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Today in Apple history: Steve Jobs prepares to take on Apple

Posted September 2, 2017 | Mac | News | NeXT | Steve Jobs | TIAH: 1980s | TIAH: Steve Jobs | Today in Apple history | Top stories


September 2, 1985: Reports claim Steve Jobs is on the verge of setting up his own company to compete with Apple. The rumors fly after Jobs sells Apple stock holdings worth $21.43 million.

For anyone who thinks speculation about Apple’s future is an invention of the blog era, today’s “Today in Apple history” is a reminder that the tech rumor mill was alive and well in 1985.

Exit Steve Jobs

Jobsstock
Apple acknowledged that Jobs was selling his AAPL stock.
Photo: InfoWorld

Speculation that Jobs was on his way out of Apple came after he was stripped of his duties as general manager of the Macintosh Division. The move came as part of a company-wide reorganization by CEO John Sculley that summer. It followed just a year-and-a-half after the first Mac went on sale, to generally good reviews but disappointing sales.

Aged 30, nobody expected Jobs — who, even in 1985, was well-known to the public, thanks to a sustained PR blitz — to stay quiet long. However, relatively few expected him to leave Apple altogether. Those rumors gained credibility in early September, when news emerged that Jobs sold 19.7 percent of his Apple stock in only two months.

Enter NeXT

Unbeknownst to the press at the time, Jobs took a very significant meeting in early September with Nobel laureate Paul Berg, a Stanford biochemist who was about to turn 60. As they lunched, Berg told Jobs about gene splicing and the challenge of conducting wet-lab research.

When Jobs asked why he didn’t simulate it on computer, Berg’s eyes reportedly “lit up.” (That’s the way Jobs recalled it, at least). Apple’s co-founder suddenly had a new idea to think about.

The result, a few months later, would be the formation of NeXT. The new computer company initially planned to build educational machines, although the remit later expanded. NeXT started the next phase of Jobs’ career, and eventually paved the way for his triumphant return to Apple.



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