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bigstrat2003 8 hours ago

Woz is by far the person in computing history for whom I have the most respect. Dude is an absolute legend, and from everything I have heard is humble and kind on top of his crazy skills. If I could get to the point where I had even 10% of his skill and generosity of spirit, I would consider myself to have done pretty well.

postalcoder 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I can't think of a single person who embodies the spirit of this site more than Woz. dang could replace the guidelines with a picture of Woz and we'd all know what it meant.

omnimus 7 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Let's not forget url of this site is Ycombinator. As far as i know that is very far from “friendly selfless genius inventor engineer”. It's more like “ambitious finance move fast and break things programmer”.

SkyMarshal 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

To be fair, Woz wasn't just a “friendly selfless genius inventor engineer”, he was also the co-founder of one of the most valuable tech companies in the world. And YC is, in their own words: "The Y combinator is one of the coolest ideas in computer science. It's also a metaphor for what we do. It's a program that runs programs; we're a company that helps start companies.". They're not entirely unrelated.

al_borland 2 hours ago | parent [-]

He was a cofounder because of his skill and Jobs talking him into it. Woz would have been perfectly happy as an engineer at HP, that was his plan.

chairmansteve 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

You are right. But the real world is a messy place. Good people do bad things and vice versa. Not many people are entirely good or entirely bad.

HN is a very strong net positive IMO. YC could easily monetize it into oblivion. They don't.

postalcoder 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Woz is a primary figure in one of YC’s essential texts. He has always been revered here as a founder and as a human.

https://www.amazon.com/Founders-Work-Stories-Startups-Early/...

flomo 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

"Tech Cofounder" who gets edged out before the next funding round.

direwolf20 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Woz may embody the spirit of hacking but does he really embody the spirit of venture capital?

postalcoder 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Since when was HN about venture capital?

  Hacker news is designed for and targeted at hackers. In the sense of the word that means people who write code, not people who break into things. Other people with similar tastes also like it.

  Since it's run by YC and the initial users were mostly YC founders, there is inevitably a startup spin to the stories that are popular here. In fact the site was originally called Startup News. But it turned out to be boring to have so much of a startup focus, so we changed the name and the focus to be more general.
- pg (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1648199)

Also: https://web.archive.org/web/20070624055731/http://www.founde...

paulcole 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Do you believe all marketing and advertising copy that you read?

postalcoder 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Look at the questions I'm replying to. They, in one way or another, asked me to draw a line between Woz and Ycombinator. That's what I did.

Woz has always carried a near perfect approval rate in our community. I've never seen anyone come close.

paulcole 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Sorry, I was replying to the person who said, “Since when was HN about venture capital?” The answer to that is obviously since its inception. It’s like watching those weird flying contraption contests and asking, “Since when is Red Bull about energy drinks?”

3 hours ago | parent | next [-]
[deleted]
postalcoder 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Oh wait that was me. I mean, yes you're right that vc and startups are inextricable. But I’d argue their underlying spirit isn’t the same.

I realize that’s a normative claim. Like the blind men and the elephant, we’re each touching a different part.

paulcole 3 hours ago | parent [-]

> But I’d argue their underlying spirit isn’t the same.

And your argument is based on the fact that you’d like this to be true as well as the fact that the vc company behind this site said, “Trust us bro!”

How is that different from the cow saying, “The farmer told us we’re walking through a fun maze!”

postalcoder 3 hours ago | parent [-]

I may have overthought this and wandered into territory I don’t actually have strong convictions about. My original impulse was simply to show some love for Woz.

aembleton 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Maybe Fabrice Bellard could be a candidate.

jdefr89 2 hours ago | parent [-]

Obviously familiar with Fabrice Bellard and his technical contributions but it seems like he is a pretty private person and he keeps to himself. I don't really know much about him as a person.

mghackerlady an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

To me he's second only to stallman for me. Woz is an engineering genius, but stallman is pretty much the reason we're on this site right now in a way

checker659 an hour ago | parent [-]

Care to explain?

volkercraig an hour ago | parent | next [-]

Without the gnu projects, software would have remained in the domain of universities and industry. Distributing it for free and encapsulating it with an actual legal license was radical in and of itself, but the notion of being required to distribute source was even more radical. Without that, people don't learn to code outside of industry, people don't share ideas and software remains in corporate silos with no/low interoptability unless a business decides to form a strategic partnership.

NetMageSCW 4 minutes ago | parent [-]

> outside of industry, people don't share ideas and software remains in corporate silos with no/low interoptability unless a business decides to form a strategic partnership.

Computer science and computing was taught and done at universities long before Stallman and GNU came along. I was using C++ Release E at college before GNU started, provided by Bell Labs at no cost.

mghackerlady 42 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

Without Stallman there wouldn't be GNU, so the operating system used to host this site and the majority of the web wouldn't exist. The compiler used to build that operating system wouldn't exist. The free software movement that later birthed its little cousin "open source" wouldn't exist, neither would the free culture movement to some extent. The ideals of the free software movement inspired the architects of the World Wide Web to make it a freely available technology, so without stallman the net would be vastly different, likely staying fragmented between different protocols like it used to be. Plus, the operating system you're using likely has some GNU stuff in it somewhere

pavlov an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Woz is great, but I'd still go for Alan Kay.

rainbowcash 38 minutes ago | parent [-]

Great mention of Alan Kay - however I enjoy hearing from them both. Both have an infectious enthusiasm for teaching and making things so dang simple. I enjoy coming back to their talks and learning something new

ares623 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Everyone chooses the wrong Steve to worship.

Aloha 8 hours ago | parent | next [-]

If you're an engineer, you should admire Woz, if you're a product manager or marketeer, Jobs.

Jobs was a brilliant product manager and marketeer - every bit as brilliant as Woz is an engineer.

The truth is, the sharpest engineers struggle to make a marketable consumer product - because they make it for themselves, and while thats quite laudable, however it's generally a tiny market compared to one targeted at normal people.

p00dles 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

They were both brilliant, but from everything that I've read, Jobs was an ass****, and Woz was the opposite, and that is a huge, huge difference.

The mythologizing of Jobs is the canonical example of people condoning terrible behavior because they think that a person is smart/valuable/talented/etc.

To me this is completely backwards and sets a terrible precedent - that you can act however you want if you get results - especially given how many people idolize and look up to Jobs.

simonh an hour ago | parent | next [-]

I'm not sure what to believe. I know he was incredibly demanding, and I've heard the stories, but he also inspired a lot of loyalty and commitment from plenty of very talented engineers who were not short of other options.

hyperhello 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Jobs dealt with people and respected the machines. Woz dealt with machines and respected the people.

hobs 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Jobs fucked over a lot of people and respected the machines. Woz dealt with the machines and respected the people.

microtherion 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The other huge, huge difference is that one of the Steves has demonstrated he was able to build a successful product without the other's assistance.

fuzzfactor 2 hours ago | parent [-]

You could say that about the iPod or the iPhone which Woz wasn't involved in, but when you do the math, there's only one Woz and he was essential to define the company in the 20th century, and look how many people it took to "replace" him when it came to Jobs "alone" defining the company in the 21st century.

microtherion an hour ago | parent [-]

You could also say it about the Mac, which Woz was, at best, peripherally involved in. Not saying that Jobs created these products "alone" — he obviously did not. But he was a key contributor.

Meanwhile, Woz has been involved in all sorts of products, including a cryptocurrency, and I can't think of a single one that got significant traction.

lynx97 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

And still, when it comes to built-in accessibility, Jobs is pretty much famous for his "fuck ROI" statement. He set precedence around 2007, which eventually forced other players like Google and Microsoft to follow. These days, Talkback and Narrator are builtin for both OSes, which is mostly because Apple went there first. This move changed the lifes of a a few million people.

tbossanova 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

You need both though. You have to accept there are a certain amount of psychopaths in the world, and learn how to manage them

BirAdam 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

This. When Woz created the Apple I and Apple II, the entire microcomputer market consisted of hackers, tinkerers, enthusiasts, and hobbyists. Had Woz been acting alone, the Apple I and Apple II would have made a splash at Homebrew, but they wouldn't have been products. Jobs made them products. After VisiCalc, this market expanded to finance professionals, but it was still a tiny market. It was really Raskin and Jobs who proved the viability of the Xerox PARC (and SRI before them) advancements around the GUI that propelled computing to a more general audience. Then, MS caught up, dominated the market in the 1990s, and Apple came back only when Jobs returned and began pushing industrial design and OS X. From the point until quite recently, most companies R&D could have just been attending Apple product launches and imitating as best they could (that's hyperbolic, but not entirely incorrect).

rainbowcash 35 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> The truth is, the sharpest engineers struggle to make a marketable consumer product - because they make it for themselves, and while thats quite laudable, however it's generally a tiny market compared to one targeted at normal people.

Woz was perfect for those in the home brew club and Steve (basically vagabond) had a different perspective on users. It was the perfect combo in hindsight.

Findecanor 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I have chosen to go by "Take no heroes, only inspiration", and take different inspiration from both.

nekooooo 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

true. woz made a $900 universal remote in 1987. it could control 256 devices via IR and was programmable via PC at a time when you probably had 1 device in your house (with 7 channels.) Maybe 2 if you had a tape player. He clearly made it for himself and his sick component system.

keiferski 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I admire both and I find the push to Pick a Steve Team really irritating.

fragmede 6 hours ago | parent [-]

Both, the sum is greater than the parts. Neither of them would be there without the other.

fuzzfactor 2 hours ago | parent [-]

When you look at it squarely, Jobs could have sold any average product and made money, and Woz' product was so far above average it could have sold on its own (to a more limited extent), with each unit sold making money either way.

Money would be made by each person regardless but this combination not only got more units to fly off the shelf, it got the company off to a more above-average likelihood of future products doing well with growth from there.

The longer that structure can be maintained, the better.

Most of the time a miraculous salesman or marketing strategist has an average to below-average product to represent, and they will still do very well.

So well in fact, that they themselves may never find out what the full upside would be if they had a product that actually was above-average enough for it to be able to sell on its own one way or another. And then act as a multiplier to that.

Through the roof can be hard to avoid then.

Same business plan I had as a preteen, way before Apple got going.

al_borland an hour ago | parent [-]

Woz took the Apple 1 to HP to see if they wanted it, since he was working there at the time. They passed on it. It seems Woz would have just kept working as an HP engineer and bringing designs to the homebrew computer club to give them away as a hobby.

Jobs went on to start NeXT (which became modern Apple) and turned Pixar into a the studio that released Toy Story.

Jobs wasn’t just a salesman, he was a serial entrepreneur. His footnotes would be most people’s whole career. His talent wasn’t just sales, but also building teams of talented people and selling them on his vision.

bko 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Worshiping Woz is cool, but like the article says, there's only one Woz. And chances are you're nothing like Woz or Jobs. But Ballmer? That's someone I can look to emulate.

https://medium.com/packt-hub/how-to-be-like-steve-ballmer-cf...

varjag 5 hours ago | parent [-]

There were/are countless engineers which are very like Woz. Just that engineers are worse positioned to reap the rewards of commercial success so you rarely hear of them.

tehnub 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I worship both thank you very much.

appplication 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I was behind Woz in Heathrow security a few years back. I was taken aback he’d just be in the regular airport security line given he’s probably worth 1B+. I asked him if he was who I thought he was (he was wearing a face mask, but it was printed with a picture of his own face on it so I wasn’t sure). He said yes and asked if I wanted to take a selfie. Very humble dude.

rsanek 5 hours ago | parent [-]

I think his net worth is probably a couple of orders of magnitude lower https://swipefile.com/steve-wozniak-co-founder-of-apple-on-h...

dhosek 44 minutes ago | parent [-]

Even 7 zeros is pretty much you can do what you want anytime you want. Ten million dollars sitting in a bank account earning 3% is 25k a month and nobody with those kinds of assets is leaving them in a bank account earning 3%.