(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
The Heinz Awards :: Steve Wozniak
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20110723143210/http://www.heinzawards.net/recipients/steve-wozniak
Senator John Heinz

RELATED NEWS

  • For his 90th birthday, Aaron Beck is profiled in Psychiatric News go >>
  • Bruce Katz co-authors article in The Atlantic: “Supercharge the Export Potential of Our Major Cities” go >>
  • Robert Langer co-develops a synthetic vocal cord tissue go >>
  • Robert Langer interviewed on EarthSky about targeted drug delivery go >>
  • Paul Farmer interviewed on NPR's "Fresh Air" about his new book on Haiti go >>
  • Jane Lubchenco one of four selected by the Oregon Commission for Women as a 2011 Women of Achievement recipient go >>
  • Amory Lovins to be inducted as founding member of new Sustainability Hall of Fame go >>
  • Paul Anastas in his role at the EPA is profiled in The New York Times go >>
  • Cary Fowler and the Global Crop Diversity Trust featured in National Geographic's story, "Food Arc" go >>
  • Robert Langer is awarded 2012 Priestley Medal go >>
  • William Thomas speaks on aging at TEDx San Francisco go >>
  • Joseph DeRisi is part of seven member team that identified four new honeybee viruses go >>
  • John Spengler chairs National Academies report on the effect of climate change on indoor air quality go >>
  • Mark di Suvero sculptures on display at Governors Island in NYC go >>
  • Tom FitzGerald authors op-ed article defending use of the Clean Air Act to reduce pollution to protect human health go >>
  • Bernard Amadei talks about engineering for the bottom 90% at TEDx MileHigh go >>
  • Paul Farmer writes op-ed in The Harvard Crimson on what the university can do to advance global health go >>
  • Jane Lubchenco is interviewed on Charlie Rose go >>
  • Dr. Donald Berwick interviewed on CPAN's "Newsmakers" go >>
  • Ashok Gadgil shares the European Inventor Award for the UV Waterworks go >>
  • Jane Lubchenco's NOAA press conference on the upcoming hurricane season is covered on NPR go >>
  • Cary Fowler receives honorary degree at Rhodes College in Memphis go >>
  • James Comer to receive Lifetime Achievement Award from NAACP New Haven branch go >>
  • Bruce Katz is interviewed by Dean Barber on the future of cities go >>
  • Dean Kamen and his FIRST program are profiled in Success magazine go >>
  • Geoffrey Canada highlighted in Time's "100 most influential people in the world" go >>
  • Paul Farmer's Partners in Health receives the 2011 Notre Dame Award for International Human Development and Solidarity go >>
  • Dean Kamen receives the inaugural Hunt Institute Visionary Award go >>
  • Joel Salatin named as "best food advocate" by Treehugger go >>
  • Marian Wright Edelman is awarded John Jay National Leader for Justice Award go >>
  • Robert Greenstein interviewed on NPR about proposals addressing the national debt go >>
  • Elizabeth Kolbert writes on ocean acidification for National Geographic go >>
  • Chris Field talks to The Economist on climate change, natural carbon sinks and the earth's hot spots go >>
  • Ashok Gadgil receives the Olympus Lifetime of Educational Innovation Award go >>
  • Elizabeth Kolbert explores the alarming decline of bat populations in the eastern U.S. in Yale's Environment 360 go >>
  • Bob Berkebile talks about water and how it relates to energy in Metropolis magazine. go >>
  • Leroy Hood receives Distinguished Alumni Award from CalTech go >>
  • John Holdren co-authors an op-ed in the New York Times regarding "space weather" go >>
  • Rita Dove honored in the new class inducted into American Academy of Arts and Letters go >>
  • Marian Wright Edelman pens “Ain’t I a Woman” in tribute to Sojourner Truth go >>
  • Marian Wright Edelman writes editorial for Huffington Post on children and dental health care go >>
  • Marian Wright Edelman receives 2011 Dr. John Hope Franklin Award go >>
  • "I was a dancer" is published, a memoir by Jacques d'Amboise go >>
  • Mark di Suvero among those honored by President Obama with the 2010 National Medal of the Arts go >>
  • Elizabeth Kolbert has essay in National Geographic magazine about the "Anthropocene - Age of Man" go >>
  • Emory University presents “Entering the World Through Language,” a Women’s History Month series featuring Rita Dove go >>
  • Dave Egger's 826 Valencia inspires the Sydney Story Factory in Australia go >>
  • Paul Anastas's work at the EPA profiled on "Living On Earth" radio program go >>
  • Bernice Johnson Reagon named Choral Arts' 2011 Humanitarian Award Recipient go >>
  • Daniel Sperling gives innaugural RITA Transportation Innovation Series lecture go >>
  • Hugh Herr and his BiOM "bionic leg" profiled on CNN Money go >>
  • Cary Fowler discusses the looming global food fight due to climate change in Huffington Post go >>
  • Paul Anastas interviewed on WHYY's Radio Times regarding the future of Green Chemistry go >>
  • Geoffrey Canada is interviewed for New York's City Limits magazine go >>
  • Berkeley Lab’s Ashok Gadgil takes fuel efficient cookstoves to Ethiopia go >>
  • Dorothy Height honored in song by B.B. King, Taj Mahal and others in Chicago go >>
  • A feature on sculptor Mark di Suvero as his new exhibition in La Jolla gets underway go >>
  • Dr. Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl on recovery efforts in Haiti in LA Times interview go >>
  • Paul Farmer and Partners In Health instrumental in opening first rural health facility of its kind in Rwanda go >>
  • Geoffrey Canada keynotes the Social Justice Leadership Conference at Wesleyan University go >>
  • Marian Wright Edelman discusses the Black Community Crusade for Children in Huffington Post go >>
  • Joel Salatin named one of The Observer's "Green Giants" for 2011 go >>
  • Paul Farmer part of Council on Foreign Relations "expert roundup" on rebuilding Haiti go >>
  • The Boston Globe looks at Haiti one year later through the work of Partners In Health and Paul Farmer go >>
  • Dean Kamen pushes for a national funding initiative to support FIRST robotics programs in public schools across the country go >>
  • Dean Kamen and performer Will.i.am launch the 20th FIRST Robotics Competition go >>
  • James Nachtwey photographs a medevac unit in Afghanistan for TIME go >>
  • Robert Greenstein predicts budget woes with new House of Representatives rule go >>
  • Nature magazine examines two decades of 'green chemistry' led by Paul Anastas and others go >>
  • Leroy Hood to receive the 2011 Fritz J. and Dolores H. Russ Prize, a biennial award recognizing bioengineering achievement go >>
  • Thomas Friedman introduces Teresa Heinz at 16th Heinz Awards in November go >>
  • Dave Egger's 826 National makes inroads into Kenya go >>
  • Geoffrey Canada appears as a guest on The Colbert Report go >>
  • William Thomas is one of three past recipients named to Long Term Living's 10 Most Influential People go >>
  • Elma Holder is one of three past recipients named to Long Term Living's 10 Most Influential People go >>
  • Robert Butler is one of three past recipients named to Long Term Living's 10 Most Influential People go >>
  • Jane Lubchenco talks about the Gulf of Mexico on The News Hour with Jim Lehrer go >>
  • James Goodby writes article for Brookings on U.S. relations with North Korea go >>
  • Steve Wozniak pens open letter to FCC on net neutrality in The Atlantic go >>
  • James Balog is profiled on Voice of America go >>
  • Jane Lubchenco, head of NOAA, is named Nature magazine's "Newsmaker of the Year" go >>
  • Robert Berkebile's firm, BNIM, receives the 2011 AIA Architecture Firm Award go >>
  • Paul Farmer appointed University Professor, Harvard's top faculty honor go >>
  • Geoffrey Canada named 2010's No.1 "good man" by the Good Men Project go >>
  • Paul Farmer co-authors Newsweek piece on how to stop cholera in Haiti go >>
  • Global Crop Diversity Trust, led by Cary Fowler, launches 10-year initiative to gather and save the wild relatives of essential food crops go >>
  • Mildred Dresselhaus honored on her 80th birthday with symposium and celebration at MIT go >>
  • Amory Lovins is co-recipient of award for leadership in energy efficiency from the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy go >>
  • Amory Lovins pens new strategy for reducing U.S. dependence on fossil fuels by 2050 go >>
  • Cary Fowler talks about how the world's future food supply is key to climate adaptation go >>

The Heinz Awards

2001

Steve Wozniak

Steve Wozniak receives the Heinz Award in Technology, the Economy and Employment for single-handedly designing the first personal computer and for then redirecting his lifelong passion for mathematics and electronics toward lighting the fires of excitement for education in grade school students and their teachers. Known simply and affectionately as "Woz," he invented the Apple I computer, its successor, the Apple II, and then left the corporate fast track for a life devoted to his family, philanthropy and teaching.

It has been 25 years since Mr. Wozniak and "the other Steve," Steve Jobs, who had once been a classmate in high school, revolutionized the computer industry when they built and marketed the first computer designed for general public use. What was begun as a two-person operation in the Jobs garage grew to a $500 million a year company in just six years. But Mr. Wozniak, who never did join the business side of the company, just continued inventing. "I just wanted to design neat things," he says.

Woz's second great ambition was teaching, which has consumed much of his time for the past decade. He made a significant investment in the future in the late 1980s by "adopting" the 5th through the 8th grades in the local Los Gatos School District in California. His hands-on teaching of the youngsters exemplifies the technologist turned educator. He not only provided the students with portable computers, he teaches computer skills to them and their teachers, wired the school for Internet access, and lives by truly believing that "being able to teach somebody to do something means more than doing it yourself."

The Silicon Valley legend fell in love with math and electronics at an early age. He enrolled in undergraduate studies at the University of California, Berkeley but dropped out in his senior year in 1971 to join Hewlett-Packard. He created his own designs, including Apple I, in his free time while at H-P and frequented the Homebrew Computer Club, which had also attracted Mr. Jobs. Woz eventually returned to Berkeley to earn his undergraduate degree in engineering after he achieved fame and fortune at Apple. But Woz is more than an engineer. He is generally considered to have accomplished a feat unlikely to be repeated, he is the only person to ever design both the hardware and the software for a computer platform that became a huge commercial success.

Woz developed a way to connect the Apple computer to a printer and went further to develop the first floppy disc (drive), a removable floppy disc with information on it that can be put into the computer memory for storage or accessed without being stored, greatly increasing the ability of people to use the Apple computer.

The Apple II is certainly one of if not the most significant developments of the 20th Century in that it was the first time the power of a computer was made available to the individual. Mr. Wozniak's design was brilliant because of its simplicity.

Steve Wozniak is considered the single most important person in the microcomputer revolution and is also one of the most interesting humanitarians. What he did he did because it was fun and he is more surprised than anyone that it amounted to anything. What it has amounted to has been seminal contributions to an industry, the impact of which is felt throughout homes and businesses worldwide.

Note: This profile is excerpted from the commemorative brochure published at the time of the awards' presentation.


UPDATES SINCE RECEIVING THE HEINZ AWARD

December 2007 - Steve Wozniak was named one of the "Founding Fathers of Computing" by the Computer History Museum and is on the first ever panel to celebrate the era of microcomputer innovation since 1982. This first event is titled "The Impact of the Commodore 64: 25th Anniversary Celebration". - Business Wire

November 2006 - Release scheduled for Wozniak's new book iWoz: Computer Geek to Cult Icon: How I Invented the Personal Computer, Co-Founded Apple, and Had Fun Doing It.

December 2004 - Wozniak previews his latest vision to the public at the Ziff Davis Media's Security Virtual Tradeshow. "Woz Location-Based Encryption" as it's called, is "an application that uses GPS tracking within a wireless hub to encrypt and decrypt sensitive data for large businesses." Wozniak expects the program to do well, as data protection is becoming an increasingly serious issue to most big businesses. - eWeek

January 2004 - Wozniak is one of eleven public figures to be inducted into the Consumer Electronics Hall of Fame. He is honored with the induction for his "leadership and innovation in the consumer electronics industry." - The Hollywood Reporter

June 2001 - Wozniak wins the Visionary Award from the Software Development Forum. A Visionary Award is given to "experts in their field who have enriched the lives of others through their work, while creating the technologies of tomorrow." Wozniak receives this award for the pioneering visions that inevitably created the first computers and launched the PC revolution. - Business Wire

Speech

3/5/2001 - Acceptance Speech

Well, it's quite an amazing company I'm in. I thought I'd stay in technology work because I'd figured out how to get the ketchup out of the bottle and my own ballet experiences are with a bit-parts - one time the director of our ballet hurled me back onto the stage as I was supposed to be walking off, and stuck me in a scene that I wasn't prepared for or rehearsed for - what a dirty joke. So, sometimes a sense of humor there. When it comes to environment, I just sort of think, when are we going to leave the world in a better shape for the next generation than worse shape?

Well, why do we care about people? You know when we're young, we're taught those values. Almost every youngster reads stories and watches TV shows and reads books, where the good guy wins something and helps the poor and needy. And so, we always have these good values when we're young and you know they're different kinds of people once we get older, how much, how directly that effects us in how we run our lives.

You know, myself I was really lucky to have a Dad that taught me that teachers were so important, that they were teaching our younger generation to grow up and make this world a better world than the prior generations had made it. And I thought, our teachers are the most important people in the world. They make more than engineers, right? And he says, 'No, they don't.' But, I told him I was going to be an engineer first, and be a teacher second, and that was in sixth grade so, pretty much my whole life I have wanted to teach and I was lucky. I found in later life that I had skills. First of all, I got influenced in college that children's minds develop along cognitive psychology lines. They develop in steps and stages that grow on each other. It's like mathematics. It's like computers. It's like programs, like the things I love.

And a child's mind became very important to me, so I tried to always direct my interest towards young children and sometimes leave the adults at the table. But, as I had my own children, I discovered I had other good teaching skills, which you can never count on. Some people are made to be teachers. And I had patience, and I could explain things in understandable ways. And I also later on, found I could put myself in the body of the person hearing me. What are they hearing, and what does it sound like to them, and are they really learning? Are their minds really taking a step forward, or are they just impressed that you know how to tell them something, and that's important?

When we started Apple, the goal was to just empower common people and give them this incredible tool - a computer - that before that, only their company had and owned, and they were sort of subsidiary to it. They were a slave to the computer the company owned, and now we were going to make them the masters, and put them in control if it, and they could write programs that were better than the company programs, and figure out more things, and we didn't really think about 'oh this is a big business and we'll make money'. No. It's ... 'we're going to better the world.'

As companies evolve though, pretty much eventually, it's sort of like, the decisions in a company weren't for me. I wasn't the political type or the company type. And pretty much the company has to decide, 'Well, we have to make decisions. What's best for us as a company money wise?' And not what's best for people, and what do they want in the product, and how do we make it better?

How do we not take steps backwards? For the future I have two big hopes inspired by my past, and one is that software in the world becomes more human and understandable, and really explains things well and helps you through things and does things for you, and doesn't make it a task and something you have to fight to get computers to always work and be understood, and we'll get back to that. We had that stage for about a five-year period or a little more, but now we're kind of fighting it.

And my other goal kind of relates to teaching. I found that a class of 30 is a lot harder to teach than a class of 20. Class size is so important. In California, we're 50th in the states in that regard. And it all boils down to money and I'm hopeful that some day like, a family of five gets five votes.

Thank you very much.
Steve Wozniak