On visits Jobs would show off the features he liked. “He was sweet and patient, but he was so
advanced in his knowledge that he had trouble teaching me,” she recalled.
He was a sudden multimillionaire; she was a world-famous celebrity, but sweetly down-to-
earth and not all that wealthy. She didn’t know what to make of him then, and still found him
puzzling when she talked about him almost thirty years later. At one dinner early in their
relationship, Jobs started talking about Ralph Lauren and his Polo Shop, which she admitted she
had never visited. “There’s a beautiful red dress there that would be perfect for you,” he said, and
then
drove her to the store in the Stanford Mall. Baez recalled, “I said to myself, far out, terrific, I’m
with one of the world’s richest men and he wants me to have this beautiful dress.” When they got
to the store, Jobs bought a handful of shirts for himself and showed her the red dress. “You ought
to buy it,” he said. She was a little surprised, and told him she couldn’t really afford it. He said
nothing, and they left. “Wouldn’t you think if someone had talked like that the whole evening, that
they were going to get it for you?” she asked me, seeming genuinely puzzled about the incident.
“The mystery of the red dress is in your hands. I felt a bit strange about it.” He would give her
computers, but not a dress, and when he brought her flowers he made sure to say they were left
over from an event in the office. “He was both romantic and afraid to be romantic,” she said.
When he was working on the NeXT computer, he went to Baez’s house in Woodside to show
her how well it could produce music. “He had it play a Brahms quartet, and he told me eventually
computers would sound better than humans playing it, even get the innuendo and the cadences
better,” Baez recalled. She was revolted by the idea. “He was working himself up into a fervor of
delight while I was shrinking into a rage and thinking, How could you defile music like that?”
Jobs would confide in Debi Coleman and Joanna Hoffman about his relationship with Baez and
worry about whether he could marry someone who had a teenage son and was probably past the
point of wanting to have more children. “At times he would belittle her as being an ‘issues’ singer
and not a true ‘political’ singer like Dylan,” said Hoffman. “She was a strong woman, and he
wanted to show he was in control. Plus, he always said he wanted to have a family, and with her
he knew that he wouldn’t.”
And so, after about three years, they ended their romance and drifted into becoming just
friends. “I thought I was in love with her, but I really just liked her a lot,” he later said. “We
weren’t destined to be together. I wanted kids, and she didn’t want any more.” In her 1989
memoir, Baez wrote about her breakup with her husband and why she never remarried: “I
belonged alone, which is how I have been since then, with occasional interruptions that are mostly
picnics.”
She did add a nice acknowledgment at the end of the book to “Steve Jobs for forcing me to use
a word processor by putting one in my kitchen.”
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