Steve Wozniak

Stephan Gary "The Woz" Wozniak (born August 11, 1950) is one of the original co-founders of Apple Computer, with Steve Jobs and Ronald Wayne on April 1, 1976. He is officially designated employee #1 and served as VP of Engineering.

History
Wozniak graduated from Homestead High School in Cupertino, California, which would later be attended by Steve Jobs. In 1969, fellow classmate Bill Fernandez introduced Jobs to Wozniak while the latter was washing his car. In 1971, Wozniak and Fernandez worked together on their first computer board, called Cream Soda, which used s, while consuming Cragmont Cream Soda. After reading about phone in an October 1971 issue of, Wozniak built "blue boxes" to make free phone calls and once called the  in an attempt to reach. Jobs sold the blue boxes for around $170; some were obtained by the after blue box customers got caught using them.

In 1973, while employed at Hewlett-Packard, Wozniak started the first Dial-A-Joke service in San Francisco in his spare time with rented answering equipment.

In 1975, Wozniak and Jobs collaborated at Atari on the design of the video game Breakout, which led him to begin work on a system that would become the Apple I.

Wozniak at Apple
Wozniak designed the logic board and hand coded the original BASIC interpreter for the Apple I and II computers. He was designated an Apple Fellow for his work.

When Wozniak discovered that some of Apple's early garage employees did not receive any stock options in the company, he offered them 10 million worth of his personal shares through what was called the "Woz Plan". Wozniak stated that he has remained on Apple's payroll since day one, still drawing a "small" paycheck and reporting directly to co-founder Steve Jobs. Wozniak added, "Since he died, I can’t be fired."

Media portrayals
Wozniak was portrayed by, , and in dramatizations of his relationship with Jobs in the films Pirates of Silicon Valley, Jobs, and Steve Jobs, respectively.

Books

 * Woz's Wanderings by Owen W. Linzmayer, Apple Confidential 2.0: The Definitive History of the World's Most Colorful Company, p.27-39. No Starch Press. 2004.