Dana Redington

Dr. Dana Juett Redington (born June 12, 1951) was an early employee of Apple Computer.

Early life
Redington was born in California, son of Edward Dana Redington II and grandson of alumnus Paul Goodwin Redington. His middle name is taken from his mother's maiden name Juett.

Apple Computer
Redington joined Apple Computer in the fall of 1977 as employee #18. He was a programmer that also prepared marketing demos, one of which was a heavily modified version of Bob Bishop's game, Star Wars v2, that was used to showcase the high resolution mode of the Apple II computer. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak said that he admired Redington's work, but Steve Jobs thought it was "lousy" and dismissed him.

Redington also communicated with user groups and prepared cassette tapes of demos for club meetings and public events.

After Apple
In the early 1980s, Redington worked at Allophonix, where he was jointly granted a U.S. for developing a multi-state speech encoder and decoder. In 1986, he founded Martial Sciences for the development of a martial arts training simulator. Since 2004, he has been the principal and CEO of Redwolf Technology, a consulting company.