
What I found while digging deep down in the ancient layers of early digital remains was a bit astonishing, to say the least, considering the widespread interest around this forum in the legendary ”French” slot car motors (but not from France...):
Gordon French, Mythic Motor Man in the early days of slot car racing and possibly the very first commercial rewinder of Mabuchi can motors in the early 1960's (founder/owner of the French Motor Co. — later involved in the Mura startup enterprise), also played an instrumental role in the creation of Apple Computer — a company that earlier this year sailed all the way to the top in the list of the largest companies in the world, before Exxon and well ahead of IBM, Microsoft et consortes. (Apple today is said to have an operating cash balance of $76,2 billion, more than Obama & the Government of the USA, $73,8 billion at the end of June this year...)
According to the well-known Apple legend, the "Homebrew Computer Club" in Silicon Valley was the playground for electronics & computer geeks and nerds in the mid-1970's. Early and eager members that joined the club to satisfy their curiosity and find further inspiration were local electronic whizz kids, Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. The two young boy's very first computer, a hand-built Apple I, was demonstrated at a Homebrew Computer Club meeting in april 1976. And the rest is history.
Food for thought is that without the Homebrew Computer Club there might never have been an Apple Inc, no Macintosh or iMac, no iPod, no iPhone or no iPad — commodities in today's wireless online world.
So what about the French connection?
Well, the Homebrew Computer Club was actually, like Apple, founded in a garage in Silicon Valley.
The Apple Computer company saw the light of day on April 1, 1976, in a garage at 2066 Crist Drive in Los Altos, where Steve Jobs lived with his sister Patti and his parents, Paul and Clara.

The Homebrew Computer Club was founded only a year earlier and not very far away, in a garage at 614, 18th Avenue in Menlo Park.
This illustrious & historically significant little club was the creation of two electronics engineers, Gordon French and Fred Moore.
And the very first meeting, assembling 32 "homebrew computer" pioneers, was held on March 5, 1975, in the garage of — Gordon French.

Gordon French's old business card:

More on Gordon French and the Homebrew Computer Club can be found here (also a few relatively fresh pictures (2005) of the elusive Gordon French himself — scroll down):
Wikipedia (link)
The Homebrew Computer Club (link)
More on the Homebrew Computer Club (link)
Even more on the Homebrew Computer Club (link)
It also appears that Gordon French is still busy in his garage, and still fiddling with electric motors.
Outlined in red below is a prize/presentation of his latest effort (2011) in the business:

Prize/presentation (link)
Two fresh videos here from youtube (2011) with a brand new French Motor (now called "Frenchie"):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4ZNiYevI_M
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ExtcbfDkfvA