Livingston: What about...
Livingston: What about Ron Wayne? Wasn’t he one of the founders?
Wozniak: Yes, but not when we incorporated as a real company. We had two
phases. One was as a partnership with Steve Jobs for the Apple I, and then for
the Apple II, we became a corporation, Apple Computer, Incorporated.
Steve knew Ron at Atari and liked him. Ron was a super-conservative guy. I
didn’t know anything about politics of any sort; I avoided it. But he had read all
these right-wing books like None Dare Call it Treason, and he could rattle the
stuff off. I didn’t realize it until later.
He had instant answers to everything. He had experience with businesses
and times he’d been gypped out of stock deals. He always had something very
quick to say and, wow, it sounded like he was very knowledgeable about this
stuff. He sat down at a typewriter and typed our partnership contract right out
of his head using lawyer-type words. I just thought, “How do you know what to
say, all rights and privileges and all the different words that are in there”—I
don’t even know what they are. He did an etching of Newton under the apple
tree for the cover of our Apple I manual. He wrote the manual. So he helped in
a number of ways. Steve had 45 percent of this partnership, I had 45 percent,
and Ron had 10 percent, because both of us agreed that we could trust him to
resolve any dispute, and we would trust his judgment.
Then what happened was that we were going to sell PC boards for $20 each
and fund it out of our own pockets. I sold my HP calculator, Steve sold his van,
so we had a few hundred bucks each. Then Steve got the $50,000 order. Over at
the company that was making our PC board, as soon as the PC boards were
made, they opened up a closet that had our parts and it started a 30-day clock
ticking. We had 30 days to pay for the parts. The parts got stuffed into the computers,
we made them work, we delivered them to the store and got paid in
cash. The parts suppliers—the distributors in Mountain View—had checked
with the store owner and knew that he was going to pay us. So basically, we
didn’t have the credit; he was good for it. But, here was the problem: What if
he didn’t accept them one time or didn’t pay us? We would owe a ton of money
on those chips.
I had no money and Steve had no money. We didn’t own cars, we didn’t
have savings accounts, we didn’t have houses. So Ron Wayne figured they’d
come after him for his golden nuggets that he kept under his mattress. (He
actually tells me it was in a safe—but he was afraid they’d come and get his
| ← projects, and we | gold.) So he → |