I met Steve at UC Berkeley in the Winter
of 1971. He begged me to come and show him how to use a blue
box he just built from information he obtained from the October
1971 issue of Esquire magazine "Secrets of the Little
Blue Box", and the Bell System Journals from the UC Library.
Woz talked me into visiting him at the dorm, where he made
his famous call to the Pope. The Woz was working at HP at
the time, and I brought him to a pot luck dinner hosted my
PCC (People's Computer Company). Shortly after that, these
pot luck dinners evolved into the
Home
Brew Computer Club.
A few months later Intel announced the 8080 Microprocessor
chip. Steve Wozniak got his hands on some 6502 chips and built
the first 6502 computer that eventually became the Apple I.
Naturally, neither the phone companies or the authorities
took kindly to my blue box "
experiments"
I was performing on their equipment, so they tracked me down
and filed charges, convicting me under Title 18, Section 1343
: Fraud by wire.
While serving time, I got sentenced to a "Work Furlough"
program, and was allowed to continue my programming work.
I wrote the first word processor for the Apple II computer,
which was the first word processor that printed in true proportional
spacing on the Qume printer, provided to me by Steve Wozniak,
the founder of
Apple
Computer.