He is delighted by Hoffman's strong commercial forecasts, but furious that Lisa has allowed her mother to sell the house Jobs bought for them. After Hoffman and Jobs discuss NeXT's unclear direction, she realizes that Jobs has designed the computer to entice Apple to buy the company and reinstate him.īy 1998, Apple has fired Sculley, purchased NeXT, and named Jobs CEO, and Jobs is about to unveil the iMac at Davies Symphony Hall. Jobs lambasted the decision and dared them to cast a final vote on his tenure, despite Sculley's warnings. Jobs defends his role as that of a conductor, who directs "musicians" like Wozniak.Īpple CEO John Sculley demands to know why the world believes he fired Jobs – Jobs was actually forced out by the Apple board, who were resolute on updating the Apple II following the Macintosh's lackluster sales. Jobs confronts him about his public criticism of him, and Wozniak questions Jobs' contributions to computing history. Wozniak arrives and predicts the NeXT will be another failure. Before the NeXT Computer launch at the War Memorial Opera House, he spends time with 9-year-old Lisa, but his relationship with Brennan is still strained – he accuses her of irresponsible behavior and of using Lisa to get money from him. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak asks Jobs to acknowledge the Apple II team in his presentation, but Jobs feels that mentioning the computer (which he considers obsolete) is unwise.īy 1988, following the apparent failure of the Macintosh, Jobs has founded a new company, NeXT. Jobs bonds with Lisa over her MacPaint art and agrees to provide more money and a house. Brennan arrives with Lisa to confront him – she is bitter over his denials and his refusal to support her despite his wealth. Jobs rants to marketing executive Joanna Hoffman about a Time magazine article exposing his paternity dispute with ex-girlfriend Chrisann Brennan – he denies he is the father of Brennan's five-year-old daughter, Lisa. Hertzfeld finally suggests faking the demo using the prototype Macintosh 512K computer. Apple co-founder Steve Jobs demands engineer Andy Hertzfeld fix it, threatening to publicly implicate him in the presentation's credits if he does not. In 1984, the Apple Macintosh 128K's voice demo fails less than an hour before its unveiling at Flint Center. Spoiler warning: The following contains plot details about