the first microcomputer "clone", being essentially the same as the Altair behind the front panel.)

    (And having toggled my share of PDP-8 and PDP-11 programs in through the front panel, I'd guess that the Imsai was easier to program -- less wear and tear on the fingertips than those metal toggle switches! :-)

    --
    -- Alastair
  141. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Aliera · · Score: 1
    Sonny, I'm 40, and I'd bet I was using computers before you were weaned. I learned about computers from my father, who saw his first compiler in 1959 or so, and thought it was for wimps, because REAL programmers wrote in assembler. We had an Altair (IMSAI?) 8080.

    Let me offer you a hint: How old do you think Engelbart is now? Wozniak? Vint Cerf? Dennis Ritchie?

    Explosive growth in computing began more than 20 years ago. Many of the people telling war stories here are over 30, over 40, and, yes, over 50. We may not be a majority of our generations, but we damned well exist.

    Random Old Fart question: There's a content-free Microsoft-underwritten travelling "history of video games" exhibition, currently at the Charlotte Discover Place museum. My husband and I wandered down memory lane, checking out the Osbornes, Apples, and Ataris. The Altair 8080 brought me up short because the toggle switches on the front were metal. I remember my father's 8080 having red and blue plastic switches -- the owner got to choose whether to assemble them in octal or hexadecimal groups. Am I misremembering, or did we have an Altair 8080 Mark II or something like that? (Long gone, alas.)

  142. Re:Pirates Comic by rm+-rf+/etc/* · · Score: 1

    Totally. I couldn't stop laughing, and it wasn't really because the comics were funny (well, not in the way you expect comics to be funny...)

  143. Re:cleartype by BedPanDan · · Score: 1

    Actually, the thing that's been available for windows for a long time is a technique called anti-aliasing, which is just bluring the edges of something to make it look smoother. The technique M$ is now taking credit for is a sub-pixel technique. It's too complicated to go into detail about, but if you had read the website that was listed, you would already understand. Please thing before posting next time...

  144. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Upsilon · · Score: 1

    "I remember a quote from one of the head Intel guys saying the only use they could think of for a personal computer was for a woman to store her recipes on."

    Isn't that about all most people do with their computers anyway?

    --
    I am not an idiot. Please use my name to email me.

    "That's right, I'm quoting myself."

    -Upsilon

  145. Temp Mirror by digitac · · Score: 3

    I see the woz.org has been slashdotted. So I've posted a mirror at
    http://www.discover.net/~still/
    No images, just the important stuff. I expect woz.org to be back up soon.

    Jonathan
    --------
    The day Microsoft makes something that doesn't suck is the day they start making vacuum cleaners.

  146. The actor who played Woz by tdm8 · · Score: 1

    Just in case it was driving anyone else crazy trying to figure out who that actor was (it was hard to tell with the glasses, beard, and makeup), I finally figured out it was the character Sam from "The Single Guy," the sitcom of a couple years ago.

  147. yes by delmoi · · Score: 0

    yes

    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  148. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by delmoi · · Score: 1

    well, I certanly plan to be using a computer untill I die, (I don't know if I'd *want* to live without one :). I think the first poster was talking about babie boomers. They didn't grow up with them, and they don't relize how cool they really are.(although they are getting on the web more, I think 40% of AOL users use there computers for nothing but )

    These are the same people who want to cencor the internet, unfortunetly....
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  149. Or Ames, Iowa by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Well, that sounds a lot better then ames highschool (the same place neil stephonson went, btw) and our ~300 node Multiuser network based on Mac0s. yep, mac clients, mac servers. it was hell.

    The system loaded all your files the first time you logged on. it was great unless you had more then a couple hundred k of stuff, I was in a Media Art Class, and I had 24 megs of video stuff to load each time, it took 7 minutes...

    The people running it were amazingly stupid. at the begning of the year they had a 3 gigs of storage... for 1700 students. it overflowed in about a week, and it didn't do it gracefully ether (it randomly deleted files)

    One time, near the end of the first semester, the program that loaded all my files from the server crashed on me, and created an empty directory where My files should have been ('User Work') when I loged out, it resored *that* so I lost all my files.

    they wern't doing backups

    at least NT has *some* multiuser features, but really you can't try and do it without using a true multi user OS... it just shouldn't be done...
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  150. Woz == the man by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Actualy, he teaches Elemetary school, out of his garage, and pays for the employment of a few teachers with the little money that he does have(well, I wouldn't call it *little*, at least not for me...)

    he does teach on Macs and AOL, though.

    he also is one of the best tetris players in the world, Nintendo Power had to stop taking his name, after he consistanly trounced the compition...

    They had a pretty big artical about him in a recent issue of wired. He was, and still is, the man :)


    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  151. don't you mean 31337? by delmoi · · Score: 1

    /\/\IcRoSoFt Rul3s d00dz!!
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  152. minor clarification by delmoi · · Score: 1

    he dosn't actualy teach a whole elementary school, its a summer program with the local school district, or somthing

    he volenteres at the school, and pays for a few other teachers out of his own pockets. he pays for all of this

    he's not exactly a poor guy...
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  153. PARC by delmoi · · Score: 1

    Jobs didn't do anything with parc other then steal there ideas (although the GUI idea came from douglass egalbart(sp?), who wanted it to be widely used anyway...)
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
    1. Re:PARC by Lucius+Lucanius · · Score: 1

      Engelbart's unfinished revolution:

      Check this out for Engelbart's inventions and the history of GUI, the first mouse, and multimedia.

      http://unrev.stanford.edu/

      While he was at it, he also created a hypertext browser, groupware, live 2-way video-conferencing, and joint document editing. It's simply mind-boggling that he did all this single-handedly in 1968, and simply sad that he's unrecognized today.

      L.


  154. cleartype by delmoi · · Score: 1

    um, Its just some font smoothing, dosn't look *that* cool, and I think its been out for quite a while... actualy it's been availible for windows for a long time (and it looks really cool)
    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  155. well, it is all true by delmoi · · Score: 1

    I was a little surprized to read that as well (woz's comments). Althought not prevelent in american culture as much in others, Humblness is still common. Most people let other talk about how great they are, but don't mention it themselves... but nothing he says is inacurete, Its all true, and he *is* the man : )


    _
    "Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"

    --

    ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
  156. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by extrasolar · · Score: 1
    No, he ****wrote**** the BASIC. At least I think. Did he write the Integer BASIC? I thought Microsoft wrote Applesoft BASIC.

    --

  157. I hate to demean the guy by extrasolar · · Score: 1
    Am I the only one who sees Woz as a little full of himself judgeing by his web page?

    --

    1. Re:I hate to demean the guy by mrpacmanjel · · Score: 1

      He has every right to be 'full of himself'.

      Steve Jobs has always been perceived as 'the guy that made Apple computers' and obviously benefitted from it.

      Microsoft and Intel dominate the industry with inferior technology.

      Woz's role has been marginialised to the point of irrelevance.

      If I was in a similar postition I would feel the same.

    2. Re:I hate to demean the guy by lowflying1 · · Score: 1

      I can understand how just reading the text of a website makes could make Woz come across this way. Text always has a way of allowing multiple interpretations.

      I had the opportunity to meet Mr. Wozniak at the MacHack a couple of years ago when he was the keynote speaker. He is anything but full of himself.

      Dave
      His big concern during his stay at the conference was that he didn't have the credentials or credibility to be giving the keynote. It was amazing to watch a couple of the organizers out in the hallway, moments before he was to speak, explaining to him that he was the most qualified person they had ever had as keynote. After they had convinced him that the people he was about to speak to considered him a hero/god, his concern shifted to, "how can I meet that expectation, I'm going to disappoint them."

      In person, he is soft-spoken and unassuming, and he was clearly uncomfortable with the hero-worship that was going on. He is just very matter of fact about what he has done, and he has done some incredibly amazing things.

  158. yes but can an by floopy · · Score: 1

    apple II run linux??? imagine a beowulf cluster!!!

    ...
    drool


    sorry, couldn't resist it :)

  159. Re:Kevin Murphy Scale? by BNL+Psycho · · Score: 1
    Isn't that the weird guy from the Don and Mike radio show?

    I really really miss that show. Those guys are great.
    -------------------------------------

  160. Re: Schools STILL use Apple2's by Dino-Bob · · Score: 1

    I'm afraid to tell you school systems (at least Virginia schools) still do use Apple II's... Yes, wheeled around on a cart. You wouldn't expect the school system to keep on top of technology, would you?

    --
    "There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts." -- Cecil Adams
  161. Re:Something I cannot agree (now off-topic) by mhm23x3 · · Score: 1
    Atheists For Jesus, for those who like Jesus but not the "belief in God"

    Illogical. Jesus claimed to be God. If God does not exist, Jesus is either a liar or nuts.

    --

    No sig.

  162. About multi-*illionaires by mhm23x3 · · Score: 2

    People who make their own fortunes do work extremely hard. They eat, drink, breathe, and sleep their business. They work 24/7 and take naps in their rented offices. It is a specific personality type.

    There is a reason why Bill Gates stays constantly busy running Microsoft, even though most of us, with his money, would buy a gigantic compound outside of a major city, have it networked with 1000-or-so top-of-the-line workstations, and hold a non-stop LAN party for the rest of eternity (well, at least, that's what I would do). It's not because he wants to get richer. It's because doing work, building businesses, etc. is what people with a personality like Gates' live for.

    I'm not justifying his riches, just explaining how you get to be worth $50B

    --

    No sig.

  163. Gerald is totally e1ite! by garyrich · · Score: 1

    That's it, I'm sending a resume to Micorsoft.

    --
    -- your Web browser is Ronald Reagan
  164. s/Microsoft/Micorsoft by nmarshall · · Score: 1

    do YOU see the diffrents?

    nmarshall
    #include "standard_disclaimer.h"
    R.U. SIRIUS: THE ONLY POSSIBLE RESPONSE

    --
    nmarshall

    The law is that which it boldly asserted and plausibly maintained..
    --Colonel Burr 1783
  165. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by Zhaus · · Score: 1

    Commodore's BASIC was a Microsoft product.

  166. Apple I by fremen · · Score: 4

    Did anyone see this? This was buried a little more deeply on his page, and refers to the auction of the first Apple I.


    WOZ: I wanted to give the first Apple I, on a PC board, to Liza LO*OP of the LO*OP Center in Cotati, California. I took Steve [Jobs] up there and she showed us how she rolled a PDP-11 around to elementary schools and told the students how a computer was just a collection of programs written by people and didn't have a mind of it's own. 4th through 6th graders. I admired this and wanted to give her the first one. Jobs actually made me buy it, if you can believe that, for $300. I did and gave it to Liza. The one being advertised must be number 2.


    This is very interesting. I wonder if the auction house realizes that it isn't selling the original Apple I like they claim? Supposedly, Jobs had identified it as being authentic, so I guess Woz disagrees. Hmmmm...

  167. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Pont · · Score: 1

    Bachelor pasta:

    Cheese, Pasta you made last night **and remembered to put in the refrigerator**, soy sauce, olive oil or butter or margarine.

    Put some olive oil in a pan and heat it up a little bit. Plunk the pasta in the pan and stir it occaisonally. Make sure to let some parts get nice and crispy. Add more olive oil as needed to keep it from drying out. When all the pasta is hot enough to kill anything that might have grown in it since you made it, start grating cheese directly onto the pasta in the pan, turn off the heat, then continue adding cheese. If it's a non-stick pan you can stir it up to melt the cheese faster. Finally, add the soy sauce, but not too much.


    I have no idea why I wrote that. I think that's the "recipe" that stunned my wife when she first tasted it. Of course, her Masala Dosa completely blew me off my feet. She's American and she does use recipes, luckily.
    --
    "I got it running, grabbed a rocket launcher, and fired down a hallway." --John Carmack

  168. M$ prod in ROM by Cris+E · · Score: 1
    I've got an old Toshiba T1000 laptop on a shelf here with DOS 2.x in ROM. Of course, with the 8x40 screen it doesn't get the use it did years ago...

    Cris E
    St Paul, MN

  169. Wow, Woz by Myshkin · · Score: 1

    I have never been a mac person, so while knowing who woz was, I never knew much more about the man. After seeing the movie (I've not seen any mention of notable innacuracies with regards to Woz.) I am rather impressed. I'm only posting out of respect but *gratitude* as well. Wow!

    We have here a guy who actually had in hand 'all the money'. Someone who had in fact 'made it'. What did he do? Distributed it among the deserving by sharing his stock with those original employees who had no stocks at all. Wether or not he said it, the line from the movie 'I don't think rich' impressed me. And, wether it was said or not, Woz walked the talk.

    I think to myself, if woz had made an amount like what bill has made, I would have no problem with it. I would feel good about contributing to a fortune founded on integrity. That is what our economy is supposed to be about. Value, inginuity, integrity.

    To woz himself, I would say, "Thank you, and well done. Your work has put all of us in a place farther along than we would have otherwise been. Kudos.

  170. 6502 programmers by musique · · Score: 1

    Boy, as an ex-6502 programmer (Atari 8-bit, for fun only:), I think it would be pretty damned difficult to port a multiprogramming OS to the 6502.

    1. 64K maximum address space (apple ][ had up to 128K, paged I assume--Atari had Fredie).
    2. 1 8-bit general purpose register
    3. 2 8-bit index registers
    4. A 256 byte stack fixed at locations 256-511
    5. No memory paging (only external paging).
    6. No indirect addressing (only indirect+index)
    7. A bug that if a jump address was on a 256 byte boundary, that the first byte and second byte were taken from the same page (can't remember which jump, though).
    8. 1MHz
    9. One interrupt level
    10. One 8-bit IO port

    Now, imagine trying to port Linux to that!

  171. Re:Something I cannot agree (now off-topic) by lostguy · · Score: 1

    Given that the earliest book of the New Testament was written fifty years after his death, I think a misquote is pretty darned likely. :-)

  172. I named my hard drive "Woz" a long time ago by stew1 · · Score: 1

    Bill Gates has said that he's going to give away most of his fortune. $90 billion is a pretty good chunk of change and should be able to affect some change for the better in our world (NOT stuff like giving away Wintels to libraries; more like his donations to those immunization efforts).

    Still... It's hard to think of a high profile person who embodies the word "charitable" more than Woz. He's like the Giving Tree.

    Also, some people kind of pooh-pooh his technical innovations. Well, last year Microsoft unveiled an imaging technology that was supposed to increase the readability of text on LCD screens dramatically. Believe it or not, Woz invented the same technique just a few years before them. Read it and you will understand why Woz is a genuine wizard.

    http://grc.com/cleartype.htm


    Jon

  173. Re:'im just a humble guy with my own domain name' by stew1 · · Score: 1

    Actually, that kind of annoyed me a little, too. Still, it's mind-boggling when you think of everything he's done, and he's mostly written off. And although the movie made him out to be a good guy, they didn't really say much of anything about his technical innovations. I think that maybe peeved him a little. Credit's due where credit's due.

    Jon

  174. Re:Old Woz stories - Correcting the correction by stew1 · · Score: 1

    Really? I coulda' sworn it was over the HP calculator. But you've got a paper source and a direct quote and I can't remember where I saw the interview, so I'll trust you over my cobwebbed brain. Dankesch:on.

    Jon

  175. Woz: a hacker's hacker by Sun+Tzu · · Score: 1

    You gotta respect a guy who single-handedly did so much to start the microcomputer industry. He made the computer *and* wrote the BASIC...

    Still, to me, the most amazing story from Woz history is that HP wasn't interested in his computer design -- reportedly because he wasn't an engineer. I guess Apple's early success says a great deal about Woz and HP.

    1. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by Coward,+Anonymous · · Score: 1

      HP wasn't interested in his computer design because it was a home computer and nobody used computers in their home at the time, only businesses used computers. It was like proposing a home forklift. There were a few geeks with computers, but they represented an insignificant part of the population, and they had them for the cool factor, not because there were many useful things they could do with them. Even the executives at Intel couldn't imagine that people would want to use computers in their homes. I remember a quote from one of the head Intel guys saying the only use they could think of for a personal computer was for a woman to store her recipes on.

      It's tough now to think of a world without computers, but it wasn't too long ago when nobody owned a computer. As they say, hindsight is always 20/20.

    2. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by chaosgrrl · · Score: 1

      I hear yah, Aliera!

      When I was a kid my dad had an IMSAI 8080 which we later got rid of and got an IMSAI VDP 80 which was a terminal and S-100 all rolled into one 15lb box.
      That's the box on which I learned 8080 assembler.

      I saved up my pennies and bought my own Apple ][ (then later a //e and a //c) and started to program on that. I'm 36 years old. I've played with every kind of computer I could get my hands on. I currently own a bunch if Intel boxes, a couple of Macs, a couple of Sparcs, a couple of AT&T 3B1's, a Lisa 2, a TRS/80 model 16b and even a TRS/80 Model 100 (that tiny notebook.) I mostly work with different flavors of unix these days and get the biggest kick out of making stuff work that isn't supposed to. I don't plan on going into retirement just because I get older.

      Incidently, I do have receipies on my computer (at least one of them) and I know how to cook quite well. I also work on my own car. I guess there are advantages to having been a tomboy growing up and a dilettante.

      I do love Woz. Always have. He's such a cute teddybear of a guy. Gotta respect a guy that chooses his principles over money and power. What a guy.

      Martha Stewart? Who's that?

      -chaosgrrl

      --
      When you can't find your jello don't come screaming at me to remove the weasle from your headgear.
    3. Re:Woz: a hacker's hacker by abaum · · Score: 1

      Another reason they weren't interested is that
      there was already a competing project, the HP-85.
      It used a fairly strange custom CPU (HP at the time was adverse to using commodity chips, as they
      felt that if they did, anyone could copy it) and
      that project was fully staffed.

  176. Give The Guy A Break by Dharma · · Score: 1

    While most of the posts here have been positive, I noticed a few ppl here upset that he seems to be talking himself up on his web site. I agree, he does seem to be harping on how he singlehandedly did a whole bunch of stuff, but think about it a little....

    First off, the fact is that he *did* do everything he said.

    Second, how would you feel after years of seeing people taking credit for achievements that never would have been possible without your work? It takes an incredible person to just let it go all the time. I've read several things about him as well as interviews & this is the first time I've heard him "talking himself up". My guess is that he was taken advantage of (as most generous people are), got fed up with other people taking credit for everything and giving him absolutely zilch and decided it was time to set the record straight.

    You can only be humble & swallow your pride for so long. More power to him.

    Gassho!

  177. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    The TRS-80 Color Computer BASIC (burned in ROM) was done by M$ - sad to say it...

    I loved my CoCo(s) - had the 2 and 3. I never gave a second thought to what BASIC they had in them or who it was by, but I was shocked when I realized who made it after many years (fired up an emulator, and sure 'nuff, there's the good ole M$ copyright).

    Makes me feel rotten.

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  178. Re: Schools STILL use Apple2's by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    What I find amzing about stories of schools still using old Apples is the fact that the Apples are still running in some fashion. I remember using Apples back in High School for programming, and the disk drives were always dying. The r/w head positioning was done by some crappy plastic mechanism that kept failing in some manner. Other times, memory problems would crop up. Still, these machines were pretty damn rugged, after being pounded on by who knows how many students, etc. The fact that many are still running after 10-15 years (possibly longer) is a testament to this...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  179. Gil Amelio's version of the cheat by dubl-u · · Score: 1


    Gil Amelio, ex-CEO of Apple, tells the story in his book On the Firing Line this way:

    --------------------------------

    Here's a guy [Woz] who still loves the company. He's thoughtful, and he cares. I knew at once that it would benefit the company if Woz would agree to server in a no-pay advisor capacity, as Steve Jobs already was.

    I put that to him and he seemed willing to give it a try. But since it would mean he and Steve Jobs attending meetings together, he thought there was some background I needed to hear.

    I may not be recalling a few of the details accurately, but as near as I can remember, the story went like this:

    "Back when Steve Jobs and I were still just kids hanging out together, we were looking for ways to make some money. Before Mike Markkula, before the Apple in the garage, Steve managed to get an assignment from Nolan Bushnell of Atari to do som circuits for one of their electronic toys. I'd do the designs and build the circuit board, and we'd get $1,000. Nolan wanted it fast--it was on a real short deadline.

    It tooks some all-night design sessions, but I got it done on time and gave it to Steve, who took it in to Atari. He came back and gave me $300. I said, 'I thought we were getting $1,000.' Steve told me, 'No, they talked us down to $600, and I figured, you know, it was better than nothing.' So I said 'Okay.'

    Years later, I found out from a guy who had been at Atari that they had really paid Steve the full $1000. I did the work; he kept $700 for himself and gave me $300.

    When Steve knew I'd found out, that sort of ended it. We've never been close since."

    Woz admitted to a bad feeling in both directions, but he thought they could manage to serve together for the benefit of Apple, and agreed to give it a try.

    I would come to build a true and lasting admiration for Steve Wozniak and to respect his integrity. I was glad he had told me the story; otherwise I would have always wondered why there seemed to be such animosity wheneve these Apple founders were together in the same room.

    The adage says that tijme heals all wounds; the parody says that time wounds all heels. In this case, neither version seems to have worked.

    --------------------------------

    As a guy who has followed Apple and these folks for years (had an Apple ][, a Mac, and a NeXT), I found Gil Amelio's book fascinating.

  180. Woz and Linux by Top+Dog · · Score: 1

    Do you think Woz uses Linux?
    I thought the show was pretty good. Does anyone remember the part where Jobs says "Ours is better." and Gates says "It doesn't matter."? Who wrote the script? (Bill keeps saying that to this day.)

    --
    Nature abhors a vacuum. So does my sister's dog.
  181. The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by sgml4kids · · Score: 1

    I remember checking out every computer and book store for the source code for applesoft basic and was shocked to learn that they wouldn't just give it to you. In the back of the Apple ][ Reference
    Manual, they published the source code for the
    system monitor. I had to suffice with the "What's Where" book.

    Bill Gates has been pissing me off for the last 20 years and I've just about HAD IT! Start releasing
    your goddamn source code, M$!!!!


    PS. Can anyone else think of a another M$-developed product that was burned into ROM?

    1. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by sgml4kids · · Score: 1
      Wasn't it hmm... "S Byrne" or something? Man,
      that was the sweetest code -- I started to
      build a whole mythology about who these guys
      were. I'm getting misty just thinking about it! Ok.. here's an apple ][ system monitor
      quiz:

      1. What was did "20 ED FD" do?
      2. What routine was at $FCA8?
      3. What were the RESET interrupt vectors?
    2. Re:The more things change (Re:Woz wrote ...) by abaum · · Score: 1

      No, Steve Jobs was the marketeer/visonary/dreamer
      (even before then, actually).

      Woz wrote the monitor, (with some small help from me) and the pieces I worked on were given a thorough compressing by Woz before it went in. He
      could squeeze bytes out of places you wouldn't believe.

  182. Re:Hey! [an aside] by humanerror · · Score: 1

    As someone who was held hostage by the government for the last week (in jail without arraignment or formal charges) for defending my property with deadly force, I will say that it should be a much smaller place.

    And the worst part of the whole ordeal was... you can't get to /. from a jail cell...

    --
    "We're an apex predator with the fecundity of a base level herbivore... We're a virus with shoes..." RazorJAK
  183. what kids today work with by colmore · · Score: 1

    actually my school still uses the Apple ]['s that they bought in the 80's. The sad fact is, there is no budget in the public schools for good technology education

    --
    In Capitalist America, bank robs you!
  184. spoon by The+Queen · · Score: 1

    Technically, the little bald boy said 'there is no spoon' before Neo did... :-) Picky? Yes. So?
    Goddess help me seek the truth, but spare me the company of those who've found it.

    --

    The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
  185. I am Grammar Queen by The+Queen · · Score: 1

    Points! Yes! I noticed it, too, but I am so used to the rampant ignorance of the SPELL CHECK button on the web that I just don't waste time bitching anymore. :-)
    Goddess help me seek the truth, but spare me the company of those who've found it.

    --

    The House Between - Original Sci-Fi Series
  186. Re:It was related to Quicktime... by eison · · Score: 1

    Amazingly enough, some Quicktime code shows up in Microsoft's Video For Windows AVI stuff (wow, M$ couldn't pull something off themselves so they just stole it, imagine that. Fine tradition.) Which naturally resulted in a lawsuit, which was settled out of court like Microsoft always does.

    --
    is competition good, or is duplication of effort bad?
  187. Re:'im just a humble guy with my own domain name' by Shadowcaster · · Score: 1

    Having that post moderated down is hardly the mindset desireable for OSS advocates, I agree. But don't you think your post would carry just a *little* more weight were it not posted AC?

    I also noticed that he seemed a tad full of himself, but the way I see it (from reading up on all of this) it's well deserved. If he were more blatant about it, or threw it in your face like "Ha ha asshole" then I'd have to write him off as some guy with too much ego, but the general feel of his writing wasn't like a brag. It evoked a bit of a feeling of awe for me actually, of the type "I wish I could do that so easily". :)

  188. Woz inspires and comes through by Slur · · Score: 1

    I first learned to program largely on the original Apple II (through SoftSide Magazine!) and I caught the Apple bug. Some 20 years later I finally got a Mac and returned to my roots.

    I wrote a shareware program for the Mac (I won't plug it here, I promise!) and I was particularly inspired by Woz as I wrote it. His engineering skill, his devotion to educating children, and his fondness for his guitars (visible on certain days on the WozCam) motivated me to do a good elegant job.

    My program has turned out good, but since it serves a niche market it hasn't received many registrations. But imagine my absolute glee when The Woz himself coughed up the $15 and became one of the precious few who registered!

    Hey, the man pays his shareware fees! That's enough for me.

    --
    -- thinkyhead software and media
  189. Trivial bits by Slur · · Score: 1

    Just had to add these two trivial bits:

    SoftSide Magazine
    Poke 33,33

    --
    -- thinkyhead software and media
  190. Re:Old Woz stories - Correcting the correction by Lucius+Lucanius · · Score: 1


    Maybe both stories are true? :O

    L.

  191. Old Woz stories by Lucius+Lucanius · · Score: 4


    In an article (I think it was in Byte) there's a story about Woz going back to college to continue his academic education. Of course, by then Apple was a billion dollar company so he enrolled under a false name. During an economics class, the lecturer went on a rant about how companies only try to cheat and steal from customers with bad products, and Woz stood up to disagree, but was cut down by the teacher. He says something along the lines of - "Here I was, the founder of one of the most successful companies in history, and he was telling me I didn't know what I was talking about and I had to just sit there and listen." Cracked me up.

    Another really good one - Woz hacked the phone to make free international calls, and as a prank, he and his buddies called up the Pope. The bishop who answered asked them who wanted to speak to him in the middle of the night.

    Woz: "Henry Kissinger".
    Bishop (now suspicious) : "You don't sound like Henry Kissinger".

    There's another story he relates about writing a spreadsheet at Apple, and being the nice guy he is, he's nervous about the deadline and worried about being fired. Woz. Worried about being fired from Apple. Well, he had some Star Wars contacts call his boss and tantalize him with some rare memoribilia. I forget what exactly it was, but it was a pretty funny trick he played.

    One more story I've read (and I don't know if this is true) is that during their early days together, Jobs told Woz they'd split a payment 50-50. But he lied about the amount and told Woz it was $500, when it was actually twice that, while pocketing the rest himself. Apparently Woz found this out, and things were never the same between them again. (Can somebody confirm if this is true?).

    L.

  192. POSV in real audio for those who missed it by Kozmik · · Score: 2

    For those of us who don't get TNT or missed it. I have the move in RA, on my web site.

    http://kozmik.guelph.on.ca

    Enjoy.

  193. Pirates Comic by gerald_holmes · · Score: 2

    Oh boy if you wants to see a cartoon I mades for pirates of the siliconium valleys you should looks at http://www.fre eyellow.com/members7/geraldholmes/MScartoon1.html its pretty funny theres also other cartoons and some good stuff about how Bill Gates is the smartest man ever to live ever.

  194. The show is right... Woz really is the sh*t by dschwarz2 · · Score: 1

    I run a small software company and one day I get an email from Woz - he likes one of my products and can he order 10 copies? No problem! I started programming on an Apple II and were it not for that computer, I'd probably be a lawyer now. :-) Of course I sent the software for free. We corresponded for a bit. It's a rare person who can achieve that level of wealth and fame and still be accessible and a really nice guy.

  195. IIgs limited. by jackyl · · Score: 1

    i actually own one of those IIgs limiteds with Woz's signature. Bought that for $3500 i think. Insane, huh?

  196. Here are Woz's comments. by Didel · · Score: 1

    I've received a few e-mails about the recent movie "Pirates of Silicon Valley" and I thought I'd share some of my responses with you. Q From e-mail: I just had to laugh at the part in the movie where someone called Dial-A-Joke. I remember calling that number to hear the joke of the day. Was it really you who did this? WOZ: Experimenting with blue boxes to make calls anywhere in the world while at Berkely in 1971-1972, I encountered a few Dial-a-Jokes in the world. I never used the blue box to save money on phone calls, I was an ethical hacker. So while working as an engineer at Hewlett Packard, designing scientific calculators, I started the first Dial-a-Joke in the San Francisco Bay Area. This was before you could buy answering machines or even telephones. I had to rent a very expensive machine made for theaters, and eventually had to quit because I couldn't afford it. I got so many calls that I had to keep changing the number. Anyone with a similar number would get 100 calls a day. The best known numbers that I had were (408) 255-6666 and (408) 575-1625. I operated Dial-a-Joke out of my Cupertino apartment, where I did a lot of the Apple designing (I designed every bit and wrote all the code including BASIC myself). I used a thick Eastern accent, like Russian, and used the name Stanley Zebrezuskinitsky when I took live calls. Q From e-mail: Hi Mr. Woz, I just wanted to say that I just saw Pirates of Silicon Valley and was amazed at what went on way back when. I commend you for remaining the same person you've always been rather than turning into a money hungry, stuck up person like so many others do. It's so interesting to me that you made the computer that made Apple even possible, but it was Steve Job's that seemed to take all the credit. Was the scene with the man being interviewed really true? Did Steve Job's actually demean a potential employee?? I have to say, that they portrayed him as a real jerk who was very demeaning to his employees if they did not perform to his liking. And actually, Bill Gates was no better. They were and maybe still are hungry for the power. The other thing that I found interesting and didn't realize was that Microsoft now owns part of Apple. Steve Jobs is definitely a brilliant business man but after seeing what Bill Gates has done I'd have to say that he's even more savvy! Anyway, those were just a few thoughts I had. I was just really impressed with your character and how you've remained the same person that you were when you created that first computer. I hope you don't mind my two cents. : - ) WOZ: It's funny, but even with all the things that aren't said outright, a great number of people, like yourself, saw a lot of things in that movie that are totally true. The personalities were very accurately portrayed. I designed the computers just to do it and show the world that it could be done and help them happen. Later Steve Jobs suggested starting a company to make money from it. I'd been giving out schematics for free at the Homebrew Computer Club. That's what I believed in. It was hard for me to even start the company when it looked like there might be real money in it. I often wonder why I remained the person I always wanted to be, from late high school on. I wanted to be an engineer and then a 5th grade teacher and I wanted a computer someday and I wanted to be nice to people and I wanted to tell and make jokes and I wanted a family and home. It couldn't have come truer for me. Watch for more comments in the coming days. What exactly were some of my important contributions? Click here to find out. These are Woz's comments, not my own.