Company, it became the centerpiece for the first meeting of the club that French and Moore had
decided to launch.
The Homebrew Computer Club
The group became known as the Homebrew Computer Club, and it encapsulated the
Whole Earth
fusion between the counterculture and technology. It would become to the personal computer era
something akin to what the Turk’s Head coffeehouse was to the age of Dr. Johnson, a place where
ideas were exchanged and disseminated. Moore wrote the flyer for the first meeting, held on
March 5, 1975, in French’s Menlo Park garage: “Are you building your own computer? Terminal,
TV, typewriter?” it asked. “If so, you might like to come to a gathering of people with like-minded
interests.”
Allen Baum spotted the flyer on the HP bulletin board and called Wozniak, who agreed to go
with him. “That night turned out to be one of the most important nights of my life,” Wozniak
recalled. About thirty other people showed up, spilling out of French’s open garage door, and they
took turns describing their interests. Wozniak, who later admitted to being extremely nervous, said
he liked “video games, pay movies for hotels, scientific calculator design, and TV terminal
design,” according to the minutes prepared by Moore. There was a demonstration of the new
Altair, but more important to Wozniak was seeing the specification sheet for a microprocessor.
As he thought about the microprocessor—a chip that had an entire central processing unit on
it—he had an insight. He had been designing a terminal, with a keyboard and monitor, that would
connect to a distant minicomputer. Using a microprocessor, he could put some of the capacity of
the minicomputer inside the terminal itself, so it could become a small stand-alone computer on a
desktop. It was an enduring idea: keyboard, screen, and computer all in one integrated personal
package. “This whole vision of a personal computer just popped into my head,” he said. “That
night, I started to sketch out on paper what would later become known as the Apple I.”
At first he planned to use the same microprocessor that was in the Altair, an Intel 8080. But
each of those “cost almost more than my monthly rent,” so he looked for an alternative. He found
one in the Motorola 6800, which a friend at HP was able to get for $40 apiece. Then he discovered
a chip made by MOS Technologies that was electronically the same but cost only $20. It would
make his machine affordable, but it would carry a long-term cost. Intel’s chips ended up becoming
the industry standard, which would haunt Apple when its computers were incompatible with it.
After work each day, Wozniak would go home for a TV dinner and then return to HP to
moonlight on his computer. He spread out the parts in his cubicle, figured out their placement, and
soldered them onto his motherboard. Then he began writing the software that would
get the microprocessor to display images on the screen. Because he could not afford to pay for
computer time, he wrote the code by hand. After a couple of months he was ready to test it. “I
typed a few keys on the keyboard and I was shocked! The letters were displayed on the screen.” It
was Sunday, June 29, 1975, a milestone for the personal computer. “It was the first time in
history,” Wozniak later said, “anyone had typed a character on a keyboard and seen it show up on
their own computer’s screen right in front of them.”
Jobs was impressed. He peppered Wozniak with questions: Could the computer ever be
networked? Was it possible to add a disk for memory storage? He also began to help Woz get
components. Particularly important were the dynamic random-access memory chips. Jobs made a
few calls and was able to score some from Intel for free. “Steve is just that sort of person,” said
Wozniak. “I mean, he knew how to talk to a sales representative. I could never have done that. I’m
too shy.”
Jobs began to accompany Wozniak to Homebrew meetings, carrying the TV monitor and
helping to set things up. The meetings now attracted more than one hundred enthusiasts and had
been moved to the auditorium of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center. Presiding with a pointer
and a free-form manner was Lee Felsenstein, another embodiment of the merger between the
world of computing and the counterculture. He was an engineering school dropout, a participant in
the Free Speech Movement, and an antiwar activist. He had written for the alternative newspaper
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: