What the other Steve has to say...
                              Apple  co-founder Steve Wozniak gave his much-anticipated fireside chat last  night at the annual MacHack conference in Dearborn, MI. Steve 'Woz'  Wozniak talked about Apple, his children, his history at Apple and his  many, many pranks. Later, Woz took questions from the audience, where  among other things, he speculated on an Apple PDA.
                              
                                  
                                  Woz on Apple 
                                  "Apple,  during the Apple II days, was just as big as Apple today," said Woz. He  still receives a nominal paycheck from Apple and also gets the latest  hardware. He says that he wants to be an Apple employee his whole life.  However, he travels and speaks on his own nickel, and he can say  anything he wants to about Apple. Woz regularly speaks to small venues  like Mac user groups. Woz is still a gadget lover, and he travels to  Japan to see some of the latest.
                                  "There are two computer  monopolies - Microsoft and Apple," said Woz. He believes that the Cube  is one of the best computers ever designed, and that the Titanium  PowerBook is the best ever. Woz' daughter decided on a blue Dalmatian  iMac over a cube.
                                  Woz  has installed Mac OS X on his new iBook, which he says is "the supreme  balance" in a portable computer. He has had three bad experiences with  the new OS, and his feeling are "negative overall."
                                  "I agree  with the writer who said that it is not ready for prime time," said  Woz. "But, it came out more beautiful than I thought it could."
                                  Curiously,  Woz seems convinced that an Apple branded PDA is likely. "It fits well  into Apple's Digital Hub," he said. He also agrees with Andy Hertzfeld  about Apple moving more into the open source arena. "If your life was  open, you wouldn't do the bad things you do now." Woz uses Eudora and  iCab exclusively now, and says that Microsoft's software is getting too  buggy.
                                   Steve Jobs 
                                  Woz still  talks to Steve Jobs, and Woz said that he has some influence at Apple.  However, this influence does not go beyond access to Jobs' ear and bug  reports and other issues being reported as Mac user Steve Wozniak.
                                  Daniel  Kottke told an interesting story about Jobs at the reunion. Kottke met  Jobs at Reed college. "Steve was a really sweet guy, real quiet and  shy," said Kottke. Jobs' parents didn't fund Jobs at Reed. According to  Kottke, Jobs got a refund of his tuition, and asked the dean to allow  him to audit classes at Reed and to stay in a dorm room. "He got  one-and-a-half years of liberal arts college educations without paying  a penny," said Kottke. At a Reed college reunion, Kottke said that  there was a class of '76 T-shirt that said "221 of Steve Jobs best  friends."
                                  Woz said that he hadn't heard all of that about  Steve Jobs. However, Woz got laughs from the audience by saying that,  of the early Apple people, he was the only one who actually finished  his degree. Woz said that the early Apple people were best friends with  Jobs.
                                  "Jobs read it in a book somewhere that there are special  people in the world who do everything, and there are those who do  nothing. Jobs wanted to be one of the people to do everything."
                                  Woz  said that he always wanted to see people first at Apple, and not the  business first. He said that he was very upset with Scully about the  layoffs of the Apple II people after he left, and that he indeed hung  up on him when he called him to discuss the layoffs. Woz said that he  decided in college that he never wanted to be a boss. "Apple and the  Macintosh would have never happened without the people," said Woz.
                                  He  said that he was never mistreated by Jobs, and that he left Apple  equitably and without any bad feelings. However, Woz also said that  Jobs is motivated by control.
                                  "Jobs wanted power, and he left  Apple to get it." Jobs charged Apple $400 million for NeXT. "Jobs told  me that Apple shouldn't have paid that much, but I now understand that  Jobs had to represent his shareholders," said Woz. "I'm not a  businessman."
                                   The Mac Design Team 
                                  Woz  talked about the Mac design team reunion from the previous evening. He  began with a story about Daniel Kottke, Apple's first employee who  physically assembled and tested all of the Mac prototypes. According to  Woz, Kottke was one day responsible for showing "Jerry 'Moonbeam'  Brown" around Apple. All of the Mac rumor sites reported that day that  Apple was going to announce a new CEO. However, Kottke didn't know  this, and didn't understand why people at Apple kept asking him if this  was the guy. Later that day, Apple did announce a new CEO -- John  Sculley.
                                  Randy Wigginton, too young to drive to the Homebrew  Computer Club, got lifts from Woz to club meetings. Woz said that he,  Jobs and many others would be top Apple players were at Wigginton's  high school graduation. Woz said that he too was sorry that Don Denman  lost MacBasic, but he also said that Wigginton created and lost his THE  Spreadsheet. THE Spreadsheet was recalled, but 100 got out. To control  the situation, Woz said that they put a sticker in the boxes saying  that this product was a gift from him, Wigginton, and some others at  Apple, but not from the company.
                                  "I still believe that  HyperCard is the best program ever written," said Woz when he talked  about Bill Atkinson. Woz also gave a great deal of credit to Jef  Raskin. "We have good graphics based computers because of him. He  always was for something easy," said Woz. He said that the Mac was  excellent partly because Raskin insisted that the Mac would be an  excellent product if it were simple enough to work for everyone. Woz  said that the most excellent design frees you to do what you want to  without effort. "If you are really free, you just float where you want  to go."
                                  One of the toughest questions asked of the design team  on Thursday was "would you change the world again?" Most of the early  Mac designers said that they could do the 90-hour weeks again, and  probably wouldn't take on such ambitious projects. Also, they noted  their age and their family and other responsibilities. Only Raskin --  deeply involved in a crusade to again change the way user interfaces  are designed -- said that his effort, begun on the Mac, has not been  finished, and that he is continuing.
                                  Woz answered this  question similarly to the rest of the early Mac design team. He said  that he is over fifty years old, and that his son is about to enter  Carnegie Mellon University this year. He also said again that his first  goal in life is to be an engineer, and that he is now pursuing his  second goal in life -- to be a teacher.
                                   Woz' history and pranks 
                                  Woz  often talks about Mac history, and he noted many of the books that have  been written on Mac history. Also, Woz hinted repeatedly that he might  write a book himself one day. His stories about the early days of  computer electronics and his early days at Apple were charming and  crowd pleasing.
                                   Curiously, Woz is a prankster, and he devoted  a large part of his keynote to a review of his triumphs. "I've always  equated humor with creativity," said Woz. He buys sheets of $2 bills  which he perforates and uses as currency. This has gotten him in a  great deal of trouble over the years, as many unknowing cashiers have  considered the bills counterfeit. Many of Woz' pranks are listed on his website woz.org . 
                                  Many  at the conference were entertained by Woz' pranks. One of the pranks  that got the most winces was when Woz got a wrong number on his cell  phone -- a likely occurrence as Woz likes repeating digits and selects  them for phone numbers. The Apple I was deliberately priced at $666.66  for this reason. Woz got the wrong number on his cell phone, and said  that he found the cell phone next to this guy who was lying critically  injured on the ground. The wrong number caller was of course shocked  and mortified, and Woz carried the prank on.
                                  Typically, Woz  will make up to injured parties and good sports of his pranks with  sweet gestures after the fact, and most of his pranks target friends  and co-workers. Generally, they are charming, and Woz easygoing  demeanor can diffuse tense situations.