Apple will celebrate 50 years on April 1, and over the past half-century, it has developed the eight-bit personal computer Apple I, the Macintosh, the iPhone, Apple Watch, and AirPods, putting its technology into the pockets of about 1.5 billion people.
Cofounder Steve Wozniak, who made his mark in this new age of technology, would rather just touch grass.
“I really have disconnected from the technology quite a bit,” Wozniak said in a recent CNN interview. “And I believe that nature is much more important than what humans do.”
Wozniak was the innovator behind Apple, serving the company until 1985 and developing its first two computer models as well as the first Macintosh, which popularized the graphical user interface.
The breakthrough made PCs more accessible to nontechnical users, opening the doors to a mass audience. Despite the Woz’s contributions to the ubiquity of devices, he does not see the same value in the current big trend in technology.
“I don’t use AI much at all,” he said. “I often read things [AI produces], and they just sound too dry and too perfe...

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