Apple Movies (1/4) [#QuédateEnCasa]

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Apple Movies (1/4) [#QuédateEnCasa]

Apple, Movies, QuédateEnCasa


Pirates

I just read an interview they did Steve Wozniak, the founder of Apple. In it he said the films were made about Apple's history, the one he liked the most and whose character he was closest to was actually Silicon Valley Pirates.

The truth is that I had never seen it, and I was curious. It's an old TV movie, and it's not available on any modern digital platform, so I had to figure out how to get it. It didn't cost me much if you knew how to navigate the internet and I watched it last night. The truth is that you are very good. That was it the origins of Apple and Microsoft.

In these days of detention at home We will have more time to use television, be it movies or series. And we'll do this as a family, on the TV in the living room, or more often, on our other devices. Home confinement often leads us to create our own privacy space.

Last night I saw for myself Silicon Valley Pirates, and I had a great time. It got me excited when I watched two furry boys create an Apple in their home garage, watch it on my iMac and listen to it on my AirPods, 45 years later. I will not make spoilers, because we all know the story.

Two hairy men with a welder. This is how Apple is made.

Love and hate between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates

Silicon Valley Pirates is TV movie made in 1999, directed by Martyn Burke and starring Noah Wyle, Joey Slotnick, J.G. Hertzler, Anthony Michael Hall and Wayne Pere.

It has to do with real names and hair and signals the startup of Apple and Microsoft. How Steve Wozniak he made his first computer, and how he became a partner Steve Jobs You are impressed by the pot and decide to market it. They called the pot a wooden box Apple.

Surprisingly, in the same Californian city and at the same time, back in 1976, two other boys (these hairdressers), and computer geeks, Bill Gates and Paul Allen, they managed to create a software company without a trace and named it Microsoft.

The film dates from 1999, so it only describes the beginning of the two companies and the love-hate relationship that exists between Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. The movie ends on the day of Presentation of Macintosh, and the upcoming release of the app Windows.

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