GIVEN APPLE’S GARGANTUAN profits and global reach, it’s easy to forget that it started life as two people in a garage. Much of the tech wizardry back then was down to Steve “Woz” Wozniak, while Steve Jobs was tactician and visionary.
The first breakthrough occurred in 1976, with what would become the Apple Computer 1 (later referred to as Apple I). The machine was offered to HP, which declined, and so Apple Computer was born. Apple was already “thinking different”, its debut hardware being the first single–board computer sold fully assembled and utilizing a television for output.
But Woz was thinking bigger. Inspired by his work on arcade games, he wanted to create a computer that was faster, more colorful and noisier than anything else. Ultimately, as he recalled in a 1986 interview with Call–A.P.P.L.E.: “A lot of the features of the Apple II went in because I had designed Breakout for Atari. I had designed it in hardware. I wanted to write it in software now.”
With Apple rarely being equated with gaming, it’s surprising to discover its foundations rest on one man’s desire to “program a BASIC version of Breakout”. But soon Woz was tinkering with his computer, adding color, BASIC commands, paddle controllers, and sound. Building primarily for himself, he was also kickstarting a computing revolution — the Apple II soon captured the imagination of wannabe home programmers, and the machine’s initial success bankrolled Apple for years.
This story is from the April 2023 edition of Mac Life.
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This story is from the April 2023 edition of Mac Life.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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