By:
Brooke (West Des Moines, IA, USA)
December 11, 2009
I really enjoyed this book. I did find the the flow a bit off with repeats of prior material in odd places. But, I was in gradeschool in mid-late 70's and was a geek as early as 2nd grade so this was like a trip down memory lane for me. I remember arranging to stay after school to spend 30 minutes in the school library just to work on the Apple. It was enjoyable to learn about this computer and inventor from the inventor's own words. It also put to rest some of the news clips/reports that didn't seem quite right at the times they were released to the public. "I am a PC" now and have been for many years, but the Apple and Commodore were my introduction to computers.
By:
Abdur (Rocklin, CA, USA)
September 28, 2009
This book would be a great assignment for junior high school students. It doesn't have too much "adult" material like the book "The Second Coming of Steve Jobs" and it has some nice suggestions for aspiring engineers. And, yes, the narrator does make you feel like it is story time in Romper Room.
By:
John (New York, NY, USA)
September 24, 2009
Awesome and inspiring book for the inner nerd in everyone. I'll have to say though that if you're not at least familiar with electronics you may yawn during the detailed explanations of circuits for his projects and inventions. I thought it was great though and brought me right back to college electronics labs. Finally, a voice of logic and reason among a world of MBA speak!
1 of 5 people
found this review helpful:
September 13, 2009
Let's be clear from the onset: I love computers, I love Apple, I love Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. But this book should only be read by fanboys like me.
It is very, very, very poorly written - you get the distinct impression that Steve sat down with Gina Smith in a Starbucks, started talking, and that she just wrote verbatim everything he said (right down to the WOWs! and the GREATs!) without ANY editing. It is often repetitive (Yes Steve, we now know that you LOVE to be an engineer, that you never wanted to go into management, that you aim to design things with as few chips as possible and that your goal in life is to be happy and to make other happy). Even Steve's boyish enthusiasm for all things rosy ends up getting on your nerves - to the point that you wonder how Jobs and Wozniak EVER got along...
But it gives you a window into the birth of computing, into the setting up of Apple, and into Steve Wozniak's optimistic personality. So if you can get passed the annoyances mentioned above, you can give this a pop.