Mike Boich was an employee at
Apple Computer who was in charge of demonstrating the first Macintosh to software developers and potential customers.[1][2] He is notable as a
technology evangelist who persuaded developers to write computer software.[3][4][5] He was instrumental in hiring Apple entrepreneur
Guy Kawasaki.[6][7] His name is listed — as credited — inside the original
Macintosh 128k.
^Jay Elliott, Dec 7, 2012, Entrepreneur magazine,
Steve Jobs’s Tips for Hiring Your A-Team, Accessed June 9, 2014, "...Someone at Stanford gave Steve the name of Mike Boich, a former Stanford undergraduate who had gone on to earn an MBA at Harvard. Mike Boich ... tackled one of the toughest challenges facing the Macintosh when it was launched, coining the word “evangelists” for people on the team..."
Mike Boich was an employee at
Apple Computer who was in charge of demonstrating the first Macintosh to software developers and potential customers.[1][2] He is notable as a
technology evangelist who persuaded developers to write computer software.[3][4][5] He was instrumental in hiring Apple entrepreneur
Guy Kawasaki.[6][7] His name is listed — as credited — inside the original
Macintosh 128k.
^Jay Elliott, Dec 7, 2012, Entrepreneur magazine,
Steve Jobs’s Tips for Hiring Your A-Team, Accessed June 9, 2014, "...Someone at Stanford gave Steve the name of Mike Boich, a former Stanford undergraduate who had gone on to earn an MBA at Harvard. Mike Boich ... tackled one of the toughest challenges facing the Macintosh when it was launched, coining the word “evangelists” for people on the team..."