The Fly on the Mac

Subscribe Today!

The Fly on the Mac delivers interesting and informative commentaries on a variety of subjects and interests to your Inbox each weekday. Visit our home page to subscribe today and begin enjoying the world's first Macintosh UseLetter.

A Look Back - Page Five

Several universities have already bought into the NeXT. Brown has made room in its new computer center for 30 NeXTs in the language labs. Schools like Carnegie Mellon and Stanford will also embrace the machine early, says Michael Carter, director of Systems Development at Stanford and a member of NeXT's academic advisory board. Those schools will develop programs and pave the way for the next tier of buyers, he says. "First, 30 universities will buy, then 300, then 3,000 . . . By the fall of 1990, it should be a very popular machine selling in the campus bookstore." Many smaller schools say that less expensive, available technology meets their needs. Joseph Moeller, director of computing for Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, N.J., says his school won't jump on the NeXT bandwagon yet: "You don't necessarily have to have the latest, greatest, most comprehensive system."

NeXT faces another serious obstacle: Microsoft's William Gates. As the producer of operating systems for the IBM PC and IBM's new PS/2 line of computers - as well as many of the important applications for IBM and Apple computers - the 32-year-old Gates dominates the industry. He is Jobs' opposite. A virtuoso software engineer with virtually zero charisma, he is the ultimate entrepreneur. Jobs invited Gates to contribute software to the NeXT machine, but Gates declined, saying there wasn't enough money in the narrow market Jobs was pursuing. In the midst of the hoopla surrounding the NeXT rollout, Gates remains its most dour critic.

Some industry observers suggest a dark motive for Gates' skepticism. The deal between Jobs and IBM centers on Unix - one major operating system Gates doesn't own. If the NeXT program helps Unix become a standard, Gates may lose money and power. The two wunderkinder have a stormy relationship. "Steve always yells at me," Gates says. "Sometimes with a positive tone in his voice, sometimes a negative tone." But analyst Dyson predicts that if NeXT catches on, Microsoft will eventually produce software for it. Gates "is a good businessman," she says.

The industry is also watching to see how another rival - Sculley - responds to Jobs' comeback. Jobs insists he bears no grudge against Apple. "I'm still happy when they ship a Mac," he says. He still owns "just enough" Apple stock "to get the annual report." But there's bitterness in his voice when he says: "I spent 10 years trying to build something, and most of what I built has been dismantled." He clearly still feels enmity toward Sculley, who seems to want to mend fences. Sculley sent Jobs a copy of his book "Odyssey." Jobs says he never read it. The day before the NeXT rollout, Sculley called Jobs to congratulate him. Jobs says the conversation was cordial: "I thought it was a gentlemanly thing to do."

The new Jobs, too, seems to be more of a gentleman. If he's not more humble, he's doing a good job of faking it. At the rollout he said self-mockingly: "We're in our 30s now. We don't need to reinvent everything." Jobs has been compared to Henry Ford for bringing computers to the public. But at NeXT, the name that comes up is Preston Tucker, the car maker who built a dream machine but couldn't market it. In the movie "Tucker," Howard Hughes meets the maverick automaker and tells him about his disastrous plane, the Spruce Goose. "They say it can't fly," whispers the multimillionaire, "but that's not the point!" For Hughes and Tucker, it may have been enough to dream big dreams. Jobs doesn't have that luxury: he will win or lose at the cash register. Those returns won't be in for months, or years. But for one week, Steven Jobs reminded the computer industry of its youth - the excitement and opportunity of the go-go early '80s. "It's great to be back," Jobs told his audience. He really was back at least for another round.

JOHN SCHWARTZ with MICHAEL ROGERS in Palo Alto and RICHARD SANDZA in Washington

Photographs: The naysayer and the bankroller: Bill Gates of Microsoft (left), NeXT backer Ross Perot (right). Photograph by: Larry Barns (left), Chuck Nacke - Picture Group (right)