Press Release


For Immediate Release
Nov. 14, 1995

Bill Gates Gives Glimpse of the Future of Office Applications
In Keynote Address at Comdex/Fall 95
Applications Become Personal, Adaptable; Provide Easier Connectivity to Internet

LAS VEGAS - Nov. 14, 1995 - The personal computer industry is on the verge of a new revolution that will bring dramatic changes to the way people work by making software much more personalized and by providing easier access to online sources, according to Bill Gates, chairman and CEO of Microsoft Corp. Gates shared his vision of the evolution of desktop application software - with which today's users spend most of their computing time - with a capacity audience attending the computer industry's largest annual gathering.

"New technologies will help move applications to the next level: software that's not only easy to learn but that actually adapts to the way people work, rather than making people learn to work as computers do," Gates told attendees during his keynote address at COMDEX/Fall 95 in Las Vegas. "In the office of the future, personal computers will be more flexible, accessible and responsive than ever before. And, they'll let you work with people and information located anywhere, all from the comfortable familiarity of your computer desktop."

"Microsoft, together with allies in the computer industry, will do everything possible over the next few years to bring these changes about by taking advantage of new technologies, including the Internet, voice recognition and natural-language processing," he added. "We'll do this to help realize the greatest promise of the personalized, connected office: to make computing more relevant to the challenges of living, working and being productive in an increasingly complex world."

"Over the past two decades, we've moved from issuing nonintuitive commands to using productivity suites that can provide answers to natural-language questions," Gates said. "We'll see as much change in applications over the next five years as we saw in the last 20."

Gates said that four key trends will drive this future of applications that adjust to the way users work: adaptable software, the connected office, project-oriented workspaces, and solutions for everyone. During his address, Gates offered these glimpses into the future:

"People don't think in terms of applications software; they think in terms of getting things done," said Clifford Nass, professor at the Center for the Study of Language and Information at Stanford University and a respected industry scholar. "When computers conform to people's expectations, they'll be more natural and automatic. Every user will become an 'expert user' because all of us are experts at our own work. Our research shows that people expect computers to respond socially; the next generation of software will, of necessity, adapt to users in a social context."

Computer users worldwide were able to read Gates' address on the Internet while he delivered it to the COMDEX/Fall audience in Las Vegas. Microsoft published the speech on its Microsoft® Office World Wide Web home page (http://www.microsoft.com/msoffice). The published speech and a videotape version can be obtained by calling Microsoft at (800) 426-9400.

Founded in 1975, Microsoft (NASDAQ "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in software for personal computers. The company offers a wide range of products and services for business and personal use, each designed with the mission of making it easier and more enjoyable for people to take advantage of the full power of personal computing every day.

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