May 1, 2008

iWoz - review of Steve Wozniac's new book

After years of being an icon of the PC revolution, Steve Wozniac talks!

iWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon
How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It


I would say this is a long-awaited account of Steve Wozniac on how it all started. And actually, towards the end of the book, he says that he wrote this book partly to set the record straight.

My take aways from the book:
  • Steve is a SIMPLE COOL NERD! This is the main take away from the book. The book reads as if Steve is sitting with you in a coffee shop and telling you a story.
    • I love the simplicity of the book.
    • He repeats himself every now and then, and asks simple rhetorical questions like "do you believe that"
    • He uses simple diction, and sounds very excited all the time.
    • He actually goes into detail explaining his original designs - showing how much he actually enjoys this stuff. If you are a CE student, you'll enjoy the book.
  • Steve Wozniac single handedly designed the Apple I & Apple II.
  • Apple company became a huge success directly because of Steve's designs of these 2 machines.
  • Steve was a true whizz kid! he was designing circuits since elementary school!
  • In high school he designed a very nice 8-bit calculator - I could relate to that :-) of course he actually implemented his design and showed it off in science fairs.
  • Steve didn't do any major design work since Apple II. He founded a company that didn't succeed afterwards.
  • Steve Jobs brilliance was bringing the right people to turn the Apple II to a great success. The original market by the 2 Steves was to sell Apple II to hobbiests (similar to Radio Hobbiests)
  • These people are:
    • Mike Markkula: he was an Intel millionaire who retired in his 30s. This guy truly saw the revolution possible with the Apple II: a cheap micro computer. According to Wozniac, this guy told them they will become a Fortune 500 company, that they will start a whole industry, that people will eventually use the computers for every day tasks - the 2 Steves just thought it was a cool device. Jobs had more of a business sense of the potential, but not like Mike. Mike also was the first real investor in Apple.
      • For example, Mike is the one who insisted that they support Floppy Drives - something very new at the time for PCs.
      • And, Mike is the one who convinced makers of VisiCalc to produce it for the Apple II.
    • Michael "Scotty" Scott: Scotty is a forgotten character in Apple's history. However, he was the CEO who took Apple to the largest IPO since Ford. He was pretty much "fire" in 1981, after he fired about 50% of Apple's engineers thinking they were redundant. That was known as "Black Wednesday". Wozniac seems to really like Scotty. I've never heard of him until this book.
  • Steve Wozniac was behind many "landmarks" in the bay area that I really like:
  • After Apple II, Steve pretty much became a cool nerdy multi multi millionaire, who just jumped from one project to another trying to do "cool stuff", like through the "US" music festival, fly airplanes, buy and build huge houses, ...
  • Steve did not produce a great design or product after the Apple II (well, the CL9 universal remote control was cool, but I would say nothing as cool as the Floppy Drivers he wrote for Apple II, what I consider his last great achievement.)
  • Ah, Wozniac claims that he's the one behind the Keyword & Monitor idea. He says that he started it with Apple II, and after that all companies imitated it.
  • And, Wozniac also claims to be behind the "whosh" sound in the floppy disks. He says that behind his drivers, the floppy disks made clicking sounds because they were constantly getting stopped and started. He came up with the design to keep them rotating at high speed, and just slowing them down to read. This brilliant design allowed Apple II to have the highest disk access speeds for several years. I can't find evidence for this story though anywhere else but his book.

In a nutshell: a very nice, informative, and entertaining book. read it.

New Job Search website from Jordan targeting Worldwide audience

Orfalis, an entrepreneurial software company in Jordan, that acts and feels like startups, has gone public with their latest venture:

http://www.jobbind.com

This has been a "secret project" for a while. The company built a very nice internet-searching technology that allows them to find jobs and update them directly from the companys' websites.

I love their UI - it's simple yet professional. The flow of the pages and usability are great.

The site is still in Beta. Try it out, and send them feedback.

Orfalis were the creators of iCuisine, the first wireless restaurant management software in Jordan (where waiters took orders on wireless PDA like devices).
Then, they came up with TickerChart.com, which is the de facto technical analysis tool for all Arabic Middle East Stock Markets.

"Golden Era" of Saudi Arabia

With the oil prices through the roof, and Saudi's massive investments in education and infrastructure, I think it's fare to call it the "Golden Era" of Saudi Arabia. And, I think this is Saudi's chance to secure their post-oil future.

Saudi Arabia in `Golden Era,' Credit Suisse Says

May 1 (Bloomberg) -- Credit Suisse Group recommended buying shares of Al Rajhi Bank, Saudi Arabia's biggest bank by market value, as well as Saudi Arabian Fertilizer Co. and said the country is in a ``golden era.''

The brokerage also initiated coverage on Riyad Bank and Almarai Co. with ``outperform'' ratings. Saudi Basic Industries Corp., the world's biggest chemicals maker by market value, received a ``neutral'' recommendation.

``Oil prices are at an all-time high; hundreds of billions of dollars of infrastructure investments are expected to drive growth,'' analysts including Mohamad Hawa wrote in a note. ``The government is continuing to diversify its hydrocarbon-based economy.''

...



This boom is in the opposite direction of the US economy:

Gulf States May End Dollar Pegs, Kuwait Minister Says