Confession… I’m a little excited that Steve “Woz” Wozniak will be keynoting this November’s Internet Summit in Raleigh.

Another confession.

Besides that he co-founded Apple and had a funny nickname, I really didn’t know the big deal about Woz until last year.

I was writing for Upstart Business Journal at the time when I had several theatrical encounters with the man. First, I saw the premiere of the musical Nerds at the Duke Energy Center for Performing Arts in Raleigh. A few months later, I was assigned to watch Jobs: The Film (which Woz has publicly denounced) on its opening night and then follow it up with a screening of the 1999 biopic Pirates of Silicon Valley, comparing and contrasting the two movies. In all three shows, it was very clear.

Woz was a genius who created world-changing technology, but who also cared deeply for people.

Like, when three of Apple’s earliest employees were left without shares when the company went public, he gave up some of his own. And he clearly tolerated Jobs at times when the man seemed insufferable.

In further (non-theatrical) research, I learned that he left the technology world in 1986 to complete his degree at the University of California at Berkeley (he dropped out to start Apple) and then spent eight years as an elementary school teacher. Hard to imagine any of today’s popular techies doing that.

Baverman’s full report can be read at ExitEvent.

(C) ExitEvent

(Note: ExitEvent is a news partner of WRAL TechWire. Both companies are owned by Capitol Broadcasting.)