tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post3489454029470111301..comments2023-09-18T07:43:38.313-04:00Comments on OD Refugee: The Noble SubstituteUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post-43304935932027751272011-02-02T20:03:48.944-05:002011-02-02T20:03:48.944-05:00Another iWoz quote:
"Logic became the heart o...Another iWoz quote:<br />"Logic became the heart of my existence in 5th grade."Deve of the Junglehttp://www.amazon.com/iWoz-Computer-Invented-Personal-Co-Founded/dp/0393061434noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post-34833255792750076882011-02-02T19:10:33.107-05:002011-02-02T19:10:33.107-05:00This pub's for you:
http://www.johnzpchut.com/...This pub's for you:<br />http://www.johnzpchut.com/documents/Pages%20from%20iWoz%20latest%20from%20USA%20with%20UK%20Kreks.pdf<br />excerpt: (page 18-19)<br />According to my birth certificate, my full name is Stephan Gary<br />Wozniak, born in 1950 to my dad, Francis Jacob Wozniak (everyone<br />called him Jerry), and to my mom, Margaret Louise Wozniak. My<br />mother said she meant to name me Stephen with an e, but the birth<br />certificate was wrong. So Stephen with an e is what I go by now.<br />My dad was from Michigan; Mom was from Washington State.<br />My dad and his brother, who later became a Catholic priest, were<br />raised in a strict and pious Catholic household. But by the time my parents had me—I’m the oldest of three—my dad had<br />rebelled against that: the Catholicism, I mean. So I never got any<br />exposure to religion. Church, mass, communion. What is that?<br />Seriously, I couldn’t tell you. <br />But from the earliest age, I had a lot of conversations with my<br />parents about social policies and how things work. As for religion, if I asked, my dad would say, no, no, he was scientific. Science was the religion. We had discussions about science and<br />truth and honesty, the first discussions of many that formed my<br />values. And what he told me was, he just wanted things to be<br />testable. He thought that to see if something is true, the most<br />important thing is to run experiments, to see what the truth is,<br />and then you call it real. You don’t just read something in a book<br />or hear someone saying something and just believe it, not ever.Deve of the Junglehttp://www.johnzpchut.com/documents/Pages%20from%20iWoz%20latest%20from%20USA%20with%20UK%20Kreks.pdfnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post-11429267346051525362011-02-02T14:29:14.785-05:002011-02-02T14:29:14.785-05:00Happy Groundhog's DayHappy Groundhog's DayDeve of the Undergroundhttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107048/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post-39675250604351593502011-02-01T23:38:47.052-05:002011-02-01T23:38:47.052-05:00And how, does that first one ever deserve an encor...And how, does that first one ever deserve an encore! I love how the clouds have a gold lining ~ in fact, I like the pastel progression down through the third picture. :-)ChrisCloudshttp://chrisclicks.us/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2431498412944656953.post-20688593463108810872011-02-01T19:38:59.566-05:002011-02-01T19:38:59.566-05:00The ice is pretty. Annoying, but pretty.The ice is pretty. Annoying, but pretty.Minettenoreply@blogger.com