Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak
spoke to students at the University of Southern California about the company he
started with Steve Jobs in the 1970s. At the presentation on 19 April,
Wozniak revealed that he was designing circuits and learning about electrons at
a young age, after he discovered a journal "in a closet". The journal
contained "articles about these things called computers! There were no
books, no magazines in book stores, no place where you can run into anything
about what are computers and this had things about 0s and 1s about how we can
add them. That's when I fell in love with science," said Wozniak. Wozniak
told the students that he and Steve Jobs shared a common interest in pranks, as
well as computers. "When you're building something for yourself, you put
so much emphasis in making it so perfect it couldn't be finer," Wozniak
explained. "Steve Jobs knew where to sell things. I never thought about
that. I just built things for fun." So that's how the partnership between
the two Steves began. Wozniak would design devices, Jobs would sell them. Wozniak
revealed that in order to create Apple Computers, he had to make sacrifices:
"I sold my most valuable possession, my HP-65 calculator. It was worth
$500; I only got $250 because the guy didn't show up with the rest." "The
Apple Two computer was really the heart of the computer. I designed it in three
months, back when I had four days and nights without sleep. Your mind, when you
are falling asleep or waking up, your mind gets into a less inhibited work
state," Wozniak told the students. "Go to sleep thinking about the
problem really hard, wake up in the middle of the night and have a solution."
Wozniak advised: "Think different. The way things have been done before,
that's like a formula, you hardly ever step back. What if it were all
different? A whole new world, a virtual world that doesn't really exist. With
products, sometimes, oh my God, sometimes that leads you to a much better
solution." Steve Wozniak recently expressed his worries about the struggle faced
by entrepreneurs aiming to start a technology business. He was also quoted as saying that he wished his iPhone did all the
things his Android does, and that the Macintosh was a failure, but he queued up for the new iPad nonetheless.
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