It's correct that selling a commercial Apple computer was Job's idea, but Wozniak had the idea of making one in the first place - I don't think that conflicts with what you heard on the interview (I haven't heard it yet, only looked at the web page. But I have read several long interviews with Peddle in the past). However, the web page claims that Jobs bought a 6502 at the show - that was Woz, not Jobs (but the $25 price is correct). Jobs, on the other hand, was essential in getting components from vendors later, he managed to get credit as well as samples where Woz said he could never have managed that - he's an engineer, he just wants to build. Jobs complemented him nicely that way.
And the page said that SWEET 16 was a compiler, which flopped - Peddle would never have said that. SWEET 16 is a virtual machine built-in in the ROM, and it did exactly what it was meant to do - to let Woz do 16-bit processing from 8-bit 6502 code, to shrink the code size. And where that statement about the TRS-80 failing came from.. I don't know. I can't imagine Peddle said that either. The TRS-80 outsold just about everything else at the time. It was wildly successful. In any case I don't think Peddle has started to forget things from back then.. *I* haven't forgotten so it's not that long ago!
However, it looks like the web page has been improved since the first time I looked at it, now the annoying black field that covered what I wanted to read when scrolling doesn't do that anymore. So I was able to read many more of the bullet points. And those seem to be reasonably OK as far as I can tell (there are things there that I don't know about so I can't evaluate everything).
I may try to download and listen to the podcast.. but it's three hours, right? I don't know how I can get the time - in general I prefer to read interviews, not listen to them, because I can read many times faster than I can listen.
-Tor