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[ Birds chirping ]
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[ Music ]
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>> Steven Jobs figures heroically in the history
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of American entrepreneurship.
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At the age of 22 he founded a company called Apple Computer
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and proceeded to grow it into a $2 billion business.
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In the spring of 1985 he lost a power struggle inside Apple
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and left the company he had created.
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He spent the summer considering his next move
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and resolved to begin again.
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In September he started a new computer company
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with his own money.
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With characteristic flair, he called it NeXT Incorporated.
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This morning at its offices in Silicon Valley, California,
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the company is about to get a first look at its new trademark,
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the signature it hopes to make familiar around the world.
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The designer, Paul Rand, created the logos for IBM,
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Westinghouse, UPS, and many others.
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Rand doesn't normally work for infant companies even
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if they could afford him, but NeXT isn't an ordinary startup.
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>> The idea is to, please don't open,
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don't look at the back first.
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This is the front.
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And don't get scared, this is not the design.
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[laughter] The reason I did this was to sort of floor Steve
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when he saw it, you know and think,
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Jesus 100,000 bucks down the drain.
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[laughter] [Inaudible]
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>> Jobs has had a sneak preview of the logo and loves it.
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As he waits for a verdict
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from his staff he can hardly contain his excitement.
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Assertive as he is, he values consensus.
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Most of these young computer and software designers were
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on the team that developed the Macintosh.
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They left secure jobs at Apple to follow their boss
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in pursuit of his new vision.
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Steve's goal is to transform the learning process at the college
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and graduate school level with a powerful computer
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and a new kind of software.
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>> And we decided we wanted to start a company that had a lot
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to do with education, and in particular, higher education;
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colleges and universities.
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So what our vision is is that there's a revolution
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in software going on now on college and university campuses,
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and it has to do with providing two types
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of breakthrough software.
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One is called simulated learning environments.
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It's where you can't give a student
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in physics a linear accelerator.
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You can't give a student
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in biology a $5 million recombinant DNA laboratory
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but you can simulate those things.
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You can simulate them on a very powerful computer,
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and it is not possible for students to afford these things.
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It is not possible for most faculty members
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to afford these things.
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So if we can take what we do best which is
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to find really great technology and pull it
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down to a price point that's affordable to people,
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if we can do the same thing for this type of computer
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which is maybe 10 times as powerful as a personal computer
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that we did for personal computers,
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then I think we can make a real difference
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in the way the learning experience happens
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in the next five years.
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And that's what we're trying to do.
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[ Waves crashing ]
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Companies come and go at the crest of the wave.
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I mean you know IBM had their day way back when when they,
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you know, they were at the crest.
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>> In December, 1985, in business for just 90 days,
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Jobs and his 11 employees hold their first retreat.
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Company retreats like this are the continuation
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of a tradition Steve established at Apple early on.
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Watching him in action at these brainstorming sessions is an
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opportunity to observe him at his lucid best
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as a company builder and motivator.
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>> Slicing into the future.
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>> His opening remarks reveal his faith in high technology
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and his idealism, an unusual combination
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that is part of his uniqueness.
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In effect, he is planting the seeds
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of a new corporate culture.
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>> More important than building a product, we are in the process
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of architecting a company that will hopefully be much,
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much more incredible-- the total will be much more incredible
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than the sum of its parts.
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And the cumulative effort of approximately, you know,
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20,000 decisions that we're all going to make
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over the next two years are going
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to define what our company is.
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And one of the things that made Apple great was
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that in the early days, it was built from the heart.
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Not by somebody who came in
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and said I know how to build a company.
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Here's what you do.
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Da da da da da da da.
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It wasn't built that way.
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It was built from the heart.
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Now unfortunately we didn't always use our heads
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and we can do better in many respects because we are wiser
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and smarter and know more and those kinds of things.
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But one of the most important things,
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one of my largest wishes is that we build NeXT from the heart
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and the people that are thinking about coming to work for us
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or buying or products or who want
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to sell us things feel that, that we're doing this
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because we have a passion about it.
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We're doing this because we really care
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about the higher educational process,
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not because we want to make a buck.
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Not because, you know, we just want to do it to do it.
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>> Jobs can be overbearing and impatient,
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but this team knows what to expect
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and is not easily intimidated.
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They are smart and they are focused.
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And their preferred language is computer ease.
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>> They actually provided analogous
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to [inaudible] small talk.
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[Inaudible] provided you a way to drop actually
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into [inaudible] and program the actions that happened
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when you double clicked on an icon
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or when you dropped something on an icon.
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>> We have to create a product that's an order
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of magnitude more powerful than the current generation of PCs.
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>> For two solid days the group listens
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to progress reports from each department.
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The goal is to arrive at design decisions, production deadlines,
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and a marketing strategy aimed at selling on college campuses.
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>> is define the problem.
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>> The point is that June, July,
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and August are the timeframes when people do work.
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When they, when the school's out and when the people
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or researchers and the staff that deal
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with making computing happen for September,
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that's when they do work.
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>> That is, that's like a bomb run.
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You don't change your target when you're in the bomb run.
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>> From the sidelines, Jobs probes and challenges.
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He has a remarkable ability
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to identify the conclusions implicit
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in what the others have to say.
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>> So really the next 90 days are real important.
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>> We are going to make it or break it based
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on whether we can provide products to higher education
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and services and relationships to higher education
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that no one else provides.
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And I think we ought to spend 100%
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of our time thinking about that.
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And if we can't do that, then we ought to go broke.
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There needs to be someone who is sort of the keeper
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and reiterator of the vision
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because there's just a ton of work to do.
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And a lot of times, you know, when you have
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to walk 1,000 miles and you take the first step it looks
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like a long ways.
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And it really helps if there's someone there saying well we're
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one step closer.
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You know the goal definitely exists.
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It's not just a mirage out there.
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So in 1001 little, and sometimes larger ways,
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the vision needs to be reiterated.
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I do that a lot.
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>> There was the price one, the schedule one--
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>> The technology.
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>> and technology.
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>> Yeah.
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>> Jobs continually interrupts to focus the lens
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of his vision on priorities.
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By the end of the first day the team has established the
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critical importance of keeping the price of the computer
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within the reach of students and professors
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and bringing the product to market by spring 1987.
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A survey of college campuses has indicated
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that the new computer should sell for no more than $3,000
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to be considered affordable.
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Since college buying takes place in the summer, Jobs is concerned
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that a failure to have their product ready
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by spring 1987 will delay the company an entire year.
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>> If we don't deliver this by spring '87,
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we're out of business so my first priority is
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to make sure this damn thing is out by spring '87.
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>> I think spring can basically push out to summer,
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but I also hear that that is number one.
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>> Right.
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>> I guess I disagree with price being the second thing
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because unless we have,
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unless we have this technology that wows people--
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>> Um hum.
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>> we're not going to have a firm foundation
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that people are going to buy from.
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And I think people are going to be a lot more flexible saying,
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well jeez, this runs three times faster, seven times faster than,
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you know, a computer--
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>> Well what's the highest we could go here?
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>> Oh well [inaudible] technology jumps ahead in price.
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>> Well we couldn't make this 5,000.
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I think we're, they didn't say
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if you made it go three times faster we'd pay 4,000.
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They didn't say that.
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>> No they said [inaudible].
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>> That's right, they said if it's $3,000 it's a hot product.
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>> But they were--
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>> They said you're over 3,000, forget it.
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>> Yeah.
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>> That that's their magic number.
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They've also told us that nobody else says they can do that.
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And they think that's a really big number.
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Now, whether it is or not in reality, who knows?
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>> Um hum.
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>> Whether it is or not in terms of their commitment--
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>> Yes.
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>> to push us, we've established that.
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>> Um hum.
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>> That's right.
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>> If we really do believe that we have to ship this by summer
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of '87, then how are we going to move that up?
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I don't think price is going to change the schedule that much.
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I think the real risk is
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in the technology, it's not in the cost.
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>> Yeah.
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>> There's another option, it can go to the spring of '88.
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>> Yeah, we could.
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[laughs] But the problem is if we do that, then the--
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>> Then [inaudible].
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>> Well wait I think--
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>> No that's not the worst thing.
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The worst thing is, every, the world isn't standing still,
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so by the spring of '88 well we want color.
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The technology window sort of passes us by
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and all the work we've done we throw
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down the toilet and we start over.
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And you know since we've proved we can't do something great
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in 18 months, why should we believe we could do it,
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you know, a year later?
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>> I don't care what you're saying, reality--
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distortion is reality distortion
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and its has its motivational value and that's fine.
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And I think it has a very strong point
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and a very important value.
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However when it comes to the, when it comes
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to that date affecting the design of the product,
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that's when we get into a rut.
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Real, deep, shit because if we are unrealistic about this date,
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we make design decisions that we have to then go over, reiterate,
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throw out, start all over again.