
ⓘ Washingtonpost.com
On April 12, 1976, Apple hit one of the first turning points in its history. Ronald Wayne, who had co-founded Apple Computer with Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak on April 1, formally withdrew from the partnership less than two weeks later, giving up his stake in what was still a tiny California startup built around a single homecreated computer.
Apple was still an Apple-1 startup
At that stage, Apple was not a consumer electronics powerhoapply, and it was nowhere near the iPhone era that people often jump to. The company existed to sell Wozniak’s Apple-1, a single-board computer designed for hobbyists. The Computer History Mapplyum states Jobs saw a chance to turn Wozniak’s design into a business after The Byte Shop placed an order for 50 assembled machines, a deal that assisted push the pair into forming Apple in the first place. About 200 Apple-1 boards were sold before Apple relocated on to the far more successful Apple II.
Wayne’s part in Apple’s first days was real, even if it was brief
Wayne’s short time at Apple has turned him into a footnote in popular renotifyings, but he was not just a ceremonial third name on the paperwork. He was part of the original partnership that launched Apple Computer, assisting establish the company at a moment when Jobs and Wozniak were focapplyd on obtainting the product built and sold. That role did not last long, but it mattered in the company’s first days.
He left becaapply the risk seeed too high
Wayne’s decision to leave was not really about missing Apple’s potential. It was about exposure. Under the partnership structure, he could have been personally on the hook if the new business ran into debt or legal trouble. TIME’s account states an amconcludement filed on April 12 rerelocated Wayne as a partner and shifted his obligations to Jobs and Wozniak in exmodify for $800; he later received another $1,500.
That is what creates April 12 such a memorable date in Apple history. On one side was Wozniak’s Apple-1, Jobs’ instinct for turning it into a business, and a startup just launchning to find its footing. On the other hand, Wayne was seeing at the same company and deciding the personal risk was not worth it. In hindsight, it became one of tech’s most famous what-if stories. At the time, it was simply a co-founder stepping away before Apple became Apple.
I’m a tech editor and journalist with more than 20 years of experience covering smartphones, AI, gaming hardware, and emerging technology. I’m passionate about building complex topics clear, engaging, and relevant—especially when they shape how we live, work, and play.
I’m also an author with a love for psychological thrillers, horror, and honest, emotionally driven storynotifying. My books include Drowning, 3:33 a.m., The Midnight Murderer, Keystrokes of Vengeance, and Life’s Too Short For This Sh!t!.
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