Steve Jobs is speaking with director
Ridley Scott about the creation of the
1984 advertisement for
Apple Computer, which introduced the
first Macintosh. Jobs is trying to convey his idea that "We're creating a completely new consciousness." Scott is more concerned with the technical aspects of the advertisement. Next in 1997 with Jobs,
returning to Apple, and announcing
a new deal with Microsoft at the
1997 Macworld Expo. His partner,
Steve "Woz" Wozniak, is introduced as one of the two central narrators of the story. Wozniak notes to the audience the resemblance between
Big Brother and the image of
Bill Gates on the screen behind Jobs during this announcement. Asking how they "got from there to here", the film turns to flashbacks of his youth with Jobs, prior to the forming of Apple. The earliest flashback is in 1971 and takes place on the
U.C. Berkeley campus during the period of the
student anti-war movements. Teenagers Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak are shown caught on the campus during a riot between students and police. They flee and after finding safety, Jobs states to Wozniak, "Those guys think they're revolutionaries. They're not revolutionaries, we are." Wozniak then comments that "Steve was never like you or me. He always saw
things differently. Even when I was in Berkeley, I would see something and just see
kilobytes or
circuit boards while he'd see
karma or the
meaning of the universe." Using a similar structure, the film next turns to a young Bill Gates at
Harvard University, in the early 1970s, with classmate
Steve Ballmer, and Gates's high school friend
Paul Allen. As with Wozniak in the earlier segment, Ballmer narrates Gates's story, particularly the moment when Gates discovers the existence of
Ed Roberts's
MITS Altair causing him to drop out of Harvard. Gates's and Allen's early work with MITS is juxtaposed against the involvement of Jobs and Wozniak with the "Homebrew Computer Club". Jobs and Woz develop
Apple Computer in the garage of Jobs's family home, with the help of
Daniel and Elizabeth. Eventually,
Mike Markkula invests in the company which allows it to expand and move forward. In 1977, Jobs, Woz, and Markkula demo the
Apple II at the
West Coast Computer Faire. This event is followed by the development of the
IBM PC with the help of Gates and
Microsoft in 1981. The film follows Jobs's relationship with his high school girlfriend and early Apple employee, Arlene (a pseudonym for
Chrisann Brennan), and the difficulties he had with acknowledging his parental legitimacy of their daughter,
Lisa. Around the time she was born, Jobs unveiled his next computer, which he named
Lisa. The Lisa was followed in 1984 by the Macintosh, both having been inspired by the
Xerox Alto. During the October 1983 Apple keynote address, Jobs shows a preview of the
1984 Macintosh commercial. During which he also finds out that Microsoft secured a licensing deal in Japan to deploy PCs with Microsoft apps, including the upcoming
Windows 1.0. Jobs and Gates then have a bitter falling out. Jobs claimed that Gates completely ripped off of Apple's design and went behind their backs to secure a deal against their partnership. Gates responds by saying that they were within their contractual rights to do so, that Apple had done the same thing to Xerox, and rather that it was analogous to both of them stealing from a rich neighbor who left their door unlocked. The main body of the film finally concludes with a 30th birthday toast in 1985 to Steve Jobs shortly before
he was forced out of Apple by CEO
John Sculley. The film ends in 1997, with the return of 42-year-old Jobs to Apple (after its acquisition of
NeXT Computer) and with his announcement at the
MacWorld Expo of an alliance between Apple and Microsoft. It also indicates that Jobs is now married, has children, and has reconciled with Lisa. ==Cast==