Steve Jobs Comes Back
            
            At 33, the computer wunderkind has a slick new 
            product and sales pitch to match. It may be the most exciting 
            machine in years. But will it sell?
 
            It's less than a week before the most important day of his life, 
            and Steve Jobs is doing what comes naturally: fussing over details. 
            At a high-school gym in Berkeley, Calif., he's rehearsing the 
            rollout that will introduce his new baby, the NeXT computer, to the 
            world. Dressed in blue jeans and a red flannel shirt, Jobs paces 
            back and forth, reading lines into a wireless microphone. Jobs has 
            hired multimedia artist George Coates to stage the unveiling in San 
            Francisco's futuristic Davies Symphony Hall. When the first slide 
            appears on the screen, Jobs enthuses: "I really like that green." 
            Around him, other NeXT executives chime in: "Great green. Great 
            green."
            The computer goes through its paces, playing music with the sound 
            of alive orchestra, pulling up images as clear as photographs, 
            retrieving quotes from a memory bank big enough to hold a bookshelf 
            full of classics. Then a software glitch makes the image on the 
            sleek black monitor freeze. NeXT employees tense up, expecting an 
            infamous Jobs outburst. Jobs just stares at the screen, then shrugs. 
            "We're hosed." he says calmly. "We'll fix that. No problem." Later, 
            a video shows the automated assembly plant that Jobs has built to 
            manufacture the NeXT machines. Wandering back to sit with a handful 
            of employees, Jobs watches as robot hands install the 
            state-of-the-art chips that will power the computer. For a second he 
            looks almost teary. "It's beautiful," he says softly.
 
            Steve Jobs was back last week with a slick new computer and more 
            self-dramatization than ever. It's been more than a decade since 
            Jobs, in his early 20s, co founded the Apple Computer Corp. and 
            brought computing to the masses with the Apple Il. It's been four 
            years since he turned the industry on to user-friendly displays and 
            software with the Macintosh. Now, at 33, he's billing the NeXT as a 
            computer that will revolutionize the higher-education market and 
            point the industry toward the 1990s (next story). Love him or hate 
            him, people in the computer world couldn't wait to see what Jobs had 
            secretly worked on for three years in his Palo Alto headquarters. 
            When a NeXT marketer called The Wall Street Journal to buy an ad for 
            the rollout. the salesman quipped, "Why bother?"
            Jobs has much more at stake than the $12 million he has invested 
            in NeXT. He's rebuilding his reputation, too. Critics say Jobs' 
            success at Apple was an accident. and that he is little more than a 
            showman with a knack for packaging other people's engineering. Jobs 
            is still smarting over his 1985 showdown with John Sculley, the CEO 
            he recruited to Apple-and who ousted him in a power struggle. The 
            public has tended to view Jobs as a techno-punk, immensely talented 
            and charming but a tad arrogant. Learning from his defeat and 
            re-emerging with a mature new style and machine would show the world 
            that Steve Jobs is a serious computer maker, can run a company--and 
            has finally grown up.
            Photographs: 
            A meticulous showman: The boss and his logo (top) 
            introducing the system (bottom). Photographs by: chuck Nacke -- 
            Picture Group
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