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  1. On the 1st April 1976, Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs, and Ronald Wayne found their new company Apple Computer Inc. Ronald Wayne was a co-worker of Jobs from Atari, and was brought into the new company to arbitrate the many disputes between Jobs and Wozniak.

    • The History of Apple
    • The Foundation of Apple
    • How Jobs Met Woz
    • The First Apple Computer
    • Why Apple Was Named Apple
    • Selling The Apple I
    • The Apple II
    • Apple, Xerox and The One-Button Mouse
    • The Lisa and The Macintosh
    • Apple’s ‘1984’ Advert

    Our Apple history feature includes information about The foundation of Apple and the years that followed, we look at How Jobs met Woz and Why Apple was named Apple. The Apple I and The debut of the Apple II. Apple’s visit to Xerox, and the one-button mouse. The story of The Lisa versus the Macintosh. Apple’s ‘1984’ advert, directed by Ridley Scott....

    The history of everyone’s favourite start-up is a tech fairytale of one garage, three friends and very humble beginnings. But we’re getting ahead of ourselves… The two Steves – Jobs and Wozniak – may have been Apple’s most visible founders, but were it not for their friend Ronald Wayne there might be no iPhone, iPad or iMactoday. Jobs convinced him...

    Jobs and Woz (that’s Steve Wozniak) were introduced in 1971 by a mutual friend, Bill Fernandez, who went on to become one of Apple’s earliest employees. The two Steves got along thanks to their shared love of technology and pranks. Jobs and Wozniak joined forces, initially coming up with pranks such as rigging up a painting of a hand showing the mi...

    The two Steves attended the Homebrew Computer Club together; a computer hobbyist group that gathered in California’s Menlo Park from 1975. Woz had seen his first MITS Altair there – which today looks like little more than a box of lights and circuit boards – and was inspired by MITS’ build-it-yourself approach (the Altair came as a kit) to make som...

    The name Apple was to cause Apple problems in later years as it was uncomfortably similar to that of the Beatles’ publisher, Apple Corps, but its genesis was innocent enough. Speaking to Byte magazine in December 1984, Woz credited Jobs with the idea. “He was working from time to time in the orchards up in Oregon. I thought that it might be because...

    Woz built each computer by hand, and although he’d wanted to sell them for little more than the cost of their parts – at a price at that would recoup their outlay as long as they shipped 50 units – Jobs had bigger ideas. Jobs inked a deal with the Byte Shop in Mountain View to supply it with 50 computers at $500 each. This meant that once the store...

    Apple II The success of the first Apple computer meant that Apple was able to go on to design its predecessor. The Apple II debuted at the West Coast Computer Faire of April 1977, going head to head with big-name rivals like the Commodore PET. It was a truly groundbreaking machine, just like the Apple computer before it, with colour graphics and ta...

    Apple has never been slow to innovate – except, perhaps, where product names are concerned. We’re approaching the eighties in our trip through the company’s history and we’re at the point where it’s followed up the Apple I and II with the III. Predictable, eh? The two Steves founded the company with a trend-bucking debut and had the gumption to tar...

    It kicked off a race inside Apple between the teams developing the Lisa and the Macintosh. Jeff Raskin The official line at the time was that Lisa stood for Local Integrated System Architecture, and the fact it was Jobs’ daughter’s name was purely coincidental. It was a high-end business machine slated to sell at close to $10,000. Convert that to t...

    Nobody would ever deny that the original Macintosh was a work of genius. It was small, relatively inexpensive (for its day) and friendly. It brought the GUI – graphical user interface – to a mass audience and gave us all the tools we could ever need for producing graphics-rich work that would have costs many times as much on any other platform. Yet...

    • Nik Rawlinson
  2. Mar 31, 2016 · Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and ... Ron Wayne? The signatures of all three men appear on Apple's April 1, 1976, incorporation documents. They also appear on a document signed 12...

  3. Apr 1, 2016 · The Apple Inc. founding partnership agreement signed by Steve Wozniak, Steve Jobs and Ronald Wayne, as displayed in New York City on Dec. 6, 2011 prior to being auctioned Scott...

  4. Apr 1, 2024 · On April 1, 1976, the Apple Computer Company was founded by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne to sell the $666 Apple-1 computer.

  5. Mar 26, 2021 · In partnership with his friend Steve Jobs, Wozniak invented the Apple I computer. The pair founded Apple Computers in 1976 with Ronald Wayne, releasing some of the first personal computers on...

  6. Apr 1, 2016 · Ronald G Wayne is 81. When he was 41, he worked at Atari. And it was there he met a young, impressionable Steve Jobs who would regularly turn to Wayne for all manner of advice.