2066 Crist Drive, Los Altos, California:
When he was in eighth grade, Steve Jobs, later the
co-founder of Apple Computer, telephoned William Hewlett,
president of Hewlett-Packard. "Bill answered, and I said,
'Hi, you know, uh, I'm 12 years old and I'm trying to build
a frequency counter,' " Jobs recalls. Hewlett, a symbol of
entrepreneurial success in the Santa Clara Valley, chatted
graciously with Jobs for 20 minutes. When it was over, the
kid got not only the Hewlett-Packard parts he needed but a
summer job at the company as well. A few years later Jobs was introduced to Stephen Wozniak,
who at 13 had built a surprisingly sophisticated calculator.
Wozniak and a friend, Bill Fernandez, had been working on a
primitive forerunner of the personal computer. Jobs and Woz
dropped in and out of each other's lives over the next few
years.
But in 1975, Woz completed a much improved version of his
computer. He took it to Hewlett-Packard, where he worked as an
engineer, and Atari, where Jobs was working. Neither company saw much
demand for a "personal" computer. But Jobs did and insisted that he
and Woz start a company.

They wound up in the Jobs family's garage, where Jobs's father removed his beloved car-restoration equipment and helped the boys by hauling home a huge wooden workbench that served as Apple's first manufacturing base. So in 1977, the Apple Computer Company was founded in the home garage.
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"It was just the two of us, Woz and me," said Jobs as he returned to that garage with FORTUNE recently and peered into its now empty space. "We were the manufacturing department, the shipping department . everything." A yellowed, 1980 Apple ad that hangs on the wall reads, "What Is a Personal Computer?" Wozniak now teaches in elementary school, while Jobs has gone on to found Next Inc. and Pixar Animation Studios. Jobs gets phone calls from kids, aspiring entrepreneurs as bold as he once was. "Sure I speak with them. I always try to," Jobs says. "That's the only way I can pay Bill Hewlett back." |
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