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             Ultimately, Jobs' new machine will be judged by what's inside the 
            black box. If nothing else, the NeXT is a treat for the eyes, ears 
            and mind. The 17-inch black-and-white screen is remarkably sharp. It 
            dispenses with floppy disks; instead, it stores information on a 
            removable "optical disk" that can hold pictures and sound as well as 
            100,000 pages of text. Thanks to an advanced sound chip, the machine 
            could be used as a telephone-answering machine or a music 
            synthesizer. It can also record with the fidelity of a compact disc. 
            The NeXT will come with a bundle of software designed to meet the 
            needs of educators and students: word processing, a data base and 
            advanced computer languages for programmers (not to mention a 
            dictionary, thesaurus and "book" of quotations). 
             New 
            computers often don't succeed because software isn't available for 
            them yet. Jobs has tried to end-run that problem. The NeXT's 
            operating system (the link between the machine and the programs it 
            runs) is a variant of Unix, the current favorite in the academic and 
            technical communities. That means the computer should be able to run 
            the programs that exist or are being written with Unix. The machine 
            makes it easy to write "courseware": instead of requiring complex 
            programming commands, it uses a simplified set of software "building 
            blocks." The company also offers a laser printer that beats the 
            industry standard at a third of the standard's price. 
            Despite the technical wizardry, the NeXT is less revolutionary 
            than evolutionary. Each component was within reach of Jobs' 
            competitors. Of its pioneering "erasable optical" disk drive, 
            Microsoft's Gates says: "Anyone can write Sony a check." (In fact, 
            the drive came from Canon) But even as an evolutionary step, NeXT is 
            impressive. After all, Jobs wrote the check to Canon before anyone 
            else, and drove his staff to incorporate the device into his machine 
            even though many analysts had not expected to see it emerge before 
            1990. "[Jobs'] gift is assessing the risk of new 
            technologies-gambling that it will be ready when he's ready," says 
            John Warnock of Adobe Systems, which produced NeXT software. "Most 
            companies take things off the shelf." John Dvorak, computer 
            columnist for the San Francisco Examiner, argues that even the gaps 
            in Jobs' technical knowledge are part of his strength. "Since Jobs 
            isn't a professional engineer," Dvorak says, "he doesn't know what 
            can't be done." 
            The NeXT venture does have several strikes against it, however, 
            the most important being the cost of bringing a computer to market. 
            Trip Hawkins, an early Jobs protégé and now president of Electronic 
            Arts, says that the Macintosh survived only because of bountiful 
            profits from the Apple II line and because Apple "had a religious 
            belief in it and went to the wall." NeXT, he says, "has the same 
            religious leader, but not the cash cow." Critics also say any "box 
            for the '90s" should have a color screen; Jobs says that's on the 
            way. 
            Jobs' third act won't be as easy as his first, when Apple 
            virtually invented the personal-computer market. The highly 
            competitive workstation market has already seen its pioneer days, 
            with plucky start-ups like Sun and Apollo. The $2.5 billion market 
            is ripe for entry by majors like AT&T and IBM--which has already 
            launched one unsuccessful workstation, but is gearing up for another 
            try. Meanwhile, the high-end personal computers from IBM and Apple 
            already rival low-end workstations for performance and price. 
            NeXT's competitors say they aren't worried about Jobs' entry into 
            their turf. In the nine months before NeXT reaches the market (most 
            machines will go to software developers until then), several of the 
            competitors are likely to launch new machines that meet Jobs' 
            computer head-on -- and offer deep discounts. "We're not out to do a 
            'NeXT killer'," says Curt Wozniak, vice president of the 
            educational-products division at Sun. "We're out to capture the 
            education market." 
            Despite those dangers, many industry analysts are still 
            enthusiastic about NeXT. Adam Cuhney, a vice president and high-tech 
            analyst at Kidder, Peabody & Co., was one of the few who warned 
            in 1983 that the Lisa was overpriced. Although he notes that a lot 
            can happen before NeXT comes to market, he calls it "a phenomenal 
            product." Unlike the computer buyers of 1983, Cuhney says, today's 
            market is now savvy enough to recognize value and pay for it. Mitch 
            Kapor, who launched Lotus Development Corp. and its pioneering Lotus 
            1-2-3 business program, has now left to form a new company and is 
            working with NeXT. Kapor predicts that "after the initial shock, 
            when [workstation makers] realize they can't do spin control, 
            they'll say [Jobs] is right." 
            Photograph: John 
            Sculley, head of Apple Computer. Photograph by: Rob Kinmonth 
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