@@TheHardDonuts Why? because he asks interesting questions, waits for the reply and doesn't grandstand in fake glamour but follows the thread with respect to get an interesting interview instead of the common "hairdo" version.
@@Philjj61 My thoughts? It's quite unprofessional to see the dude's on the left dirty and nasty shoe soles pointed directly at the camera. If you're going to do that, use new shoes or better yet don't do it at all. This isn't a conversation at a bar or cigar lounge.
People comment on his genius, not enough credit given to his heart and generosity. Top company man who gives his stock away to employees is a rare example of selflessness in a culture driven by greed and ego. That's the part that should be celebrated.
Steve Wozniak was a genius, and cared about his work no matter what.; and, that is true genius from the heart.He always cared about his work.Thank you Mr.Wozniak!🎓
Woz was a genious. Yes. But no more than Bill Herd or Dave Haynie. And Tramiel were leages ahead of Jobs. Why spend 1500 dollars on an Apple-II, when you can get a C64 for 300? And that even with a build in synthesiser and colour from the factory. My point. Dont give Woz more credit than he need.
The title of the video upsets me. This interview is about Steve Wozniak. He deserves his props. He deserves to be interviewed for his contributions and opinions, and it should be marketed that way.
It upsets me too because I don’t actually get the sense that Woz would agree for a second with all the people that think Jobs just rolled by and sold his shit and was nothing more than a salesman, they may have their bit of bad blood but to me this partnership is the best example of comparing and contrasting genius with brilliance, and it’s very clear Woz knows Jobs wasn’t just a con man or some shit. I no more want to see clickbait about this shit than between Lennon and McCartney.
@@thealch3myst No doubt, when anybody else might say "I was just that good" they're bragging, but when Woz says it, he's simply stating fact. Woz invented the first consumer affordable floppy drive and his design was simpler and more elegant than anything IBM came up with.
Steve and Steve has to be seen as THE so called poineers in the computer-industry. They supported eachother perhaps so to say, kind remark of you, kind regards.
His eyes lit up the moment he was handed the Apple II, this man is truly passionate about his work. He barely acknowledged the money, that was a non-issue. Steve Wozniak was fortunate enough to not only find his passion in life, but to also have able to make a fortune off of it. He's one of the greatest men in the tech space. Some men serve a higher purpose in life, we need more people like him in the world.
Yea, a good proportion should get into eco-friendly & ressource-efficient technologies tho cuz rare ores ain't infinite eventho new technologies are an enrichment for humanity.
Steve Wozniak is kind of like Walt Disney's Roy Disney. His brother got his shit together. Without him Walt would've been living in a garage eating beans. (True story).
Hands down to Steve Wozniak , the greatest engineer of our times . This is the greatest interview I've ever listened to as someone aspiring to be an electrical engineer myself.
Woz would of just been an HP employee without Jobs. Love or hate him Jobs made Apple happen. Of course the technical genius was Woz. Woz a nice guy Jobs an asshole two together made a great team.
@@777Kiq False. Woz would find its way. Job had no idea of what a real value product was. Parts salesman, with all respect for salesman. Opportunist charlatan, or.... the luckiest guy in the world to be smart enough to take advantage of Woz. Is this a merit? Sociopaths discussion. Praise it? Never.
"You've got to have somebody at least in the company who has incredible drive, who is absolutely determined that you're unto something big, that you gotta keep moving to get there. Just about everybody in apple was that way" - Steve Wozniak
Woz is an incredible guy, total nerd and engineer. Not a marketing/magnate. Just very down to earth and smart. Love that guy. Took us out for hamburgers when I went to Genius Training in 2008. Helluva nice guy.
Woz is a kind and brilliant genius Jobs was nothing but a marketing salesman who took credit for this man's and others engineering technology. Woz is the man who who should have gotten the most recognition not Steve Jobs.
Steve Wozniak is a spark , a lightning rod of enthusiasm. But it's genuine, it's not salesman stuff. Great man. Thanks for producing such a great interview.
lol humble? do you know what humble means? A humble man is slow to take credit, more inclined to mention the work of others, never brags about himself or calls attention to his accomplishments. Steve is the OPPOSITE of that. lol
That eureka moment when he knew what he had just created... wow. And the way he tells the story is such a gem too. Mad respect for this true alchemist.
I have never heard an indepth interview with Steve W. I am really impressed with how gracious he is with praise for all his colleagues at Apple as they were building it up. Love it! Too many people just say I, I, I, I... he recognizes and gives credit to all the people he worked with! really cool.
Steve Jobs & Steve Woz is a prime example of the book Outlier. Perfect timing on meeting each other, early years of the computer, mixed with luck. They complimented each other nearly perfectly
This guy is great because he remembers what it was like to have nothing and he did not forget the people that helped him make Apple what it is!! Great interview for young people to watch! NEVER GIVE UP!
After learning and hearing so much of Wozniak talking about the story of Apple, I now understand that He needed Jobs as much as Jobs needed him. Wow was the technical mind and Jobs was the visionary with the balls to make the decisions.
Woz had nothing to do with Apple when it was dying and then Steve Jobs took over again and invented the ipod, iphone etc. Was that Woz or Jobs? Woz would not of been able to do it without Jobs and vice versa the first time. But Jobs did it the second time without Woz, Woz didnt do it again ever. I love Woz, he was a great engineer. But engineering is different to building products that sell and having business vision and knowing what choices to make and most importantly what choices to not make. There are plenty of fake leaders but when one really knows what they are doing it is more valuable than someone with only technical skills. Also it isnt an either or fallacy.. lots of engineers also are awesome businessmen who have the vision too. But some are not.
After I read his biography, I realized we had some identical childhood 'tinkering' experiences. I reached out to Woz and he was so kind to respond with a sweet email. What a sincere down-to-earth genius!Great guy. I've read every Apple book by every former employee. Loved Woz's... as he was also the creator of everything Apple up until his retirement.
@@Sovereign_Citizen_LEO The smarter and more introverted you are the less incentive there is to pay other people to do stuff for you. Woz also ate like garbage while Jobs was always doing "cleanses"...Woz made a lot less money but he's still alive and still worth hundreds of millions. It appears he understands that success is about passion just as much as it is about balance.
@@funfun5656 - Generally agree. That all depends though, as around 80% of the population off the top either doesn't have the skills/ training/ ability, time, or motivation. Another 15%+ are elderly/ disabled and unable to even if they possess the skills. Such as is the case in my case. It's even less than that. It's probably about .003% of the population or less who even goes on to start a business, let alone engineers complex things/ products/ inventions/ innovations/ services. And also, when you're young (as these guys were) health is not usually a complicating factor (such that Jobs' cleanses or healthy lifestyle had any impact whatsoever).
Pat, the fact that you're landing all these high profile interviews says a lot. Ronnie Coleman, Steve Wozniak, Wolf of Wall Street, JFK's adviser, ExMafia, the list goes on
I bought an Apple ll in 1977. What a great time I had in learning that machine, and the computer world. First floppy drive was $650. Before that it was audio tape for program storage.
Steve Wozniak, the computer world wouldn’t be as it is without your contribution. You worked in background and in underworld allowing others coming out front... Just like those hairdressers and makeup artists making theatre actors look as they should to hold the proper role... Thank you for your contribution to a better world... Lots of love to you ❤️
Woz is such a great person, couple of years ago he gave the main speech at my engineering graduation ceremony. He spoke about the importance of taking risks, be creative and not be afraid to build something big. All my friends moved to 'stable' jobs after graduation, I on the other spent the next 10 months build a SaaS platform from scratch with barely any experience, zero funding and an army of friends,relatives and family members fighting against me to 'get back to my senses' and get a 'real job'. Such an inspirational man, a highly respected engineer! I wish they would emphasize more about the fact that without him there would be no Apple, I mean sales and marketing is great but without the hardcore computer system he built from scratch there would be no company.
your platform could be as successful as apple itself, or it could flop. working on that right after college IS the sensible thing to do. even if it did flop, it's a live portfolio item you can use to show off your talents. working on it further GREW your talents and probably gave you more ideas. and really, doing that for a year after graduation makes a lot more sense than trying to do the same halfway thru a mid-life crisis with piles of bills + family life shot to hell cos you're so miserable.
@@Numantino312 yes indeed. While it didn't make me good income, it did help me land my future roles and differentiate my resume. No loss there and I became way proficient at building scalable systems starting early in my career. As the saying goes, you either succeed or you learn. I still plan on rebuilding and expanding it now, with my experience level 100 folds of what it was before, will see.
The wizardry of Woz is impressive, but his authenticity is like no other I've ever seen. Had there been there no Mac II, my resistance to the tech revolution would have never been overcome. Kudos and Brava to Woz for his talent and dedication to his dream Thanks.
Wozniak is charming because he is open and enthusiastic like a kid, as well as not falsely modest about his “engineering excellence”. What he said about conformity being wrongly valued as intelligence, is spot on.
21:38 ~ 22:15 this is interesting.. notice how for Steve it’s not that he wasn’t listening to the question, but rather how his passion and focus for what vision him and Jobs had exceeded to thought of worrying about doubters ...this man was focused 💎
He is the kind of person who created miraculous life for me. Without having no deeper knowledge in anything- I am living a life 100 years ago a king even could not dream of. Respect!
Thank you for bringing spotlight on a gifted, humanist, humorous & creative Woz. He served as a regular public school teacher. Enough said. Much respect to the Valuetainment Team. Peace!
Mr. Wozniak, I had a pirated Apple 2 in the early 80’s in Asia. You are truly one of the giants that built Silicon Valley. Thank you for this precious gem of an interview, Patrick Bet David.
That interview of you with Steve Wozniak from back from 2010 is so eye opening. How some young dreamers with no money and a garage with engineering capabilities revolutionised the world together. Its so insanely mind blowing when Steve describes the night OCD worked himself into a dreaming state and how he experienced his eureka moment: inventing how to put colored pixels on PC screens with zeros and ones. What a fucking madman!!!!!
Many compliments to the host. What makes your interviews a cut above the rest I think is both skill and a natural talent you have, which makes an interview sound more like a conversation we wandered in on as it was just starting, very comfortable, just two guys kicking back and shooting the breeze. Well done as usual, enjoyed it immensely, thank you.
What an interview, so pleasant and showing the true personality of Steve Wozniak and his delightful anecdotes in how, he and his partner Steve Jobs had managed their meager years. However, made it into an enormous unbelievable world success.
Great interview David. Great job letting him speak when he was on a roll and putting in just enough to keeo him going. And the perfect questions. Ive learned alot
Ya, I mean Woz is clearly a prodigy and technical genius, but in addition to being smart, he's very energetic and determined. That motivational charge is essential.
He plunked down millions of dollars to sponsor the US Festival in 1983, trying to unite East and West in Cold War days. Mind you, that was a lot of money and the big wealth of Tech was a decade away. Just a decent all around person.
I was at HP in the mid 70's, about the time Steve left. I remember someone giving me one of his business cards. It was hilarious; he was a tireless prankster. Had it for years and lost it. Wish I still had it.
DebWittner aww, it’s fine though, as an early employee you would’ve had a lot of money but working at hp at that time meant you were pretty good, so not many regrets
@@oldtwinsna8347 If the first thing you think of when someone's relating a personal story-concerning a humorous business card that illustrates Wozniak's merry-prankster personality-is how much it'd sell for on eBay, you have missed the point entirely.
Woz describes Jobs as a Walt Disney type personality. Walt was not the best animator or artist but he knew how to get the best out of those who were. He set up a productive environment and, maybe most importantly, he knew how to tell stories in a way that would inspire and direct those who could make his stories come to life on the screen.
Love the enthusiasm in Steve's voice. His passion is astonishing. I am chuffed that i can remember or relate to using every product he mentions. I remember loading code in - that i was copying from dot matrik printouts as high as the roof. Clearly remember using the Apple 11 (they could only afford to have 1 in the entire school)(haha mainly space invaders at lunchtime or "goto" here ) hp packard calculators that were crazy for their time. Perfect example of someone being used perfectly for his unique talent and passion - same as Jobs and same as their first investor - Great interview (must admit i have always tuned out to Steves other interviews)
I was fortunate to have spent an afternoon with Stephen and Janet in London a few years ago. Two of the most humble people I have ever had the fortune of meeting. Over a snack of sliders, I got Steve to work on an issue I had with with my iPhone. He wasn't able to sort it so he called a tech friend in America to work through the fix. In the meantime I had my then teenager son to go hug him while in the middle of his call. No issues! all cool! just another Tuesday. I love this beautiful, most humble of human beings, so so much. Very few understand that we humans are ...really ...actually ...running out of true beacons of hope for the future
My first job was with one of the first Apple dealers. My first computer was an Apple II. I did briefly get a chance to meet Woz the first time I'd attended Comdex back in the early 80s. Interestingly he seemed very down to earth among a sea of blue and grey suits running about. My current desktop at home is an i7 @ 4GHz with 32GB RAM... mounted into an old Apple II case! I can still run old Apple II software on it using an emulator.
@@SeanHollingsworth Actually I bought two of them on E-bay. The first turned out to have a motherboard, power supply and keyboard with a low serial no. so I decided not to butcher it and bought another. The motherboard though turns out has a major issue I have yet to try to troubleshoot which is the RAM in the $8000-$BFFF range isn't working. It also had a keyboard which was completely useless so I put it on the other case for looks. I plan on at least wiring up the reset key to be functional.
@@SeanHollingsworth It's just a matter of finding and drilling some holes in the base to match the ITX or mini-ATX motherboard, then cutting up the back to expose the ports. If you plan on putting any cards inito it, they will have to be low-profile as well as the power supply. It's one of two crazy projects. I also built a media/file server with FreeNAS into an old 1930s wooden radio cabinet. It's much nicer looking than a cheap piece of plastic!
@@dr.elvis.h.christ That is awesome!! I picked up an Apple ][gs back in 1994 from a newspaper ad. Fully functioning. I ended up giving it to my grandmother, along with my old Apple Imagewriter printer that my parents purchased new for me back in 1988. She still does bookkeeping for a couple of small companies in Reno, NV with an old BPI accounting program that originally came out in 1978. Whenever I make my way back to Reno from Texas, I always spend time backing things up onto newer floppy discs. (By "newer," would mean bought in the mid 1990's when they were still available.) ;-)
Apple was fantastic. I knew it from the start. They did not have rich relatives to keep them afloat. They had genius and persistence. They developed a quality product. Steve and Steve were a winning pair.
Sir thanks a gazillion times for uploading this interview again. Watch the whole interview at a single go and noted many Golden nuggets. #made me proud to be an ENGINEER Thanks again sir.🙏🙏 #love from INDIA
I happened to meet Jobs (and Steve Wozniak) while I worked for Apple Accessory Products Division in 1985 as a Regional MIS Manager for Southern California. While Harry James was GM for the APG Division in Garden Grove, my boss in Cuppertino was Debbie Coleman who worked for Jobs as a controller. That was in 1985, shortly before Jobs was fired by Scully. I remember we were wearing t-shirts with words IBM - which meant I Build Macintosh. Today Apple is the largest company in the world, their valuation on the stock market is over trillion dollars. And that happened because of Steve Jobs, no doubt about it. Steve Wozniak was clearly a design genius, way ahead of his times. And also a master prankster. There would not be Jobs without Wozniak. They both complemented themselves. Steve Jobs was selling what Steve Wozniak was creating (that was Apple I and Apple II). Later Jobs start selling what Palo Alto Xerox Research Lab created (computer with user friendly interface - called Macintosh by Apple). Mike Markulla (the first angel investor of Apple) was responsible for creating Apple Company and its survival in late 70-ties/early 80-ties. BTW - Apple sold APG Division in Garden Grove to Alps (Japanese company) in early Fall 1985.
What were they like to be around personally? Was Jobs a tyrant to work for or all the rumors untrue? Did you continue working there after Jobs was sacked?
I went to high school with "the Steves"...they were both total nerds with no social skills whatsoever. Both belonged to after-school clubs, the engineer club, science club, etc. Geeky as hell, but smart too. They were kind of weird to be honest with you. Definitely not popular kids, but they probably didn't care about all that. Strange guys for sure.
@@chillytoes337 They didn't attend Homestead High School at the same time. Wozniak is five years older than Jobs, and they first met in 1971, while Wozniak was in college and Jobs was finishing high school. And they definitely did have social skills. So I doubt your story.
13:11 The U.S. government education system was based on an older German education system--which was oriented not toward critical independent thought, but toward producing people with technical competence to work in factories. Government schools can't meet everyone's educational needs and maximize everyone's outcome, but it could do a LOT better in identifying students who _could_ benefit from a less regimented approach to education, and start developing alternative systems that meet their needs better.
Honestly, with the internet around, the education system needs a complete overhaul. Group students by age, but everyone learns at their own pace. A true understanding of a subject needs to reach rather than standardized test results, which means we need better-designed tests. Also, tests should only have a passing score of 100%. If you can't complete the test fully, then you lack the understanding to move on (again, why we need much better tests based on understanding rather than rote memory, otherwise this point becomes moot). Only have Mandatory classes up until all the material is learned to a certain base level (mandatory classes should include critical thinking and reasoning, history of philosophy, personal finance, and common knowledge, like how to set up a bank account and buy a house/rent, etc) . People pursue the education they are most interested in. Teachers are there to provide structure, and to facilitate learning, and teach kids how to learn efficiently, not to teach individual subjects. Online teachers could be consulted on specific subjects you are struggling to grasp. An online platform keeps track of subjects you are learning and helps you find resources that you need ( such as websites, articles, etc) to learn said subjects, using A.I, as well as keeping track of other metrics, like time spent on a particular subject, people who are studying the same things as you, teachers who are recommended for the subjects and their ratings, etc. The list goes on. You could save a shit ton of money in education and improve the quality by several orders of magnitude. I haven't put too much thought into this in terms of depth, but I imagine if you got a room full of a dozen of the right people, you could come up with something pretty good.
@@brandonporter6223 A test where the passing grade is 100% assumes the system knows best which questions are relevant to ask, and the "correct" answer for each. If the goal is the well-informed citizenry that a Republic requires, one-size-fits-none government education is just a bad idea all around.
@@wlan246 I don't know. I personally think the government should have no role in education, other than to facilitate it. Independent learning is superior in every way, except it does require self-discipline, and one to know how to learn effectively. That's something that on site staff could still help with.
Wozniak is the most agreeable engineer I've seen. Engineers are not known for this sort of demeanor. They have a rep for being difficult and a little too techy.
debating in a work environment vs speaking at an interview are 2 different things. Wosniak probably has no problem being disagreeable if he believes the other person is wrong in their assessment.
It's amazing how they are talking about how Siri and how you will use speech recognition.. now look at what they are doing with NeuralLink.. everything he is saying happened exactly the way he said. Amazing man.
Making money is not the same as keeping it, there are a lot of things that aren't well taught in schools. The market crisis gave me my first millions, when people stayed away from hard times I made the most of it..many credits goes to Sir Zach Micah Demers
This is superb information, as a noob it gets quite difficult to handle all of this and staying informed is a major cause, how do you go about this? Do you trade on your own?
Not at all, I invest with Sir Zach Micah Demers. I have been monitoring my portfolio performance which has made a jaw dropping $473k from just the past two quarters alone, I have learned why experienced traders make enormous returns from the seemingly unknown market. I must say it's the boldest decision I've taken since recently.
Investors should be cautious about their selections and money management, especially during inflation. Attaining high yields in this recession is only possible under the supervision of a professional or trusted advisor like Mr Zach Micah Demers
Wow. My favorite interview ever. So many hidden gems for Woz. We should build based on our own goals and find the tools to complete the puzzle. Truly inspirational.
I don't consider myself a strict libertarian and I think The Woz probably doesn't consider himself at all libertarian but the descriptions he gives of how to think outside the box is a beautiful example of libertarianism, i.e., people are best motivated by what they personally want.
Why am I not surprised that a genius like Jobs was a little flawed as a human being. It pretty much goes with the territory. That being said there would be no Apple without the genius of Steve Wozniak and he's down to earth.
I love the whole Apple ][ family of computers. I always found it funny how the firsts PC's were NOT expendable yet the first of Apple computers were and now almost every PC is expandable in everyway yet Apple computers are stuck how they come out of the box. Smh I wish Apple computers were customizable again.
Bruce Lee, Eddie Van Halen, Einstein, Tesla etc all great. Woz will go down as one of the people who most changed, influenced and enriched our lives. Everyone from Presidents to the poorest his contributions have and will continue to change the world.
@@j109joell They were all innovaters in their respective fields. In no way do they have to be "equal" nor did I say they were equal. You're just a pseudo intellectual snob trying to sound smart.
Share your thoughts with Patrick Bet-David by texting 310.340.1132 or click here my.community.com/patrickbetdavid
Ok, My thoughts? Patrick is a douche.
@@TheHardDonuts Why? because he asks interesting questions, waits for the reply and doesn't grandstand in fake glamour but follows the thread with respect to get an interesting interview instead of the common "hairdo" version.
@@Philjj61 My thoughts? It's quite unprofessional to see the dude's on the left dirty and nasty shoe soles pointed directly at the camera. If you're going to do that, use new shoes or better yet don't do it at all. This isn't a conversation at a bar or cigar lounge.
Patrick comes across as a...used car salesman. Kind of fake and slimey.
@@TheHardDonuts 0001111q1P111q1q0000q0qq1qQQAQQQQ1Q0qQqqQQQQQQqQqaq1
People comment on his genius, not enough credit given to his heart and generosity. Top company man who gives his stock away to employees is a rare example of selflessness in a culture driven by greed and ego. That's the part that should be celebrated.
Yes. His kindness and good heart, passion and work ethic is what I am touched by.
Steve Wozniak was a genius, and cared about his work no matter what.; and, that is true genius from the heart.He always cared about his work.Thank you Mr.Wozniak!🎓
@@mermaidtailsgeig5272 That's true! But he was not a sales guy. He was not a marketing guy. And he knew it. Woz and Jobs needed each other.
@sukaran gulati True.
Woz was a genious. Yes. But no more than Bill Herd or Dave Haynie. And Tramiel were leages ahead of Jobs. Why spend 1500 dollars on an Apple-II, when you can get a C64 for 300? And that even with a build in synthesiser and colour from the factory.
My point. Dont give Woz more credit than he need.
The title of the video upsets me. This interview is about Steve Wozniak. He deserves his props. He deserves to be interviewed for his contributions and opinions, and it should be marketed that way.
agreed 100%. clickbait
ikr
@@coldacre is it really though? It got 1.6M people to witness Woz and his genius
It upsets me too because I don’t actually get the sense that Woz would agree for a second with all the people that think Jobs just rolled by and sold his shit and was nothing more than a salesman, they may have their bit of bad blood but to me this partnership is the best example of comparing and contrasting genius with brilliance, and it’s very clear Woz knows Jobs wasn’t just a con man or some shit. I no more want to see clickbait about this shit than between Lennon and McCartney.
Exactly and it’s so obvious how they wanted Jobs name to be first before Wozniak’s
When you hear someone who says "I was so good" they're usually bragging, but with Woz he's just stating it as it is.
Exactly. "No brag, just fact"
Because you love him
actually I would say that he is being extremely humble.
This guy is a legit GENIUS of our time
@@thealch3myst No doubt, when anybody else might say "I was just that good" they're bragging, but when Woz says it, he's simply stating fact. Woz invented the first consumer affordable floppy drive and his design was simpler and more elegant than anything IBM came up with.
@@tomaxxamot4906 You don't know who I know or don't butt munch.
Wozniak is a treasure for all mankind: not just for bringing in the computer revolution, but also for just being who he is as a person. SALUTE!
Steve and Steve has to be seen as THE so called poineers in the computer-industry. They supported eachother perhaps so to say, kind remark of you, kind regards.
His eyes lit up the moment he was handed the Apple II, this man is truly passionate about his work. He barely acknowledged the money, that was a non-issue. Steve Wozniak was fortunate enough to not only find his passion in life, but to also have able to make a fortune off of it. He's one of the greatest men in the tech space. Some men serve a higher purpose in life, we need more people like him in the world.
Absolutely.
I like him, because he's an honest guy!
Yea, a good proportion should get into eco-friendly & ressource-efficient technologies tho cuz rare ores ain't infinite eventho new technologies are an enrichment for humanity.
I respect him way more than Steve and always have. Apple would be nowhere with Wozniak.
Steve Wozniak is kind of like Walt Disney's Roy Disney. His brother got his shit together. Without him Walt would've been living in a garage eating beans. (True story).
Hands down to Steve Wozniak , the greatest engineer of our times . This is the greatest interview I've ever listened to as someone aspiring to be an electrical engineer myself.
👏🏻
Steve Wozniak is a great man and often ignored.. Huge respect for Valuetainment for bringing him in! 👌👌
Woz would of just been an HP employee without Jobs. Love or hate him Jobs made Apple happen. Of course the technical genius was Woz. Woz a nice guy Jobs an asshole two together made a great team.
@@thomassutherland5188 true
@I. Wynn Wynn stop this bullshit, already told you.
@@777Kiq False. Woz would find its way. Job had no idea of what a real value product was. Parts salesman, with all respect for salesman. Opportunist charlatan, or.... the luckiest guy in the world to be smart enough to take advantage of Woz. Is this a merit? Sociopaths discussion. Praise it? Never.
@I. Wynn Wynn I agree. That was it
Someone should do interview with this Steve which is not about other Steve. Woz is wizard of computer science
True
Woz is Hardcore!
You know, he wrote a great book "iWoz". Sure Jobs is in it, but their fates are just intertwined.
@@thomaspeputofules8471 how is your experience with the book .
I wanna read it
@@ankkol2011 it was a good autobiography.
"You've got to have somebody at least in the company who has incredible drive, who is absolutely determined that you're unto something big, that you gotta keep moving to get there. Just about everybody in apple was that way" - Steve Wozniak
I can listen to Wozniak for hours without getting bored. He has so much interesting historical stuff to share.
Woz is an incredible guy, total nerd and engineer. Not a marketing/magnate. Just very down to earth and smart. Love that guy. Took us out for hamburgers when I went to Genius Training in 2008. Helluva nice guy.
Woz is a kind and brilliant genius Jobs was nothing but a marketing salesman who took credit for this man's and others engineering technology. Woz is the man who who should have gotten the most recognition not Steve Jobs.
Living legend
Steve Wozniak is a spark , a lightning rod of enthusiasm. But it's genuine, it's not salesman stuff. Great man. Thanks for producing such a great interview.
South Hill Farm it took me years to realized Apple was the best
Mad respect for Woz, such an honest, good guy. Not to mention super talented and enthusiastic for the love of it.
Why is 2010 looking like 1999?
Woz is and always has been brilliant and humble, the world loves you Woz!
Yah man he just oozes IQ . One can just tell how smart he is
Well,
@@tonymoretti2347 Honesty doesn't mean money.
Yes we do...!
lol humble? do you know what humble means? A humble man is slow to take credit, more inclined to mention the work of others, never brags about himself or calls attention to his accomplishments. Steve is the OPPOSITE of that. lol
That eureka moment when he knew what he had just created... wow. And the way he tells the story is such a gem too. Mad respect for this true alchemist.
I have never heard an indepth interview with Steve W. I am really impressed with how gracious he is with praise for all his colleagues at Apple as they were building it up. Love it! Too many people just say I, I, I, I... he recognizes and gives credit to all the people he worked with! really cool.
Steve Jobs & Steve Woz is a prime example of the book Outlier. Perfect timing on meeting each other, early years of the computer, mixed with luck. They complimented each other nearly perfectly
+ early smart money ($1M) from marketing guru Mike Markkula
@@carlatashkadeh5890. Yep, that is repeatedly recognised by Woz.
They could have gotten money in another way, but you can't replace either Jobs or Woz, or the time they lived. And the luck 👌
*complEmented
(unless you mean that they were telling each other "you are awesome, man" every day)
This guy is great because he remembers what it was like to have nothing and he did not forget the people that helped him make Apple what it is!! Great interview for young people to watch! NEVER GIVE UP!
"Woz" was truly a prodigy ahead of his time!! 77'-78' wow unheard of in some communities
Steve W has still that kid him. He’s adorable and a genius.
He was real.God bless .
😎
I love and respect him so much.
Thank you for being yourself.
Yes I enjoyed every bit
After learning and hearing so much of Wozniak talking about the story of Apple, I now understand that He needed Jobs as much as Jobs needed him. Wow was the technical mind and Jobs was the visionary with the balls to make the decisions.
No Woz = no Apple. Woz is a BRILLIANT engineer while Jobs was a promoter and charismatic person who could extract the best out of others.
Jobs genius excised his passport for bad behavior. Woz remains the true genius.
It took Steve to turn Woz's brilliancy into a billion dollar company, though.
Woz had nothing to do with Apple when it was dying and then Steve Jobs took over again and invented the ipod, iphone etc. Was that Woz or Jobs? Woz would not of been able to do it without Jobs and vice versa the first time. But Jobs did it the second time without Woz, Woz didnt do it again ever. I love Woz, he was a great engineer. But engineering is different to building products that sell and having business vision and knowing what choices to make and most importantly what choices to not make. There are plenty of fake leaders but when one really knows what they are doing it is more valuable than someone with only technical skills. Also it isnt an either or fallacy.. lots of engineers also are awesome businessmen who have the vision too. But some are not.
Woz says himself, he could work for HP lifetime. But 2 Steves met and Jobs had other idea. Woz new how to build hardware and software, Jobs had vision
@@LL-wc4wn no engineer no computer
Man , this is second time this year Im watching this. So well spoken and fluent by Woz it's no problem, still learn.
This is amazing. As a teacher, I’m happy that he pointed out some of the many flaws with education.
After I read his biography, I realized we had some identical childhood 'tinkering' experiences. I reached out to Woz and he was so kind to respond with a sweet email. What a sincere down-to-earth genius!Great guy. I've read every Apple book by every former employee. Loved Woz's... as he was also the creator of everything Apple up until his retirement.
That’s awesome!
He is genuine, passionate and sincere to share his thought. I could listened to him all day.
Woz seems like such a genuine guy. Great interview.
Even though he ultimately became wealthy, it was never about the money.
I had read it too fast, I first saw "a guinea pig"...
@@Sovereign_Citizen_LEO The smarter and more introverted you are the less incentive there is to pay other people to do stuff for you.
Woz also ate like garbage while Jobs was always doing "cleanses"...Woz made a lot less money but he's still alive and still worth hundreds of millions. It appears he understands that success is about passion just as much as it is about balance.
@@funfun5656 - Generally agree. That all depends though, as around 80% of the population off the top either doesn't have the skills/ training/ ability, time, or motivation. Another 15%+ are elderly/ disabled and unable to even if they possess the skills. Such as is the case in my case. It's even less than that. It's probably about .003% of the population or less who even goes on to start a business, let alone engineers complex things/ products/ inventions/ innovations/ services. And also, when you're young (as these guys were) health is not usually a complicating factor (such that Jobs' cleanses or healthy lifestyle had any impact whatsoever).
Pat, the fact that you're landing all these high profile interviews says a lot. Ronnie Coleman, Steve Wozniak, Wolf of Wall Street, JFK's adviser, ExMafia, the list goes on
this is a 9 year old interview, so it's not exactly a new thing
*Phill Heath, not Ronnie Coleman.
been landing them since 2010
So many great interviews to watch on Valuetainment!
@Jay Not to mention that they stole most of the tech for Alibaba
Why is 2010 looking like 1999?
VHS right?
Take 360p and zoom it.
Welcome to 1999.
Filmed on an iPhone innit.
2019 is like 1999, too!
it’s better
I bought an Apple ll in 1977. What a great time I had in learning that machine, and the computer world. First floppy drive was $650. Before that it was audio tape for program storage.
Steve Wozniak is such a wholesome individual, completely selfless and introspective man. May god bless his soul.
Steve Wozniak, the computer world wouldn’t be as it is without your contribution. You worked in background and in underworld allowing others coming out front... Just like those hairdressers and makeup artists making theatre actors look as they should to hold the proper role... Thank you for your contribution to a better world... Lots of love to you ❤️
What an inspiration. It's hard not to get fired up listening to Steve talk.
Can't wait to watch this! Finally. I totally respect The Woz. He's principled. He equally contributed to Apple. IDC what anyone says.
Woz is such a great person, couple of years ago he gave the main speech at my engineering graduation ceremony. He spoke about the importance of taking risks, be creative and not be afraid to build something big. All my friends moved to 'stable' jobs after graduation, I on the other spent the next 10 months build a SaaS platform from scratch with barely any experience, zero funding and an army of friends,relatives and family members fighting against me to 'get back to my senses' and get a 'real job'. Such an inspirational man, a highly respected engineer! I wish they would emphasize more about the fact that without him there would be no Apple, I mean sales and marketing is great but without the hardcore computer system he built from scratch there would be no company.
your platform could be as successful as apple itself, or it could flop.
working on that right after college IS the sensible thing to do. even if it did flop, it's a live portfolio item you can use to show off your talents. working on it further GREW your talents and probably gave you more ideas.
and really, doing that for a year after graduation makes a lot more sense than trying to do the same halfway thru a mid-life crisis with piles of bills + family life shot to hell cos you're so miserable.
@@Numantino312 yes indeed. While it didn't make me good income, it did help me land my future roles and differentiate my resume. No loss there and I became way proficient at building scalable systems starting early in my career. As the saying goes, you either succeed or you learn. I still plan on rebuilding and expanding it now, with my experience level 100 folds of what it was before, will see.
The wizardry of Woz is impressive, but his authenticity is like no other I've ever seen. Had there been there no Mac II, my resistance to the tech revolution would have never been overcome. Kudos and Brava to Woz for his talent and dedication to his dream Thanks.
Steve Wozniak is an amazing man.. He was the brains, and even took care of employees when Steve didn't..
He was raised right. Raised with a good work ethic and humility.
Wozniak is charming because he is open and enthusiastic like a kid, as well as not falsely modest about his “engineering excellence”.
What he said about conformity being wrongly valued as intelligence, is spot on.
I wonder if Steve Wozniak, was like George Westinghouse? An Intelligent, knowing. man and a decent individual ; makes for a great legacy! Thank you!
@oh no He does, and I always like that about Mr.Wozniak.
He was.
⚡
Jobs = Sales & Business
Wozniak = Engineer & Designer
Exactly! It was a winning combination. Neither would have made it without the other.
Mike Markkula - the angel investor who made sure that Apple survived as a company.
Boom
@Diana MitfordI was gonna say he reminds me of Donkey Kong...no lie.
@Diana Mitford He is a stud through and through. His spirit is what I resonate with. But I am worlds more attractive..maybe I have a chance 😆
21:38 ~ 22:15 this is interesting.. notice how for Steve it’s not that he wasn’t listening to the question, but rather how his passion and focus for what vision him and Jobs had exceeded to thought of worrying about doubters ...this man was focused 💎
He is the kind of person who created miraculous life for me. Without having no deeper knowledge in anything- I am living a life 100 years ago a king even could not dream of. Respect!
Thank you for bringing spotlight on a gifted, humanist, humorous & creative Woz. He served as a regular public school teacher. Enough said. Much respect to the Valuetainment Team. Peace!
Both Steve are Genius in their comfortable area without steping each other toes.
They really complete each other.
Dulistan Tarigan
good point
I appreciate how Woz attributes to other people his success and not just because he is awesome at what he does
Mr. Wozniak, I had a pirated Apple 2 in the early 80’s in Asia. You are truly one of the giants that built Silicon Valley. Thank you for this precious gem of an interview, Patrick Bet David.
his innocents and his humility and his passion its just inspiring
That interview of you with Steve Wozniak from back from 2010 is so eye opening.
How some young dreamers with no money and a garage with engineering capabilities revolutionised the world together.
Its so insanely mind blowing when Steve describes the night OCD worked himself into a dreaming state and how he experienced his eureka moment: inventing how to put colored pixels on PC screens with zeros and ones. What a fucking madman!!!!!
Totally agree with that really blow my mind
He’s amazing. A true genius and a superior example of being gifted with a divine talent. Thank you for this 🙏🏻
Absolute respect to you sir, this interview is fantastic!
"Smart people always leave doors unlocked."
And here I thought I was just lazy
I do.
That's cool!⚡
…and I’m obsessive compulsive about checking and rechecking that the doors are locked at night. I feel offended by my hero.
Im so happy to see this interview on your channel. Thanks for publishing after so many years.
Many compliments to the host. What makes your interviews a cut above the rest I think is both skill and a natural talent you have, which makes an interview sound more like a conversation we wandered in on as it was just starting, very comfortable, just two guys kicking back and shooting the breeze. Well done as usual, enjoyed it immensely, thank you.
He's an excellent interviewer indeed.
And he let Woz talk.
What an interview, so pleasant and showing the true personality of Steve Wozniak and his delightful anecdotes in how, he and his partner Steve Jobs had managed their meager years. However, made it into an enormous unbelievable world success.
Here because of 5 bullet Friday. Shoutout to Tim
Same
Asad Shah same!
me too !
ditto
As well
Great interview David. Great job letting him speak when he was on a roll and putting in just enough to keeo him going. And the perfect questions. Ive learned alot
Ya, I mean Woz is clearly a prodigy and technical genius, but in addition to being smart, he's very energetic and determined. That motivational charge is essential.
Steve made sure that his employees all got paid fairly. He's a man of great ethics and a golden heart.
And he's still a multimillionaire.
If he didn't sell his shares or gabe it to his friends , he would have been the richest person in the world
True, Steve Wozniak was always the better Steve.
He plunked down millions of dollars to sponsor the US Festival in 1983, trying to unite East and West in Cold War days. Mind you, that was a lot of money and the big wealth of Tech was a decade away. Just a decent all around person.
Yea I thinking that right all your be storng to make computer apple 😊
What Steve Wozniak said at 34:15 about entrepreneurship in colleges is absolutely right.
I was at HP in the mid 70's, about the time Steve left. I remember someone giving me one of his business cards. It was hilarious; he was a tireless prankster. Had it for years and lost it. Wish I still had it.
DebWittner aww, it’s fine though, as an early employee you would’ve had a lot of money but working at hp at that time meant you were pretty good, so not many regrets
Wow, certainly would've been worth some good $$ on ebay if you still had it.
@@oldtwinsna8347 She's not speaking about its monetary value. That shouldn't be the focus. It's a memento of a brilliantly unique person.
@@tomasooie Who are you to say monetary value isn't the focus?
@@oldtwinsna8347 If the first thing you think of when someone's relating a personal story-concerning a humorous business card that illustrates Wozniak's merry-prankster personality-is how much it'd sell for on eBay, you have missed the point entirely.
This person changed my attitude to electronics!I'm happy about it!Now I'm an expert for industrial equipment.
Woz describes Jobs as a Walt Disney type personality. Walt was not the best animator or artist but he knew how to get the best out of those who were. He set up a productive environment and, maybe most importantly, he knew how to tell stories in a way that would inspire and direct those who could make his stories come to life on the screen.
You mean one have had to be a Director
Everything we have today is because of Wozniak. Thanks Steve.
Woz is a great guy who stayed humble - enormous talent, very approachable and charming.
Love the enthusiasm in Steve's voice. His passion is astonishing. I am chuffed that i can remember or relate to using every product he mentions. I remember loading code in - that i was copying from dot matrik printouts as high as the roof. Clearly remember using the Apple 11 (they could only afford to have 1 in the entire school)(haha mainly space invaders at lunchtime or "goto" here ) hp packard calculators that were crazy for their time. Perfect example of someone being used perfectly for his unique talent and passion - same as Jobs and same as their first investor - Great interview (must admit i have always tuned out to Steves other interviews)
I was fortunate to have spent an afternoon with Stephen and Janet in London a few years ago. Two of the most humble people I have ever had the fortune of meeting. Over a snack of sliders, I got Steve to work on an issue I had with with my iPhone. He wasn't able to sort it so he called a tech friend in America to work through the fix. In the meantime I had my then teenager son to go hug him while in the middle of his call. No issues! all cool! just another Tuesday. I love this beautiful, most humble of human beings, so so much. Very few understand that we humans are ...really ...actually ...running out of true beacons of hope for the future
A lot of Steve Jobs legacy is thanks and should be accredited to this man.
My first job was with one of the first Apple dealers. My first computer was an Apple II. I did briefly get a chance to meet Woz the first time I'd attended Comdex back in the early 80s. Interestingly he seemed very down to earth among a sea of blue and grey suits running about.
My current desktop at home is an i7 @ 4GHz with 32GB RAM... mounted into an old Apple II case! I can still run old Apple II software on it using an emulator.
Feels Great to hear that mam.
That is in awesome use of an old Apple ][ case!! Maybe my old Apple ][+ case could see a similar future. ;-)
@@SeanHollingsworth Actually I bought two of them on E-bay. The first turned out to have a motherboard, power supply and keyboard with a low serial no. so I decided not to butcher it and bought another.
The motherboard though turns out has a major issue I have yet to try to troubleshoot which is the RAM in the $8000-$BFFF range isn't working. It also had a keyboard which was completely useless so I put it on the other case for looks. I plan on at least wiring up the reset key to be functional.
@@SeanHollingsworth It's just a matter of finding and drilling some holes in the base to match the ITX or mini-ATX motherboard, then cutting up the back to expose the ports. If you plan on putting any cards inito it, they will have to be low-profile as well as the power supply.
It's one of two crazy projects. I also built a media/file server with FreeNAS into an old 1930s wooden radio cabinet. It's much nicer looking than a cheap piece of plastic!
@@dr.elvis.h.christ
That is awesome!!
I picked up an Apple ][gs back in 1994 from a newspaper ad. Fully functioning. I ended up giving it to my grandmother, along with my old Apple Imagewriter printer that my parents purchased new for me back in 1988. She still does bookkeeping for a couple of small companies in Reno, NV with an old BPI accounting program that originally came out in 1978. Whenever I make my way back to Reno from Texas, I always spend time backing things up onto newer floppy discs. (By "newer," would mean bought in the mid 1990's when they were still available.) ;-)
If your reading this you will get rich stay blessed and stay hustling!
@Gokul Narayan Proud of the community that brings all of us together.
@Gokul Narayan Well good luck with your effort if that is what will make you succesfull
@Gokul Narayan Its all about your mindset
Thank you! Be blessed! 😁
Your, you're... can't even do that and hope to get rich?😂😂
Apple was fantastic. I knew it from the start. They did not have rich relatives to keep them afloat. They had genius and persistence. They developed a quality product. Steve and Steve were a winning pair.
Steve Jobs was my inspiration in starting my youtube channel. Focus and Mindfulness. Indeed It feels amazing to practice meditation.
Woz will always be the brains of Apple. Jobs were the looks. Both needed each other, but there's nobody as humble and nice as Woz. Cheers
Sir thanks a gazillion times for uploading this interview again.
Watch the whole interview at a single go and noted many Golden nuggets.
#made me proud to be an ENGINEER
Thanks again sir.🙏🙏
#love from INDIA
I happened to meet Jobs (and Steve Wozniak) while I worked for Apple Accessory Products Division in 1985 as a Regional MIS Manager for Southern California. While Harry James was GM for the APG Division in Garden Grove, my boss in Cuppertino was Debbie Coleman who worked for Jobs as a controller. That was in 1985, shortly before Jobs was fired by Scully. I remember we were wearing t-shirts with words IBM - which meant I Build Macintosh. Today Apple is the largest company in the world, their valuation on the stock market is over trillion dollars. And that happened because of Steve Jobs, no doubt about it. Steve Wozniak was clearly a design genius, way ahead of his times. And also a master prankster. There would not be Jobs without Wozniak. They both complemented themselves. Steve Jobs was selling what Steve Wozniak was creating (that was Apple I and Apple II). Later Jobs start selling what Palo Alto Xerox Research Lab created (computer with user friendly interface - called Macintosh by Apple). Mike Markulla (the first angel investor of Apple) was responsible for creating Apple Company and its survival in late 70-ties/early 80-ties. BTW - Apple sold APG Division in Garden Grove to Alps (Japanese company) in early Fall 1985.
What were they like to be around personally? Was Jobs a tyrant to work for or all the rumors untrue? Did you continue working there after Jobs was sacked?
@ Not me - as MIS manager I was supporting information mgmt for the division
I went to high school with "the Steves"...they were both total nerds with no social skills whatsoever. Both belonged to after-school clubs, the engineer club, science club, etc. Geeky as hell, but smart too. They were kind of weird to be honest with you. Definitely not popular kids, but they probably didn't care about all that. Strange guys for sure.
@@chillytoes337 They didn't attend Homestead High School at the same time. Wozniak is five years older than Jobs, and they first met in 1971, while Wozniak was in college and Jobs was finishing high school. And they definitely did have social skills. So I doubt your story.
13:11 The U.S. government education system was based on an older German education system--which was oriented not toward critical independent thought, but toward producing people with technical competence to work in factories. Government schools can't meet everyone's educational needs and maximize everyone's outcome, but it could do a LOT better in identifying students who _could_ benefit from a less regimented approach to education, and start developing alternative systems that meet their needs better.
Spot on.
Honestly, with the internet around, the education system needs a complete overhaul. Group students by age, but everyone learns at their own pace. A true understanding of a subject needs to reach rather than standardized test results, which means we need better-designed tests. Also, tests should only have a passing score of 100%. If you can't complete the test fully, then you lack the understanding to move on (again, why we need much better tests based on understanding rather than rote memory, otherwise this point becomes moot). Only have Mandatory classes up until all the material is learned to a certain base level (mandatory classes should include critical thinking and reasoning, history of philosophy, personal finance, and common knowledge, like how to set up a bank account and buy a house/rent, etc) . People pursue the education they are most interested in. Teachers are there to provide structure, and to facilitate learning, and teach kids how to learn efficiently, not to teach individual subjects. Online teachers could be consulted on specific subjects you are struggling to grasp. An online platform keeps track of subjects you are learning and helps you find resources that you need ( such as websites, articles, etc) to learn said subjects, using A.I, as well as keeping track of other metrics, like time spent on a particular subject, people who are studying the same things as you, teachers who are recommended for the subjects and their ratings, etc. The list goes on. You could save a shit ton of money in education and improve the quality by several orders of magnitude. I haven't put too much thought into this in terms of depth, but I imagine if you got a room full of a dozen of the right people, you could come up with something pretty good.
@@brandonporter6223 A test where the passing grade is 100% assumes the system knows best which questions are relevant to ask, and the "correct" answer for each. If the goal is the well-informed citizenry that a Republic requires, one-size-fits-none government education is just a bad idea all around.
@@wlan246 I don't know. I personally think the government should have no role in education, other than to facilitate it. Independent learning is superior in every way, except it does require self-discipline, and one to know how to learn effectively. That's something that on site staff could still help with.
Steve Jobs was soo lucky to have such a naive nerdy capable loyal friend.
Patrick. Thank you for speaking truth about Woz. Most Apple users don't know about him besides Jobs but Woz deserves most if not all the credit.
Wozniak is the most agreeable engineer I've seen. Engineers are not known for this sort of demeanor. They have a rep for being difficult and a little too techy.
debating in a work environment vs speaking at an interview are 2 different things. Wosniak probably has no problem being disagreeable if he believes the other person is wrong in their assessment.
Maybe it’s because he never went to college
3:30 Woz compliments host and host doesn't even thank him for it? "Absolutely."
He didnt even finish the sentence jeez
He spent almost 2 min complementing him in the beginning. This is not a Mr.nice guy competition
He’s a little self centered, I think.
It's amazing how they are talking about how Siri and how you will use speech recognition.. now look at what they are doing with NeuralLink.. everything he is saying happened exactly the way he said. Amazing man.
Making money is not the same as keeping it, there are a lot of things that aren't well taught in schools. The market crisis gave me my first millions, when people stayed away from hard times I made the most of it..many credits goes to Sir Zach Micah Demers
This is superb information, as a noob it gets quite difficult to handle all of this and staying informed is a major cause, how do you go about this? Do you trade on your own?
Not at all, I invest with Sir Zach Micah Demers. I have been monitoring my portfolio performance which has made a jaw dropping $473k from just the past two quarters alone, I have learned why experienced traders make enormous returns from the seemingly unknown market. I must say it's the boldest decision I've taken since recently.
Investors should be cautious about their selections and money management, especially during inflation. Attaining high yields in this recession is only possible under the supervision of a professional or trusted advisor like Mr Zach Micah Demers
Bots, these days, are unleashed..
@@gopro5281if UA-cam wanted to take them down they would - hell they can remove a comment about the COVID vaccine in seconds lol
Steve Wazniak is gem, unheard gem.
The real workhorse behind Apple Steve wouldnt be half of what he is without this man.
He wasn't mad, honest.
this guy is an engineer marvel,i have so much respect for this gentleman.
Yes.
Wozniak - what a gem
Thank you valuetainment for being so great with interviews!
Wow. My favorite interview ever. So many hidden gems for Woz. We should build based on our own goals and find the tools to complete the puzzle. Truly inspirational.
Valuetainment is the best channel in UA-cam!
Rituraj Basu facts bro
I don't consider myself a strict libertarian and I think The Woz probably doesn't consider himself at all libertarian but the descriptions he gives of how to think outside the box is a beautiful example of libertarianism, i.e., people are best motivated by what they personally want.
Someone needs to put Woz back in the lab with some LSD and have him come up with some new stuff before he leaves us
He never took drugs. Jobs did.
@@thisistheendpt2 Yeah but jobs was a businessman regardless of the LSD.
Listening to the legends is always music to ears. A masterpiece!!!
Woz did much more than I ever thought! What a genius!
*There is a fine line between genius and madness...*
There sure is
or a fat rail
The difference between insanity and invention is successful implementation.
@@ebt1117 that default pict doe👌😂
True
Having someone in your life who gets as excited as you do about that little yellow dot is one of the great things in life.
Great interviewer. Doesn’t interrupt. And knows when to stop. Good work.
Why am I not surprised that a genius like Jobs was a little flawed as a human being. It pretty much goes with the territory. That being said there would be no Apple without the genius of Steve Wozniak and he's down to earth.
How do you even get these guys to give an interview? That's damn talent , thanks for the video
$$$
@@RobertLinthicum $$$$ & of course the amount of subscribers is of Vital Importance.. Patrick has the following
Woz don’t need money, has money
Woz is a true genius, a lot respect and admiration , great interview thanks Patrick for sharing.
I love the irony when he said that their computers were expandable back then. Things change, don't they?
I love the whole Apple ][ family of computers. I always found it funny how the firsts PC's were NOT expendable yet the first of Apple computers were and now almost every PC is expandable in everyway yet Apple computers are stuck how they come out of the box. Smh I wish Apple computers were customizable again.
No not really? USB was invented.
It only took me 12 years to watch and listen to this for the first time. I agree 100%. Thank you for sharing.
Bruce Lee, Eddie Van Halen, Einstein, Tesla etc all great. Woz will go down as one of the people who most changed, influenced and enriched our lives. Everyone from Presidents to the poorest his contributions have and will continue to change the world.
@@j109joell You have a problem with EVH?
@@j109joell They were all innovaters in their respective fields. In no way do they have to be "equal" nor did I say they were equal. You're just a pseudo intellectual snob trying to sound smart.