Although the NeXT ultimately failed in the marketplace, it introduced several features new to personal computers, including an optical storage disc, a built-in digital signal processor that allowed voice recognition, and object-oriented languages that simplified programming. It's relatively high price of $6,500 limited sales. NeXT Computer Inc. eventually became NeXT Software Inc. and then was bought by Apple in 1997.
@TheNewsOwl it was art.
@sfleetucker @TheNewsOwl Mach Kernel:
The NeXTSTEP operating system was based on the Mach microkernel, which separated the hardware-level tasks from the higher-level operating system components. Mach’s modular design allowed for better memory management and multitasking. By abstracting certain low-level tasks (like memory and process management) into smaller components, NeXTSTEP could run on various hardware architectures, an idea carried into modern OS X/macOS. (don't mention it to @macfate)
@sfleetucker @TheNewsOwl Unfortunately some great programmers can be shit gibbons.
@matuzalem @TheNewsOwl I remember it well. And our binaries could be multi platform and the Mach loader would load the right one for the OS. Avie Tevanian was ex-CMU (and my boss for a while). He was a much better programmer than a boss.