a16z Podcast - The Human Behind the Genius
Episode Date: January 19, 2023In this special episode, we share never heard before footage from Steve Wozniak alongside his cofounder and best man, Alex Fielding. Listeners get an inside look into what drove Woz to building a com...puter, but also how Steve’s zest for life was applied beyond computers – from the rare opportunity to play Tetris on the side of a building or throw a concert across borders. Full Privateer episode: https://a16z.simplecast.com/episodes/new-the-data-highway-above-with-privateers-steve-wozniak-alex-fielding-and-dr-moriba-jahFull Privateer episode on Youtube: https://youtu.be/ZZbrwxOs0y4 Stay Updated: Find us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/a16zFind us on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/a16zSubscribe on your favorite podcast app: https://a16z.simplecast.com/Follow our host: https://twitter.com/stephsmithioPlease note that the content here is for informational purposes only; should NOT be taken as legal, business, tax, or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security; and is not directed at any investors or potential investors in any a16z fund. For more details please see a16z.com/disclosures.
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What would you do if you co-founded the world's largest company? Would you do it again?
Well, we're lucky enough to have someone on this earth whose answer is, why not?
That person is Steve Wozniak. In today's episode, we're sharing a portion of our
privateer interview with Steve. Privateer, of course, is his new company, but also some never heard
before footage with his best man and his co-worker of many decades, who also happens to be
privateer CEO, Alex Fielding. Now, as you listen, you might ask, why are we sharing this?
Well, I was excited to share this because we're at that inspiring part of the year,
where you think you can accomplish just about anything in the remaining 300-plus days,
maybe even change the world.
And there are a few things more inspiring than hearing from someone who did.
In this short episode, you'll get an inside look into the brain and heart of Woz,
but also the curiosity that led to game-changing technologies that many of us benefit from today,
like the phones, or as I like to say, pocket computers, or AirPods that you're probably using to listen to this episode.
If you'd like to hear the full episode and get up to speed on Privateer, the company that Alex, Waz, and their co-founder Moriba are working on to clean up the next frontier, then check out episode 684, the data highway above.
Let's start this episode by hearing from Steve Wozniak directly about what inspired him to build a computer in the first place.
The content here is for informational purposes only should not be taken as legal business tax or investment advice or be used to evaluate any investment or security and is not direct.
at any investors or potential investors in any A16Z fund.
For more details, please see A16Z.com slash disclosures.
I had the privilege of talking to Alex yesterday,
and he told me the story about you from the very, very early days
where when you were younger, you basically told your dad
hey dad I want to have a computer someday and he said because at this time this is true he said you're crazy computers cost as much as that house and you told him well dad I'll live in an apartment and you seem to really really just want a computer at that time to your point earlier starting apple was not about building one of the biggest businesses in the world it was wanting a computer and wanting other people to have that I'm curious just to know from a personal perspective what did you see back then was it truly just like a personal need for this device or I want to
to, you know, dig into that early Wa's brain and hear your perspective on what was going on
in those early days. A lot of great things come personally. And I learned even I taught middle school
and elementary school for eight years straight full time, full time, like every hour of the day
up to seven days a week. No press allowed. So it's not a big story. But I learned that it was less
important that you're speaking facts and knowledge from your mouth. Knowledge was less importance
than the motivation of my students to learn, had to find ways to make it fun, make it understandable. And that's
when I decided, you know what, wanting something is even more important. And I go back,
I wanted a computer. It was in my heart. And I didn't know if I ever get it. I didn't know
if designing computers would ever be a job for engineers because we were back in the analog days,
you know, smart math stuff. But I kept it in me and eventually I found the path to do it. So I was
building a computer for myself and turned out the point in time. Luck is sometimes there's a lot
of luck in business success. And the point in time that I was going to build that computer,
no matter what it was worth, turned out to be worth a ton. Now, governments have all the
resources, you know, but they're stale in their approaches because of it. Here's what we can do
very successfully, very stably. We know we'll get there if we put enough money in and test enough.
And private industry works so differently. I've only been in private. And I just love having
ideas and thinking about them and thinking different and the creativity that comes about when
you think, by gosh, I could do something they haven't done before. Or maybe the resources are
cheaper. The sorts of huge computing devices are cheaper to make and maybe certain types of motors
sensors that didn't exist before.
You've got to always shoot for at the top being, you know, one of the leaders in the world.
And that's just how we think.
So a lot of times when I think of government versus private, I also come down to types of people,
which is very important.
And you have an inventor who could be given a job and they have the right skill sets and
they've gone through the right university, you know, majors and PhDs.
And they're an engineer and they can design what you sign them.
But then there's the inventor.
It goes along, thinks, oh my gosh, is there something I'm interested in that I could do,
and would it work?
And maybe it hasn't been done before
and can I make a difference in the world?
The inventor wants to run into a laboratory,
hook up some demos real quick,
try to get some sort of prototype
to show that the idea is bright.
And that's the sort of person I am.
It's in your personality.
You don't change it.
You don't just say tomorrow I'm going to be an inventor.
Today I'm an engineer.
You're usually one or the other.
Yeah, definitely.
Another word sometimes people use for inventor is visionary.
And I'm curious in the early days
when you were just out of passion
creating these computers, could you see the path to today?
Of course, you can't picture everything with so many advancements since those early days.
But like, how far along were you actually envisioning?
And I'm asking this partially because even if we apply this to space,
a lot of the things that people talk about also sound kind of like science fiction, right?
They probably won't be eventually.
But I'm trying to understand how far along you see or the extrapolation that maybe goes on in your brain
when you're originally talking about, yes,
a computer with 200 transistors
and now we're talking billions
and the applications that have kind of sprung from that.
I myself, I was really a great engineer in certain field
and I was designing the hottest products in the world
for Hewlett-Backard without even having a college degree yet.
And then you talk about visionary, vision see in the future.
That's different than invention, though.
Inventor really wants to actually go in and create something today
that didn't exist and not have a vision that's 50 years out
or 10 years out because that's science fiction a lot.
and everybody can talk about it and say later on, see, I proposed it, but it wasn't really
possible to do with money. And the engineer says, feet on the ground, what can I actually do
and build and deliver to people? When we started Apple, you know, we had a great product that was
going to be all the revenues of Apple for the first 10 years. We had a great lead. We were comfortable
and we could do what we wanted. But the amount of memory that would hold a song costs, you know,
we were back in the days of tape, it cost about a million dollars, a good fraction of a million
Do you think we saw today
where you have a device in your hand
with a thousand songs on it even?
No, Steve Jobs is very instrumental
in always taking us, do what we can do today.
Fred, do something a little more tomorrow,
a little more.
You can have a lot of failures too
if you'll have one great product
bringing in the revenues,
but the whole idea was we'll move towards the future
and we'll be a part of it
and we'll be in with it.
And after all, you look back at it was kind of invisible
the steps we took, but they all led to today.
Steve Jobs' Apple 2 was really the iPod music.
music. And that was the first time, oh my gosh, up till then our company valuation was the same
as the old Apple two days. And then all of a sudden, we sold it to everyone in the world and our
sales doubled and our profits doubled and the board gave Steve Williams and stock options
and jet airplanes. That was the turning point. And then the iPhone was even better. And it was based
on the iPod, not the reverse, not a phone and we'll include an iPod, more like it's an iPod,
but you get a phone with it. And so it's hard to say that you really see the future more than a
ahead when you're working a year ahead on your projects. Whenever I tried to see the future a year
ahead, I knew it one year ahead because I was working on it. If I looked two years ahead and made
some guesses, oh my gosh, other aspects, other technologies and all came out from outer space
and people's desire which way they wanted to go was different. It's very hard to predict even
two years ahead successfully the way I work. Nowadays, we got huge big companies. So it's kind of like,
you know, anything that work on is going to be successful. It's not as much of a gamble. But,
You know, real inventors like to gamble, like to prove the world that they can do more than you ever imagine.
Now here's Alex reflecting on what it's been like to work with someone so influential over the years,
getting to witness just how human, even those who are superhuman are.
We've known each other for a long time, but I will say working between him and getting to work with Steve Jobs back in my time at Apple,
the thing that's interesting, I was helping Waz clean out his garage. This is a true story.
You don't think about Waz cleaning out his garage, right?
But in his garage, I came across a blue three-ring binder
and it was filled with HP graph paper
from when he worked at Hillard Packard before they started Apple.
And he was monolid and working on his designs for Apple I and Apple II.
And this was a solo endeavor.
I mean, this is different from the type of endeavors that we have to do at the scale, right?
But I'm going through it page by page as an engineer
and looking at every trace and every chip that he hand drew on every page for Apple
one and Apple II, and then in assembler for Apple ROM and Apple DOS.
And then I get to the back of this book that is, it's an engineering PhD manifesto that
I don't think you could create today.
Like, this should be a part of engineering school curriculum for every kid that wants to
go into STEM.
At the back of the same book, on the same HP graph paper before he started Apple, were hand-ridden
song lyrics from the Beatles and Bob Dylan.
and that he had heard on the radio while he was working on Apple One and Apple II.
And I thought, man, how can you be the human that did this
and be the human that cared enough to write this down and to live by those things?
And I think it is important that we make a difference and we make an impact.
And, you know, there are a lot of things that on planet Earth that are technology projects
that I really don't care about.
I mean, I'm not the type of person that's going to go start the next Tinder
or, you know, the next, I'll skip all the other great app examples, but they're fleeting.
And I'm a big believer that Elon oftentimes actually means what he says.
Sometimes he doesn't.
I mean, I think he's pretty damn funny, but I think sometimes he says exactly what he means,
and people glance over it because it sounds so crazy.
But all of these enabling stepstones on the way to Mars and on the way to an interplanetary
species, on the way to ultimately a space sparing civilization.
all absolutely critical.
And we can't start on it at the last minute.
There's going to be a million baby steps to get that one giant leap.
And we have to work on it now.
Something I took from what you just shared there,
even the example of seeing the drawings in Wazze's garage,
is that I think you've had the unique perspective
or ability to see something from its very, very early stages
like those drawings to obviously the giant that Apple became today.
and getting to work with someone who had the capacity to understand something that can emerge from being a seed into something much, much bigger.
Now, here's where the bonus footage comes in.
Here was Alex and I chatting after our interview was finished.
Of course, we've confirmed with him this footage could be shared.
You'll get to hear how Steve's zest for life was not only applied to computers,
but also the rare opportunity to play Tetris on the side of a building or throw a concert across borders.
I think Steve is one of those very, very rare personality types
where he can see and connect the dots forward
and it has never been a motivation of money,
even at the start.
Like Apple...
He was just building computers for fun, right?
Like, he was doing that well before Apple even existed.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, he called me one time.
I was working at a company with our former CTO at Apple.
She laughed and took me with her.
She ripped me out of Steve Jobs's hands.
And unfortunately, she just passed away this year, Ellen Hancock.
I mean, she is single-handedly responsible for saving Apple.
And I say saving, because when I was there, we were on the way to bankruptcy.
And Ellen is the reason why Apple abandoned a very large,
multi-billion dollar software development project for a new operating system
and went out and bought Steve Jobs' company next and brought him back.
And one day I get a call from Waz.
I'm at my day job.
I'm working for Alan.
And he calls me, like, 10 o'clock at night.
And he goes, dude, do you remember when you told me
if we could play Tetris on the side of a building?
You would be there no matter what.
And I was like, no, I don't remember saying that.
And he was like, you definitely remember it.
And if you don't do it right now, you're not a man of your word.
You're not a person of principals.
You are just full of BS if you don't get on this plane with me
and go play Tetris on the side of the Brown University Library
building in Rhode Island tomorrow morning.
Oh, my God, I love that.
Steve, I, like, manage a bunch of people, and I can't just, like, bail.
Like, what do you mean tomorrow morning?
He's like, I already booked you a plane ticket.
Seven in the morning, we're going.
And I was like, dude, I can't just up.
It's 11 o'clock at night, right?
What am I going to do?
So he goes, you have to do it.
So I call Ellen.
I call on management chain.
I'm like, I've got a once in a lifetime opportunity.
I have to do it.
I'm going to be gone for like three days.
I'm going to, so I'm just thinking.
Get me planes and touch right there.
And play you some Tetris.
Next thing I know, I'm in Rhode Island.
I'm across the street from the Brown University of Library building with Steve.
We're playing Tetris using the whole building as a display.
Oh, that's amazing.
They took Christmas tree lights and relays, and they lit all the windows so that we could play.
And there was a live Russian band behind us playing Tetris music while we were playing.
So I don't think anything up it.
And Steve and I are playing stupid pranks on each other the whole time.
I fly at home.
Ellen calls me.
Kid, my office.
What?
Okay.
So I own her office.
I'm a total idiot, no idea what's going on.
She goes, family emergency, huh?
I was like, family emergency.
I was like, no, no, no.
Once in a life, she whips open the New York Times.
There's a picture of Steve and I playing in Texas.
I wouldn't see if I can find this.
Is it still online, probably?
It's got to be out there somewhere.
And she was like, what about this?
And I go, well, Ellen, it was a once in a whole lot of time.
I had to do it.
You're like, you know, Steve?
I know when it's like.
And she just, it was hysterical.
But like these types of things, I mean,
he would call me in the middle of the night
when we live nearby each other and we'd go,
milkshakes, we drive tonight,
Bob's Big Boy in Burbank, we're going.
Like, we've got to get milkshakes.
I'm like, Steve, I can't just,
he's like, you got to do it.
We got to drive down right now.
Like, drive from the Bay Area to Burbank
to go get Bob's Big Boy.
I love these stories because, yeah,
You hear, I mean, obviously, Steve is a legend, but it's always cool to see or hear these
stories of him just like wanting a milkshake or wanting to play Tetris with his friend.
Those are awesome stories.
I've told him, like the biggest prank he's ever fooled is that he has tried to convince
people that he has anything like us.
He's not wired the same.
He doesn't have, maybe this is just me.
You know, Steve is one of those people, and he'll tell you this probably more than anything
else.
he's had a history like with Steve Jobs
if Woz would come up with some crazy technology
for fun or for a prank
or something that he thought would improve the world.
And Steve Jobs would show up and be like,
how do we make money on this?
And you need that combination of stuff
to make businesses work.
It's like Hillert and Packard.
Or maybe it was like Bill Gates and I wouldn't even want to say bomber,
but maybe it was like Bill Gates and Paul Allen.
I think you need those weird combinations of personalities.
You can't have a diversity of ideas
with a bunch of people that look and think the same.
So Steve's one of those very rare personalities.
He threw the biggest concert on planet Earth
because he missed Woodstock.
Okay, he spent $40 million throwing a concert.
He threw the Us festivals when I was a child.
So in 1983, he threw the Us festivals.
Bigger than Woodstock, more attendance.
Middle of California, he had to build the amphitheater to put it on.
lost $40 million on a concert because he wanted to have his own Woodstock.
He just wanted to be there.
That's amazing.
So he opened the gates, right?
And by the way, that event, it was really for the rest of us.
Oh, got it.
Nice.
So we're talking about the time, like, you know, Ozzy Osbourne and Judas Priest and Van Halen and Fleetwood Mac.
And it was broken out by like country day, hard metal day, like classic rock day, like folk day.
So he was like the first mega concert, multi-day concert thing outside of Woodstock.
Well, at that event, we were in a hugely contentious environment in 1983.
This is the fall of the Berlin Wall a year early.
The wall is still up.
What does Steve do?
He goes, man, we should go talk to the Russians,
and we could set up a live satellite simulcast in both directions
so that people in Moscow can attend the US festivals remotely.
That is so amazing because that is so far before, you know, the times.
Well, and he did it.
One of my friends that got to go to both sides of it actually gave me his Russian pass
to attend on the Moscow side because they gave him a pass.
They're like, yes, was.
It's not going to start a war.
That's so amazing.
But, I mean, we talked about exponential curves before,
and I just feel like so many people are very similar to each other.
and then you have these people who are true outliers.
They're just, like, so, so different from the rest.
It's ridiculous, like the number of very hysterical events
over a couple decades of knowing Waz.
I wanted to end this episode by coming full circle
by hearing Alex touch on Waz's need to own a computer
that fueled his desire to build one,
touching also on John Draper's similar story
of inventing the Blue Box
just so he could make free phone calls.
Such an elegant reminder that sometimes the best things in life
come from a place of genuine curiosity
and the need to solve a problem of your own.
I don't think wealth is in his vocabulary
because it was never a desire.
Like, I remember when we first met,
we were talking about what drove you to decide
that you had to do Apple?
And he was like, I never had to do Apple.
I had to own a computer.
I wanted a computer.
And I told me, I said, well, what was that like?
He told me his thought he was a brilliant engineer.
And Waz is 10 times the engineer's law.
was. I mean, he is, it's Jedi. I've never seen anything like it. There are tricks that he
pulled off before I was born that I still don't know how the hell he did them. And I will probably
struggle. And that's the reason I think that book should be engineering curriculum because there
were genuine, brilliant tricks that he pulled to be efficient in his designs that no one else
would have done, but he needed to do it. He didn't have any money. You have to be efficient. You have to be
scrappy. And I asked him, so do you know the moment? You had to do it. And he goes, yeah, I read about
this thing called a computer.
And I decided I really, really wanted one.
And I went to my dad, who isn't, you know, this brilliant engineer.
I think his dad was at Lockheed because he was in the Bay Area kind of old buzzard club rocket people.
Space is a reoccurring theme for all of us.
And he said, Dad, I really, I want to have a computer someday.
And he said, his dad told him, you're crazy.
Computers cost as much as a house.
You're never going to own a computer.
And Steve's answer right away was, I live in an apartment.
And that tells you almost everything you need to know.
Could he see the steps beyond the thing that he was doing?
I believe there was an intuition.
There might not have been like, I know exactly Tinder is going to exist.
Like, I don't think that was 1976.
I don't think that was the basis of any of these crazy people doing crazy things.
And all of these things for Steve, blue boxes, he didn't invent the blue box.
I mean, Captain Crunch, that crazy bad.
bastard, you know, obviously invented the Blue Box so that he could hack the telephone system to
make free phone calls. Steve, it was challenged for himself. He didn't want to sell him. He wanted
to take what one person was doing with analog electronics and make a digital and see if he could do
it. And of course, he did it. And then Steve Jobs lumped into him and they actually used
part of their blue box sales revenue from Berkeley to finance Apple. They sold their most personal
possessions. Steve Jobs sold his Volkswagen thing. Was sold his HP calculator. They used those
monies to bootstrap Apple and their existence, those are stories of conviction because there's
nothing to fall back on, right? You can't go back. You can only go forward. Burn the boats.
Right. Burn the boats. I know. And wow, it's so cool. It must be so cool to have seen all this
over the many decades you've known him. And it must be very interesting also to be working on something
that you know the visionary level that Guaz is. And if he cares so much about this topic and you
equally care about the topic, which is cleaning up space and improving it, making it more
collective. That must be so cool to get to work with someone who has that level of vision and to
align with it and get to build something that is bigger than you. Well, it's been 20 years since
he decided he wanted to be president of anything, and I love that he's president of this.
Again, that was Alex Fielding, CEO of Privateer, reflecting on his many years of friendship with
Steve Wozniak. If you're interested in what both of them are building today, alongside their co-founder
Moriba? Again, check out episode 684, the data highway above, where they discuss the growing
amount of space debris and what they're doing to fix it. I'll leave you with my favorite part
of that episode. All of outer space is probably infinite, but where we put satellites, that's
actually finite. In fact, we put satellites on very specific orbital highways. They're very
close to Earth. In fact, where are you right now, Steph? I am in Insomides, California. So I'm closer
to lower the four of it than I am to you. And I think that's what people just don't realize.
Thanks for listening to the A16Z podcast. If you like this episode, don't forget to subscribe,
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Thank you.
Thank you.