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Timing does seem bad, seeing they had transitioned to PowerPC only 4 or 5 years before NeXT was acquired. And Intel had not yet really taken a huge performance lead. PowerPC's were still pretty competitive. It wasn't until the mid-2000's that it was clear they were not going to get a G5 or whatever running in a laptop.

Apple also wasn't rolling in cash like the are today. They were struggling. They wouldn't have had the resources in the late 90's to support consumer-level x86 and the various hardware/driver configurations. NeXT was fine with supporting a limited set of configurations since they weren't targeting the "consumer" anyway. They were targeting high end commercial "workstation" customers. NeXTStep 486 cost something like $800 if I remember. The developer tools were more $$$. The people running that stuff could afford to spec out their machines properly.



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