Keynote Introduction
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                                                                (1.23MB)

Good morning.

It's great to be back at Comdex in Las Vegas.

There are a lot of really big milestones this year. Microsoft celebrated its 20th year anniversary. I turned forty years old. That means for the majority of my life I've had the same job, same job title. When I started out it was tough being young, I couldn't rent a car, people wanted to have meetings in bars I couldn't go in.

Now, I go into review meetings on the products, and these hip programmers are making jokes about "Friends" and "ER" and things I just don't understand, so maybe I'm a little too old. I told Jay Leno that I was turning forty and he suggested that maybe I'm the Mick Jagger of the software industry. And I'm still trying to figure out, is that a compliment or what does that mean?

Well, I could spend the next 60 minutes talking about Windows 95. So I thought I'd ask, are there people here who have not heard of Windows 95?

(Laughter)

It looks like maybe we can stop running our ads now.

What I do want to talk about is how personal computers have helped knowledge workers. What have they done to make those jobs more effective?




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You can order a video of the
Bill Gates 1995 Comdex keynote address (Part No. 098-63020) and
the accompanying whitepaper (Part No. 098-63022)
from Microsoft by calling 1-800-426-9400.

Download the Whitepaper (FutureWP.doc 2.7MB)


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