A 1975 meeting in a Silicon Valley garage inspired the young, shy Steve Wozniak to build the Apple I -- and an icon. Jessica Dolcourt VP, Content Operations and Commerce, CNET Group and CNET Labs ...
An informal group of hobbyists interested in promoting computers for the masses. Founded in 1975 by Gordon French and Fred Moore, Homebrew Computer Club members first met at a Community Computer ...
Notes from the hobbyist club where Jobs, Steve Wozniak and other tech pioneers shared ideas and code offer fascinating insights into a pivotal moment in the PC revolution. Leslie Katz led a team that ...
Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak says that going to Homebrew Computer Club meetings taught him a lot that was useful in creating Apple. The Club nurtured the dream that each person could have a home ...
The Homebrew Computer Club was a hobbyist computer club in the 1970s that counted many famous technologists, like Steve Wozniak, as members. The club pushed forward the boundaries of hobbyist ...
Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak built 200 Apple-1 computers in 1976 during the genesis of the pioneering tech company. Inspired by hours spent at meetings of the Homebrew Computer Club in Palo Alto, ...
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Stephen Wozniak grew up in suburban Santa Clara Valley, California (the area now known as Silicon Valley), where his father was an engineer for Lockheed and his mother the president of a Republican ...
The exact place in history of a rare, early Apple computer up for auction remains unclear, but people with direct knowledge and expertise say it may be the device Apple co-founders Steve Wozniak and ...