Woz On Apple's Success 294
Frankenbuffer writes "The Globe and Mail today has a short interview with Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple. Steve muses on spinning off iPod as a separate division. He also questions the move to Intel." From the article: "Microsoft wants to get out of the whole image of the big, black Darth Vader evil guy ... Innovation is probably going on within the company, because any time you put smart engineers in places eventually they wind up talking and innovating no matter how much you try to hold them back. I hope Microsoft improves and becomes more like Apple."
Nawww... (Score:5, Funny)
I swear, the next time a manager tells me that I need to leverage my win-win situation to think outside the box synergisticly, I'm going to mail the CEO the christmas party pictures I took...it graphically proves that our admin used to be a gymnast...
Boldly going where I surely don't belong...
Re:Nawww... (Score:4, Funny)
You missed a few (Score:3, Funny)
You aren't to critical mass yet:
In my work group, we spend staff meetings keeping track of the jargon used by management. It's interesting to track over time.
Re:You missed a few (Score:2)
Re:Nawww... (Score:2)
A dead language [fak3r.com]
More bad language [fak3r.com]
Unless you want to 'take this offline' to 'get your head around the 'tribal knowledge' - that's my fav...
Re:Nawww... (Score:3, Funny)
I swear, the next time a manager tells me that I need to leverage my win-win situation to think outside the box synergisticly, I'm going to mail the CEO the christmas party pictures I took...it graphically proves that our admin used to be a gymnast...
I think you need to send the photos to me. You know, for safekeeping ... in case something ever happens to you.... :-)
Buzzword Bingo (Score:2)
Each time the manager/meeting leader (er, I guess I should say 'facilitator' in this context) says a word on your card, cross it off. When you get a bingo, signal by coughing.
Use smaller grids for short meetings, larger for long meetings. Use differ
Re:Nawww... (Score:2, Funny)
How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Still, the switch to Intel is a necessary one from an engineering standpoint, he said, because Apple needed a way to improve performance per watt. Mr. Wozniak would have liked Apple to continue using Motorola processors, but "Intel just did a very good logic design.""
Sounds like sound logic to me. No questioning there at all.
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2, Informative)
"I still have some questions
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2, Informative)
I guess it's good he's no longer with the company. We migh
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
If those same comments were coming from someone intimately involved in the Powerbook line I'd think along the same lines as you (WTF?). Coming from Woz they're just about loyalty to
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Performas weren't Woz's idea. If Woz still stuck with Apple for all of those years, we'd be seeing very expandable, open, and well-engineered Apple machines (well-engineered from an electrical engineering perspective). All of the modern PC enthusiasts would have stuck with Apple to this day had Apple kept the Apple II and went beyond that (more powerful processors, improved OS, etc.).
If Woz still remained at Apple,
Michael Spindler (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:3, Informative)
Beg to differ. That would be Darwin [apple.com] or OpenDarwin [opendarwin.org] - the resemblence to BSD exists, but is generaly overstated.
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Performas weren't Woz's idea. If Woz still stuck with Apple for all of those years, we'd be seeing very expandable, open, and well-engineered Apple machines (well-engineered from an electrical engineering perspective). All of the modern PC enthusiasts would have stuck with Apple to this day had Apple kept the Apple II and went beyond that (more powerful processors, improved OS, etc.).
You said it, dude.
My first PC was an
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Maybe people forget it because it isn't true. The Apple I and Apple II that Woz designed used the MOS Technologies 6502 processor, not the more expensive Motorola 6800 or Intel 8086.
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
*checks wiki to avoid being so very wrong a second time*
The 6502 was designed primarily by the same team that had designed the Motorola 6800. After quitting Motorola en-masse, they quickly designed the 6501, a completely new design that was nevertheless pin-compatible with the 6800. Motorola sued immediately, and although today the case would have been dismissed out of hand, the damage to MOS was enough for them to agree
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Sounds like sound logic to me. No questioning there at all.
Read on a little further.. like the next paragraph.
Engineering related considerations aside, he still seems reluctant about joining the Intel camp. "If it wasn't needed, I wo
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
Re:How is he questioning the move to Intel? (Score:2)
The reason for Apple's success is the underlying OS that runs their software. I really don't think some of you will ever get that. The reason why Photoshop runs so damn fast on "slo
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Re:Woz is a good man (Score:5, Interesting)
Jobs, on the other hand, started NeXT; and though we can bicker somewhat about its market success, it was eventually sold to Apple for $400M and was extraordinarily innovative for its time. Afterward, Jobs was the single-most-responsible reason why Apple had its turn-around. He brought Pixar to its successful heights. He envisioned, brought about, and championed changes to the way we think about computer styling, music players, and animated entertainment.
Wozniak sounds like a really nice guy. He was a brilliant engineer, no doubt. However, the real force behind his rise to success was the marketing brilliance of Steve Jobs. Jobs financially made Woz what he is today, and Woz should really be nothing but grateful. Slashdot probably is not the most receptive crowd to such heresy, but it is the truth.
I'd put it this way (Score:2)
Re:I'd put it this way (Score:2)
We all have great ideas that show up later brought to market (the world) by someone with more drive. Many more people than we realize have their brilliant ways to be excellent.
Without the guiding hand of someone with Job's skills, though, those sparks tend to die out.
I'll stop being a Jobs fanboy now and get back to my own entrepreneurial endeavors.
Fire? (Score:2)
Re:Woz is a good man (Score:2)
I think the big thing with Jobs was that he had some relatively small success in the 80's and then came back with something else, which is pretty rare. Few people reach the top, fall
Re:Woz is a good man (Score:2)
Businesses fail, and there are a lot of people that do persist, thrive, fail & thrive with relative obscurity. Where Jobs is pretty lucky is that he's started three major businesses, each one a success by several measures.
As for Woz, he's not a limelight kind
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Woz is a good man (Score:3, Funny)
Aww.... What did he do, steal your girlfriend?
Yes, he did. Also, my name is Bob Dylan.
Re:Woz is a good man (Score:2)
The "wakka wakka wakka!" guy, right? He always cracks me up.
Sales (Score:2)
Steve and Woz were both necessary for Apple to become a success, and I would highly doubt that Steve would argue with this. It's like saying the Beatles would still be the Beatles without John...
I remember a video on NPR
Re:He has more than enough (Score:2)
Re:Woz is a good man (Score:3, Interesting)
The Apple II had a few things going for it. Visicalc was the killer app, and being the first with
Do we really want clones? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Do we really want clones? (Score:2, Funny)
Luke: An iPOD?!
Obi Wan: Yes, it used to be your father's before he turned evil and worked for Microsoft.
Luke: You knew my father?
Obi Wan: Yes, I fought with your father in the Clone Wars....
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Do we really want clones? (Score:2)
Easy! Because having a human (clone or not) is infinite times better than having a borg!
Re:Do we really want clones? (Score:2)
Where do you think this [xbox.com] is headed?
Ah the Woz.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Right now people seem to be straining to turn the iPod into an Input device, or at least to give it that capability. I'd be very interested to see what the Woz could do with it.
Re:Ah the Woz.. (Score:2)
How much involvement does he have, really? I know he sits on Danger's advisory board, but I would imagine that if he had much of a hands-on role, a few really nasty bugs in the Hiptop API would have been history a long time ago.
Spinning off iPod (Score:2)
Re:Spinning off iPod (Score:2)
Another "Fun fact about business" (Score:2)
Companies spin-off their larger profit makers all the time. It is called 'unlocking value'. Basically if one division of a company is vastly outpserforming the others, then it makes good financial sense to spin it off, so that the shares of both seperate companies more accuratly reflect their marketplace, instead of one division pullling another one down.
Look at Viacom spinning off CBS for example, or Wendy's spinning off it's cash-cow Tim hortons subsidiary.
It would not be u
Re:Another "Fun fact about business" (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Another "Fun fact about business" (Score:2)
Innovate? (Score:2, Insightful)
Prove it (Score:2)
Now prove it.
I make a counter assertion; detailed in some of my responses later in this thread. What's your proof?
Re:Innovate? (Score:2)
Re:Innovate? (Score:2)
A) Smart Playlist support (database driven)
B) Integrated ripping, cataloging, and indexing
c) Live search
why? (Score:2, Insightful)
Does he realize that if Microsoft improves their image and becomes more like Apple it is only going to hurt Apple?
Guess someone has some MS stock that he wants to see go up.
Re:why? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd like to see Microsoft become more like Apple. I'd like to see Apple become more like Google (yeah yeah China blah blah blah). The fact is, all the big companies have some excellent traits, and each could stand to learn something from the others. And the more they take these lessons to heart, the better their products get, and the more we benefit from it. Have you considered the possibility that
Re: (Score:2)
Testing New Technologies (Score:2)
Would have been a great way to test new collision-advoidance systems.
In Other News... (Score:2)
Re:Testing New Technologies (Score:2)
spinning off the wrong part? (Score:3)
Given the huge success of the iPod, perhaps a better strategy would be to spin off the computing business.
Woz's iPod views (Score:3, Interesting)
Given the huge success of the iPod, perhaps a better strategy would be to spin off the computing business.
It is surprising how Woz misunderstands the success of the iPod so deeply. He seems to think of it as a Palm Pilot. A standalone gadget. Jobs obviously takes a different view. He sees a vertically integrated entertainment industry from content production to device presentation. The iPod gets its cache by being associated with other enlightened Apple solutions. Spin it off and the magic is gone, just
Re:Woz's iPod views (Score:2)
The iPod gets its cache by being associated with other enlightened Apple solutions. Spin it off and the magic is gone
uhh, i think you've got it back-asswords; apple's recent resurgence is largely due to the ipod, which is the hip, gotta have toy. if anything, it's the 'other enlightened apple solutions' GAIN cachet from the ipod.
Would you like fries with your words? (Score:2)
Somehow Steve Jobs never seems to have that problem.
No one ever wants to hold him to account for past pronouncements.
Calling BS (Score:2)
I call Bullshit!
Apple may have needed to improve performance, but not necessarily performance per watt.
And if performance was their sole concern -- not even considering price -- then there was AMD.
Woz, sorry, but you spouting Intel sloga
Re:Calling BS (Score:3, Insightful)
laptops. heard of them?
Re:Calling BS (Score:3, Insightful)
Tell me why they would go to another company with supply problems?
All the AMD zealots here seem to continually forget AMD's biggest problem, they cannot produce. Going with Intel is a BUSINESS decision as much as a technical one. We can debate the relative merits till the cows come home and it does not matter one bit.
For the sake of this argument (and only to remove it as a possible sticking point) I will grant that AMD has a superior processor. Bottom line, t
Re:Calling BS (Score:3)
Exactly! (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple... (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft, Dell, HP and the rest target anyone with a pulse, which in my mind makes it less attractive. Apple's best move was the IPod because it not only makes wads of money, but increases the consumer's awareness of the whole Apple brand as a consumer company, and so the consumers are more likely to buy an Apple Mac if their IPod works well for them, then a Windows based computer which is made by HP, runs Microsoft, and runs Napster which getting support for is a nightmare (no, it's a hardware problem, no it's Windows at fault, etc...). My 2 cents...
Re:Apple... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Apple... (Score:5, Interesting)
Getting access to electric power is easy, it is the price that is a killer issue.
Brilliant!! (Score:5, Funny)
Mr. Jobs returned to the company as chief executive officer in 1997 and has since led the company to new heights, but Mr. Wozniak has stayed away. His dealings with Apple are minor, he said, although he's still on the payroll "just out of loyalty."
That's awesome. I'm going to go tell my boss right now that I'm leaving, but I wish to remain on the payroll "just out of loyalty"!
Actually having chatted with Woz.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Interestingly, Woz denied having anything to do with ADB (although he is frequently cited as the inventor), he carries a RAZR (despite his association with Danger, the company that produces the Sidekick) and a Bluetooth headset.
I happened to have a Sony MagicLink with me, and Woz indicated that he hadn't seen someone actually using one in years.
A Computer Company? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not anymore they're not. Now they're some combination of a media company, industrial design company, and computer company, to varying degrees. The other other Steve gets that...
I'd like to see MS more like Apple too... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:MOD THIS COMMENT DOWN!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:IPods are the only reason why Apple still exist (Score:3, Informative)
Industry Comparison: Apple doing better than Dell in terms of operating margin. MS still better 40+% [yahoo.com]
ROE very nice! [yahoo.com]
I mention this because a couple of years ago I was once with a bunch of mgt types and they were saying that Apple should get out of the PC business because they were an industry laggard. It looks like things have changed.
Re:IPods are the only reason why Apple still exist (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:IPods are the only reason why Apple still exist (Score:2)
I commute in to London every day and work in the City. My experience is similar to yours - only those three brands tend to make an appearence, though I'll allow the odd HP and Sony a guest mention. However the Dell/Thinkpad numbers dwarf the rest - whilst my Powerbook isn't quite a unique sight, it's not an especially common one either.
Re:IPods are the only reason why Apple still exist (Score:2)
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:2)
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:2)
From the Apple ][ and the C= PET the line goes to the IBM PC and Phoenix/Compaq, which took the idea a step further: The "Standard PC" as a design, not a product, where hun
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, he's kind of a hippy who marginalized himself at Apple and eventually quit because it stopped being fun, so he also has anti-establishment cred.
He's also very good at talking about technology, and a fairly likable person, so the press loves the guy.
Finally, Steve Jobs haters love to hail him as the "real" genius behind anything good that Apple has ever done, in spite of the fact that he was never really part of the Macintosh team and hasn't been involved in any company of note for a couple of decades now.
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:5, Insightful)
He built neat stuff because he loved doing it, not because he wanted to become really wealthy or something else. He is a good example of the archetypal hacker.
He loves high-tech practical jokes.
He's credited with pushing hard for two major aspects of computers where his impact had a lasting effect on the industry -- gaming capabilities and openness. He liked playing video games, and wanted them to be affordable and available to all kinds of people. He also wanted them to be expandable and something that people could reconfigure and build new systems out of.
He's a nice, funny guy, which contrasts [wikipedia.org] with Jobs:
He [Jobs] was given the task of creating a circuit board for the Atari game Breakout. According to Atari Founder Nolan Bushnell, Atari had offered $100 to each chip that was reduced in the machine. Unfortunately (and admittedly), Steve [Jobs] had little interest or knowledge in circuit board design. He made a deal with Stephen Wozniak: the bonus would be split evenly between them, if Woz could create a circuit board with a minimal number of chips. Much to the amazement of Atari, Wozniak reduced the number of chips by 50. Unfortunately he had made the design so tight that it was impossible to reproduce on an assembly line. At the time, Jobs told Wozniak that Atari had only given them $500 (rather than $5000), and that Wozniak's share was thus $250.
Today, Jobs is a power broker and the Woz teaches computer science to kids and encourages people to be hackers and engineers. The Woz is a geek and Jobs is a marketer -- and we all want a friendly hero to love.
He and Jobs started Apple partly with money made from selling blue boxes (devices that let people get free calls at the time) so he has a bit of appeal to the pirate folks out there as well.
Basically, The Woz is the kind of guy that we all wish we had a lot more of in society, and wish that more people would emulate. That's why people like to hang on his every word. I attended a talk he gave once, and while I didn't walk away with my life changed, you get the feeling that this is a guy who really has figured out life and how to enjoy doing what he loves.
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:2)
It's more like Steve Jobs "happened to get lucky" by knowing Woz. Jobs was (and is) a salesman, not an engineer. Without Woz, Jobs wouldn't have had an Apple II to sell and make a fortune off of.
Re:Why do people care about this guy? (serious inq (Score:2)
Re:Hey "Woz"! (Score:2)
Re:Engineers (Score:3, Interesting)
Except in limited cases, big companies don't innovate on their own. It's too freaking expensive, which makes it even riskier than it is for the garage/basement innovators.
It's a much better strategy for big companies to acquire small innovative companies.