WebProNews

Tag: Steve Wozniak

  • Steve Wozniak Launches Privateer, a Space Startup

    Steve Wozniak Launches Privateer, a Space Startup

    Steve Wozniak is embarking on the next chapter of his storied career in tech, launching a space startup.

    Steve Wozniak is famous for co-founding Apple, along with Steve Jobs. Whereas Jobs’ speciality was his vision and marketing, Wozniak is a technical genius whose creations formed the basis of Apple’s early success.

    Wozniak has announced on Twitter that he is co-founder of Privateer, a different kind of space startup. 

    The YouTube video included with the announcement takes a veiled swipe at existing space companies, and especially the competition between Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos Blue Origin, saying: “This isn’t a race. It isn’t a competition, or a game.”

    The video ends with a statement that appears to sum up the company’s approach and goals:

    “So here’s to taking care of what we have, so the next generation can be better together”

  • Steve Wozniak: I Believe Steve Jobs Would be Very Happy with Apple Today

    Steve Wozniak: I Believe Steve Jobs Would be Very Happy with Apple Today

    Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak said that he believes that Steve Jobs would be very happy with Apple today because they continue to put people above technology. Wozniak also said that other mobile phone companies are not really innovating, they are just creating fun features. He said that Apple is focusing on innovations like Touch ID that literally affect everything we do all the time in life.

    Steve Wozniak, Apple co-founder, recently discussed how Apple continues to live up to the vision that the company was founded on:

    I Believe Steve Jobs Would be Very Happy with Apple Today

    In my discussions with Steve Jobs, even when I met him in discussing philosophies of the world and how it works and what’s right and wrong… I believe that he would be very happy with the company today and its concern more with end users and putting people above technology. Steve always acted that way. The users should be more important than the technology itself. You should not be a victim of the technology and what it can do. You should get to live your human life in the most human way possible.

    Apple was the first one to have a smart assistant called Siri where you could just talk a thought that you had in your head. You didn’t have to memorize a structured sequence of operations and memorization. That’s what we got the world away from… becoming human.

    Real Innovation is What Changes Our Life.

    People look at a product as an innovation and they say, oh my gosh all of these companies are coming out with other products and each one has a different look and a style and operating system. Wait a minute, what kind of innovation is that? Buy a Samsung phone, I used to do it. I love playing with other products and seeing what they do. You could say smile and it would take a picture a second later. Well, that’s a fun feature, but features aren’t innovation.

    Real innovation is what changes our life. Apple was the first of the phone companies to put Touch ID. Let’s look at real things in life. Touch ID so you didn’t have to type passwords. Every other phone company had to come along and copy Apple. Apple was the first one to come up with an easy to pay system. Don’t even turn your phone on, don’t unlock it, don’t find an app, don’t type in a credit card number pin. Just hold your phone over the device and put your finger on it to identify yourself. Every other company now had to find easy ways to pay with your phone because you always have your phone with you. Those are major innovations that affect everything we do all the time in life.

  • Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk, and Hundreds More Call for Ban on Autonomous Weapons

    Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk, and Hundreds More Call for Ban on Autonomous Weapons

    According to Stephen Hawking, Elon Musk, Steve Wozniak, Noam Chomsky, and hundreds of AI and robotics researchers, governments should ban autonomous weapons in order to prevent a “military AI arms race.”

    In a letter signed by over 1,000, Musk, Hawking and others say that most AI researchers “have no interest in building AI weapons, and do not want others to tarnish their field by doing so, potentially creating a major public backlash against AI that curtails its future societal benefits.”

    The letter, which will be officially announced at the International Joint Conferences on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI) in Buenos Aires, is organized by the Future of Life Institute. FLI “are a volunteer-run research and outreach organization working to mitigate existential risks facing humanity. We are currently focusing on potential risks from the development of human-level artificial intelligence.”

    According to the organization, its mission is “to catalyze and support research and initiatives for safeguarding life and developing optimistic visions of the future.”

    And to FLI and the signatories of this open letter, flying death robots do not an optimistic future make.

    Here’s the full text of the letter:

    Autonomous weapons select and engage targets without human intervention. They might include, for example, armed quadcopters that can search for and eliminate people meeting certain pre-defined criteria, but do not include cruise missiles or remotely piloted drones for which humans make all targeting decisions. Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology has reached a point where the deployment of such systems is — practically if not legally — feasible within years, not decades, and the stakes are high: autonomous weapons have been described as the third revolution in warfare, after gunpowder and nuclear arms.

    Many arguments have been made for and against autonomous weapons, for example that replacing human soldiers by machines is good by reducing casualties for the owner but bad by thereby lowering the threshold for going to battle. The key question for humanity today is whether to start a global AI arms race or to prevent it from starting. If any major military power pushes ahead with AI weapon development, a global arms race is virtually inevitable, and the endpoint of this technological trajectory is obvious: autonomous weapons will become the Kalashnikovs of tomorrow. Unlike nuclear weapons, they require no costly or hard-to-obtain raw materials, so they will become ubiquitous and cheap for all significant military powers to mass-produce. It will only be a matter of time until they appear on the black market and in the hands of terrorists, dictators wishing to better control their populace, warlords wishing to perpetrate ethnic cleansing, etc. Autonomous weapons are ideal for tasks such as assassinations, destabilizing nations, subduing populations and selectively killing a particular ethnic group. We therefore believe that a military AI arms race would not be beneficial for humanity. There are many ways in which AI can make battlefields safer for humans, especially civilians, without creating new tools for killing people.

    Just as most chemists and biologists have no interest in building chemical or biological weapons, most AI researchers have no interest in building AI weapons — and do not want others to tarnish their field by doing so, potentially creating a major public backlash against AI that curtails its future societal benefits. Indeed, chemists and biologists have broadly supported international agreements that have successfully prohibited chemical and biological weapons, just as most physicists supported the treaties banning space-based nuclear weapons and blinding laser weapons.

    In summary, we believe that AI has great potential to benefit humanity in many ways, and that the goal of the field should be to do so. Starting a military AI arms race is a bad idea, and should be prevented by a ban on offensive autonomous weapons beyond meaningful human control.

    Elon Musk, Steve Wozniak, and Stephen Hawking have all gone on record plenty of times with concerns about artificial intelligence.

    Image via Stephen Hawking, Facebook

  • Steve Wozniak Is Also Concerned About Our Future Robot Overlords

    Steve Wozniak Is Also Concerned About Our Future Robot Overlords

    Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak has become the latest tech figure to warn us that the computers are learning and they’re going to destroy us all at some point.

    “Computers are going to take over from humans, no question,” said Wozniak in an interview with the Australian Financial Review.

    “Like people including Stephen Hawking and Elon Musk have predicted, I agree that the future is scary and very bad for people. If we build these devices to take care of everything for us, eventually they’ll think faster than us and they’ll get rid of the slow humans to run companies more efficiently.”

    You might recall that others have recently spoken out about the existential threat that unchecked Artificial Intelligence poses to the human race.

    “I am in the camp that is concerned about super intelligence. First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well. A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don’t understand why some people are not concerned,” said Bill Gates in a recent reddit AMA.

    Tesla and spaceX founder Elon Musk has been the most vocal about his AI concerns.

    See?

    “Will we be the gods? Will we be the family pets? Or will we be ants that get stepped on? I don’t know about that … But when I got that thinking in my head about if I’m going to be treated in the future as a pet to these smart machines … well I’m going to treat my own pet dog really nice,” says Wozniak.

    Be nice to the machines, guys. They might remember.

  • Natalie Portman in Talks to Star in Steve Jobs Biopic

    Natalie Portman is reportedly in talks to star in the upcoming Steve Jobs biopic, Jobs.

    According to Deadline, Portman may have a major role in the film that is struggling to get off the ground.

    Sony dropped its backing for the project completely last week, and it was picked up by Universal.

    The screenplay was written by The Social Network‘s Aaron Sorkin and Slumdog Millionaire‘s Danny Boyle is set to direct the movie based on Walter Isaacson’s 2001 Steve Jobs biography.

    Reports claim Michael Fassbender is set to star as Jobs, replacing Christian Bale, and producers were reportedly reaching out to Scarlett Johansson, although it looks like the role may now go to Portman. Seth Rogen is also reported to be the choice for the part of Steve Wozniak.

    Portman, who won an Academy Award for her role in Black Swan, is currently in post-production on her directional debut, A Tale Of Love And Darkness. The movie, in which she will also star, is an adaptation of Israeli writer Amos Oz’s memoir. She is also co-producing Burr Steers’ Pride And Prejudice And Zombies and is starring in two upcoming Terrence Malick films.

    Busy girl!

  • Seth Rogen Considered to Play Steve Wozniak Opposite Christian Bale’s Steve Jobs

    The Wrap is reporting that Seth Rogen is being considered for the role of Steve Wozniak in the Steve Jobs biopic also rumored to star Christian Bale.

    Bale’s involvement with the upcoming film has been much ballyhooed already. He ended up at the front of the line when Leonardo DiCaprio passed on the role.

    There are high hopes for the new film, considering that another Steve Jobs-centered film, Jobs starring Ashton Kutcher, did not quite live up to expectations. It was even mildly panned by the man Rogen is in talks to play in the new one, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

    “I had such high hopes for this movie and, oh, it was so hard to say that it let me down a bit and it fell a bit flat,” Wozniak told ABC News of the Kutcher-fronted Jobs.

    “Ashton played Steve Jobs’ mannerisms so well but he didn’t bring out the thinking that makes us love Steve [and] the ideas that drove Apple forward,” Wozniak said.

    Wozniak elaborated a bit more in a review he posted to Gizmodo.

    “I thought the acting throughout was good. I was attentive and entertained but not greatly enough to recommend the movie.

    “I suspect a lot of what was wrong with the film came from Ashton’s own image of Jobs… I’m grateful to Steve for his excellence in the i-era, and his contribution to my own life of enjoying great products, but this movie portrays him having had those skills in earlier times.

    It wasn’t just Kutcher’s portrayal of Jobs that landed wrong with Wozniak, but other characterizations as well.

    “I felt bad for many people I know well who were portrayed wrongly in their interactions with Jobs and the company.”

    Perhaps the most damning statement of all that Wozniak made is something he actually attributed to someone else, but hints that the people represented in the Jobs film felt they were not fairly portrayed at all. That it was less a biopic and more a fictionalization.

    “One friend who is in the movie said he didn’t want to watch fiction so he wasn’t interested in seeing it.”

  • Steve Wozniak Met DMX in an Airport and Yes, There’s a Video, Thank God

    Ok, so TMZ was hanging out in an airport just waiting to catch some celebrity doing something. It’s not like this is a rare occurrence or anything, but I know – some of you probably have some pretty strong feelings about this and other tactics employed by celeb-centric news organizations.

    Once again, I know. But LOOK – they caught DMX and Steve Wozniak first bumping!

    They planned a robbery? Can we please turn that into a buddy comedy? Did you see that brief look of wtf on DMX’s face when the TMZ reporter started mentioning the Apple II? Yeah, I’m going to assume that DMX had no goddamned idea what he was talking about, considering DMX isn’t too keen on the “google” or the “blogging” either.

    Still. Great minds, man, great minds.

    I want you to know that the above photo of Steve Wozniak is now my second favorite photo of Steve Wozniak. Segway Woz will always hold a special place in my heart. Love you, Woz.

    (image)

    Images via Video screenshot, TMZ, and Woz.org

  • Steve Jobs’ Old House Now a Historical Site

    2066 Crist Drive, Los Altos has now been officially designated as a “historical resource.”

    The house (and more importantly, its garage) is better known as the place where Apple Computers was founded. Back in 1976, the home of Paul and Clara Jobs provided a roof for Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne to form Apple. There, Jobs and Wozniak built the first Apple 1 computers and sold that first batch for $500 a piece to a store in Mountain View…and so the story goes.

    After two years of review, the Los Altos Historical Commission, a 7-member group designated with recommending historical sites in the area, has approved the location’s spot on the historical registry.

    According to Mercury News, the home was also where Jobs held talks with early investors.

    The vote was unanimous.

    “Steve Jobs is considered a genius who blended technology and creativity to invent and market a product which dramatically changed six industries – personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing and digital publishing. His influence is expected to be felt by multiple generations forthcoming,” said the property evaluation. “These significant events took place at the subject property.”

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Steve Jobs’ Old Home (or the Garage Where Apple Was Built) Could Become Historical Site

    We all know the story of Apple Computer, and how the company was formed in Steve Jobs’ parents’ garage back in 1976. It was an important moment in the tech world for sure, and now the garage (and the house it’s attached to, of course) may be granted protection as an official historic site.

    The Los Altos Historical Commission, a 7-member group appointed by the Los Altos City Council with the task of recommending historical sites in the area, is holding a historic property evaluation on Steve Jobs’ childhood home.

    “Steve Jobs is considered a genius who blended technology and creativity to invent and market a product which dramatically changed six industries – personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing and digital publishing. His influence is expected to be felt by multiple generations forthcoming,” says part of the property evaluation, obtained by CNN.

    And it’s that influence that may lead to the former home of Paul and Clara Jobs being given protection as an historical site.

    The house became Steve Jobs’ home when he was a young teen. Paul and Clara Jobs adopted Steve at birth in 1955.

    Jobs first met Steve Wozniak through a friend at Homestead High School in Cupertino, California. A few years later Wozniak, having built the Apple I computer, joined forces with Jobs and Ronald Wayne. The trio formed Apple Computer in that garage in 1976. Wayne soon left the newly-formed company.

    The commission has actually been reviewing the 2066 Crist Drive property for the past two years. You can check out the full evaluation here.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Watch Steve Wozniak Talk About His Love For Tetris

    Steve Wozniak is best known as the co-founder of Apple. He’s also an opponent of patent laws and a friend of Kim Dotcom. What many people may not know is that he’s also a huge fan of Tetris.

    In this video from Game Informer, Wozniak plays Tetris on the Game Boy while reminiscing about his time with the game. He apparently wasn’t very good at the game when it first came out, but his son showed him the ropes. After that, he was one of the best players around. When Nintendo Power used to publish high scores in Tetris, he had the highest score for many consecutive months. He even had to submit his scores with his name spelled backwards because the folks at the magazine were tired of printing his name every month.

    It’s really interesting to see Wozniak talk about games since he himself has a history with the medium. He designed the original Breakout arcade cabinet and game, but Atari ditched the hardware design while keeping his original game design. It’s a shame that he didn’t stick with game development. It would have been really interesting to see what would have come of his ability to build gaming hardware.

  • Ashton Kutcher’s ‘Jobs’ Biopic Release Delayed for Additional Marketing

    You’re going to have to wait just a little bit longer to see Ashton Kutcher’s Steve Jobs biopic.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Open Road Films has decided to push back the release of Jobs. The film, which was originally slated for an April 19th release, is being postponed so that it can benefit from additional marketing, according to the sources.

    There’s no new date to report, only that it’s been pushed back from April 19th.

    Jobs (previously titled jOBS), premiered at the Sundance Film Festival back in January. The reviews were mixed, with many praising Kutcher’s portrayal of Steve Jobs while at the same time dismissing the films as disappointing, “saccharine,” and “too respectful.”

    Jobs details the major moments and defining characters that influenced Steve Jobs on a daily basis from 1971 through 2000. Jobs plunges into the depths of his character, creating an intense dialogue-driven story that is as much a sweeping epic as it is an immensely personal portrait of Steve Jobs’ life. The filmmakers were granted unprecedented access during shooting to the historic garage in Palo Alto, that served as the birthplace to Apple Inc,” according to the film’s producers Five Star Feature Films.

    jOBS stars Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs and Josh Gad as Steve Wozniak. It also features Dermot Mulroney, Lukas Haas, J.K. Simmons and Matthew Modine. It’s directed by Joshua Michael Stern, who brought you the 2008 political comedy Swing Vote.

  • Early jOBS Reviews Are Mixed, Generally Approving of Ashton Kutcher’s Steve Jobs Portrayal

    On Friday, the Ashton Kutcher-led Steve Jobs biopic jOBS had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival. The film, which is directed by Joshua Michael Stern and co-stars Josh Gad as Steve Wozniak, will open to the public on April 19th.

    Here’s a look at some of the early reviews, which are mixed.

    CNET calls the film “saccharine” and says that viewers will spend two hours “watching cardboard cutouts lose arguments to Ashton Kutcher”:

    My primary disappointment was in how shallow the film felt, given the extensive historical record. In the early days Jobs’ co-workers had to wrestle with a man who smelled bad, who cried often, who yelled constantly, who missed deadlines, who overspent his budget by millions. He did it in service of products we love and use daily, and yet his obsessions took a toll on those around him. He also inspired others to do the best work of their lives, pushing themselves further than they ever imagined they could go. There is great drama to be found in all that, but it is not to be found in the saccharine “jOBS.”

    The Guardian gives the film two out of a possible five stars, calling Ashton Kutcher’s portrayal of Steve Jobs as a “surprisingly effective turn.” Still, The Guardian laments that it’s everything else that falls short:

    The results, then, are mixed. This is far from the bomb some would have envisaged, but neither is it the character illumination one would wish for. Jobs appears so consumed by his work here that little else mattered in his life. That may be true, but we’re left none the wiser as to what made the man tick, beyond what we already know. Apple will no doubt feel satisfied, even relieved. Those wanting a sharper, more incisive view will have to wait for Sorkin.

    The Hollywood Reporter says that the film is “a biopic that’s perhaps too respectful of the tech icon’s innovations still remains frequently engaging.”

    Playing somewhat like a two-hour commercial covering the first 20 tumultuous years of Apple’s development, Joshua Michael Stern’s biopic of Steve Jobs is a passably entertaining account of the career of one of the 20th century’s great innovators that doesn’t break any stylistic ground, hewing closely to public perception of the tech giant.

    Writing for Gizmodo, reader Seth Kinkaid gives a fan’s review. He says that despite some clear inaccuracies and exaggerations, “it was the experience [he] wanted.”

    I wasn’t sure exactly what I would get, but it turned out to be surprisingly nice. It was… satisfying. It also proved that I could enjoy Ashton Kutcher’s acting as Silicon Valley’s most prized CEO. Although his performance wasn’t perfect, it felt right. The rest of the movie was just as good.

    The Next Web’s Matthew Panzarino calls the film “entertaining, if impressionistic,” but adds that “this isn’t going to be the canonical Steve Jobs biography movie.”

    [O]verall, jOBS works. The lead actors are likable and appear to have put serious effort into getting the spirit of the characters right. The film looks (mostly) good aside from some of what could likely be ascribed to budgetary constraints. And though the director is a tad indulgent here and there, it doesn’t take away from the overall feeling of ‘decent’ that I came away with.

    Film School Rejects gives it an upside…

    An often-solid performance by Kutcher; a very solid series of supporting performances (particularly by Gad); surprisingly well-paced and quite entertaining.

    ..and a downside:

    Relies on basic and unimaginative filmmaking tricks, particularly a score calibrated to make audiences think “something triumphant and bold is happening!” and long-winded montage sequences; “tells” rather than “shows” large swathes of character development and exposition; leaves many unanswered questions (you know, like, why computers?).

    Check here for more coverage of jOBS.

  • jOBS Release Date Announced as April 19th

    UPDATE: The very first clip has also been released. Check it out here.

    The highly-anticipated Steve Jobs biopic jOBS just got an official release date: April 19th. The last we heard on this, we simply received a generic “April” release target.

    The film stars Ashton Kutcher in the title role of Steve Jobs, and will make its world premiere on the closing night of Sundance.

    “jOBS details the major moments and defining characters that influenced Steve Jobs on a daily basis from 1971 through 2000. jOBS plunges into the depths of his character, creating an intense dialogue-driven story that is as much a sweeping epic as it is an immensely personal portrait of Steve Jobs’ life. The filmmakers were granted unprecedented access during shooting to the historic garage in Palo Alto, that served as the birthplace to Apple Inc,” according to the film’s producers Five Star Feature Films.

    From what we’ve seen, the casting looks pretty good. Kutcher is a dead ringer for a young Jobs, and Josh Gad looks passable as a young Steve Wozniak.

    jOBS stars Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs, as well as Dermot Mulroney, Josh Gad, Lukas Haas, J.K. Simmons and Matthew Modine. It’s directed by Joshua Michael Stern, who brought you the 2008 political comedy Swing Vote.

    No word yet on that other Steve Jobs movie.

  • Check Out Josh Gad as Steve Wozniak in ‘jOBS’

    We know that Ashton Kutcher looks so much like a young Steve Jobs that it’s kind of scary. Seriously, in terms of physical appearance, it’s hard to think of a better casting job. Now, whether or not that uncanny physical appearance will translate into a good performance, and if a good performance will be able to carry the movie is left to be seen.

    Of course, we’re talking about the upcoming film jOBS, which “details the major moments and defining characters that influenced Steve Jobs on a daily basis from 1971 through 2000,” according to makers Five Star Feature Films. “jOBS plunges into the depths of his character, creating an intense dialogue-driven story that is as much a sweeping epic as it is an immensely personal portrait of Steve Jobs’ life. The filmmakers were granted unprecedented access during shooting to the historic garage in Palo Alto, that served as the birthplace to Apple Inc.”

    Today, we get another look at how the cast is shaping up. This time, it’s Josh Gad as Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

    USA Today provided the still from the new film and we tacked on an old photo of Jobs and the Woz. What do you think? On a purely physical level, does Gad fit the role? I think the pair looks pretty good.

    We recently learned the jOBS will screen on the closing night of the Sundance Film Festival, and will be released to the public shortly after that, some time in April. Earlier this month the film got a distribution partner, Open Road Films, which is an independent distribution company founded in 2011.

    The film also stars Dermot Mulroney, Josh Gad, Lukas Haas, J.K. Simmons and Matthew Modine. It’s helmed by Joshua Michael Stern, who brought you the 2008 political comedy Swing Vote. And as always, it’s not to be confused with Sony Pictures’ upcoming Steve Jobs movie, which is being written by Aaron Sorkin.

    [USA Today via The Verge]

  • Steve Wozniak and Danny Trejo Team Up for New iOS Game

    Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak is about to become an action hero, as he is set to star in an upcoming iOS game called “Woz with a Coz.”

    His costar for the video game is legendary movie badass Danny Trejo, who will help Woz slash up his wife’s kidnappers in classic 8-bit platformer style. Yes, I said Woz’s wife’s kidnappers…

    Here’s all we know about the game, via Facebook:

    In “Woz with a Coz” on iOS, the Apple co-founder and his wife, “J-Woz,” are enjoying their evening together, taking a glide. Unfortunately, their otherwise quiet evening is ruined — not by a competitive product release — but rather by street thugs kidnapping “J-Woz”!!! Your dynamic duo of Steve and Danny must hurry and swing into action as they tear up Fusion City in their quest to rescue “J-Woz,” and maybe cause a little mayhem on their way.

    Apparently, Trejo will provide the brawn and the Woz will provide the brains as “players will enjoy Woz’s brain power, translator apps, Danny Trejo’s machetes, guns, and other crazy upgrades.”

    The game is a promotional tie in to Danny Trejo’s Vengeance, the upcoming action flick starring Trejo, Jason Mewes, and 50 Cent (the full name of the new iOS game is Danny Trejo’s VENGEANCE: Woz with a Coz).

    The game, which will mark the first time the Apple co-founder has starred in his own video game, is slated for a Thanksgiving release.

  • Steve Wozniak Thinks iOS 6 Maps Aren’t That Bad

    The iPhone 5 came out last week, and it brought with it a new Maps app that nobody likes. Many people are comparing it to the antennae problems in the iPhone 4. While Apple is scrambling to fix it, company co-founder Steve Wozniak has finally given his thoughts on the issue.

    ZDNet reports that Wozniak was speaking at an event for Fusion-io, of which he is the chief scientist. He has been playing around with the iPhone 5 since launch as he was first in line at the phone’s launch in Australia. So, he should know what he’s talking about when addressing the problems facing Apple’s new Maps app.

    The Apple co-founder said that he was “disappointed” with the Maps app because he couldn’t get to where he wanted to go by voice. He noted that he loved the voice navigation that’s available in Android phones because “they always get it and are based on a better database.”

    Wozniak is well versed in the many phones of the world. He’s always willing to give his honest opinions on the strengths and weaknesses in iOS, Android and Windows Phone. So when he talks about Apple’s iOS, you can expect his answers to be honest opinions.

    To that end, he says that he’s not so sure the problems plaguing the Maps app “are that severe.” He says that “there are a lot of complaints about one little thing people spot, but it’s not that hard to deal with in life.” He’s worried about the app, but he’s not worried since there are dozens of other navigations apps for iOS 6 already available. Unfortunately, Google Maps is not one of them… yet.

  • Steve Wozniak Is Currently in Australia Waiting on an iPhone 5

    It’s nice to know that Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak puts his pants one in the morning the same way everyone else does. The Woz can easily have iPhones delivered to his home (and I’m sure he wouldn’t have to deal with a pushed-back shipping date). But instead, he chooses to slum it out with the rest of the iPhone fanatics and wait in line for the new device.

    Last year, Woz was the first in line at the Apple Store in Los Gatos, California, waiting to receive his new iPhone 4S.

    “Well, I actually have iPhones delivered to my house,” he said. “I’ve gotten so used to loving to wait in line, overnight – it has meaning. The product has meaning, it is so good, it’s an important part of our life. And this is just my way of recognizing it. I want to be a part of this direction, great products,” he said last year.

    A year later, he’s upped the ante. He’s currently waiting in line at the Apple Store in Chermside, Queensland Australia according to a tweet.

    Wozniak’s Twitter feed is pretty boring as it consists of nothing but cross-posts from Foursquare check-ins. But hey, at least he included a photo of two fellow campers:

    Last week, Woz said that he hopes the iPhone 5 takes better photos:

    “I am always excited about every iPhone product because there are always good advances. A better quality on the pictures will mean a lot, because when I show people pictures on my iPhone 4 and my Galaxy S III, they always say the Galaxy S III, or even the Motorola Razr, pictures look better.”

    Let’s hope he’s not disappointed.

  • Steve Wozniak Hopes the iPhone 5 Takes Better Photos

    Apple co-founder and longtime iPhone enthusiast Steve Wozniak has weighed in on the big iPhone 5 reveal, at least preliminarily.

    Speaking in Shanghai, the Woz said that he likes to use a product for himself before he passes judgement, but did have one hope for the new iPhone.

    “I am always excited about every iPhone product because there are always good advances,” he said. “A better quality on the pictures will mean a lot, because when I show people pictures on my iPhone 4 and my Galaxy S III, they always say the Galaxy S III, or even the Motorola Razr, pictures look better.”

    Better photos than the iPhone? Oh no he di’int.

    ““I think they took some very important steps,” said the Woz. “I’d like to get a product, use it myself before I judge it and compare to others. I’d like to have it myself and tell what’s good and bad about it.”

    Not exactly a shining endorsement for someone who camped overnight to be the first in line for the iPhone 4S. But he has a point. It’s hard to speculate based on simply watching that media event.

    There’s good news for Wozniak, if Apple is to be believed. They say they’ve improved the camera in the iPhone 5, saying that “the Camera app…features improvements including 40 percent faster photo capture, better low-light performance, and improved noise reduction. So you can snap more shots with more detail and clarity than ever before.”

    The 8 megapixel camera features backside illumination, a hybrid IR filter, a five-element lens, and f/2.4 aperture, specs that an iPhone 4S owner may be familiar with.

    We’ll let you know if Wozniak camps out again this year. I’m sure he’ll let us know via Foursquare check-in cross-posted to Twitter.

    [via Bloomberg]

  • Steve Wozniak And Kim Dotcom Cement Their BFF Status

    We brought you news last week that Kim Dotcom has been on a Twitter/Instagram binge. He loves posting pictures of himself, his kids and all the crazy hijinks he and his friends get into. It was just this past weekend that he posted a picture of his friends riding around on an all-terrain segways and golf carts.

    One of the more interesting pictures, however, from last week was Dotcom posing with Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple. The original picture featured a Tweet from Dotcom saying, “MegaWoz. Great guy & supporter of EFF. EFF is helping to give Mega users their files back. Thanks Woz & EFF.” It’s obvious that Dotcom likes the Woz, but is the feeling mutual?

    CNET got in touch with the tech luminary to get his thoughts on Dotcom and his fight against the U.S. government. First and foremost, Wozniak says that the attempt to extradite Dotcom to the U.S. was “poorly thought out.” He says that Dotcom is just a “typical IT guy” running a file-sharing service.

    He also spoke out on the well-publicized attempts of the U.S. government to prevent Dotcom from accessing any money for legal fees or even basic rights. He said that it was unfair that the U.S. can spend millions on lawyers trying to arrest Dotcom, but won’t extend him the same courtesy.

    The most interesting thing is that Wozniak is the first third-party to come out and say that MegaUpload make a conscious effort to remove infringing content from the Web site. The government and rights holders all say that Dotcom would only remove the link, but not the content from his servers. Wozniak says that Dotcom was “doing more than can be imagined” to police copyrighted content on the file-sharing service.

    Everything Wozniak says lines up with what Dotcom has been using in his defense so far. It seems to be working well since the MegaUpload founder has secured a number of high-profile wins from securing more money for his defense to having a judge order the FBI to return his data.

    As for the government and entertainment industries trying to take down Dotcom, the Woz only had this to say: “When you can’t stop something like a steamroller, get out of the way.”

  • Kim Dotcom Hangs Out With Steve Wozniak In New Zealand

    Kim Dotcom is fighting for his business, and more importantly, his livelihood right now. The U.S. has brought multiple charges of copyright infringement and other nasty crimes against the Megaupload founder. He must be going through a lot of stress right now. You know what’s good for stress? Hanging out with the cool co-founder of Apple – Steve Wozniak.

    Ever since Dotcom was allowed to use the Internet again, he’s been rather busy on Twitter. He’s always posting pictures via Instagram that give insight into his everyday life alongside what he’s planning next for his defense. Part of that everyday life apparently entails hanging out with The Woz.

    Dotcom is referring to the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The group has been busy with trying to get legitimate users’ data back. The poster boy for the campaign has been Kyle Goodwin, a regular everyday guy who used Megaupload to store high school sports footage for his recruitment video creation business. The MPAA has recently given their OK to people getting their files back, but the U.S. government is protesting the return.

    We shouldn’t be focusing on the bad legal stuff now though. These kind of pictures paint Dotcom as being just a regular family guy instead of the big, bad criminal that the US would want you to believe. Don’t believe me? Here’s Dotcom hanging out with his cute kids.

    Kim Dotcom Steve Wozniak

    Check out Kim Dotcom’s Twitter feed to see the rest of his kooky adventures. There’s some awesome stuff on there including the confirmation that Dotcom will be bringing back Megabox, his pet project for music artists to share music directly with fans.

  • Apple 1 Computer Goes For $374,000 At Auction

    I’m a Windows fan now, but that doesn’t mean that I hate Apple. In fact, I have a soft spot for the Apple II – my very first computer. I would love to get my hands on its predecessor, but it apparently takes a millionaire to get one.

    According to CBS, there was an Apple 1 on auction in New York City. The computer was one of the original six computers that Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak built back in 1976. The demand for such a rare item must surely be high. An Apple fan, or maybe just a technology fan in general, has far outstripped what the original demand was valued at.

    When the smoke cleared from what was surely an arduous battle, a victor appeared having won the computer for $374,000. Those in charge of the auction stated that the selling price was two-times higher than what they expected to get for the computer. The last Apple I sold at auction went for $210,000, so here’s hoping the next one goes for over $600,000.

    We don’t know who actually bought the computer, but they’re probably going to put in some kind of collection to never be used. Maybe that’s best as I would totally play around with and probably break it.

    Here’s a video tour of what went inside the Apple 1 back in the 70s. It shows the technical mastery that Wozniak put into the device. Sure, it’s great to see all the new technology that Apple puts out today, but we should never forget where it came from.