Steve Wozniak, the visionary American engineer and co-founder of Apple Inc., revolutionizes the personal computing industry with his groundbreaking inventions and technical prowess. As the architect of the Apple I and Apple II computers, Wozniak's innovations lay the foundation for the modern era of computing, shaping the way we work, communicate, and interact with technology.

"I worked with such concentration and focus and I had hundreds of obscure engineering or programming things in my head. I was just real exceptional in that way."



"I had a TV set and a typewriter and that made me think a computer should be laid out like a typewriter with a video screen."



"I'd learned enough about circuitry in high school electronics to know how to drive a TV and get it to draw - shapes of characters and things."



"I sold my most valuable possession, but I knew that because I worked at Hewlett Packard, I could buy the next model calculator the very next month for a lower price than I sold the older one for!"



"I'm surprised at the extent of the bigotry. But it really plays out when companies or schools take a side and prohibit the other platform at all. We Mac users should be good even when the other side is bad. We should do what we can to accept the other platforms."



"For some reason I get this key position of being one of two people that started the company that started the revolution."



"Another hero was Tom Swift, in the books. What he stood for, the freedom, the scientific knowledge and being and engineer gave him the ability to invent solutions to problems. He's always been a hero to me. I buy old Tom Swift books now and read them to my own children."



"A lot of hacking is playing with other people, you know, getting them to do strange things."



"In some parts of life, like mathematics and science, yeah, I was a genius. I would top all the top scores you could ever measure it by."

