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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!uchinews!ellis!sip1
- From: sip1@ellis.uchicago.edu (Timothy F. Sipples)
- Subject: Re: Bill Gates: What a weenie...
- Message-ID: <1993Jan4.023916.8324@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: sip1@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: Dept. of Econ., Univ. of Chicago
- References: <dlcogswe.726111080@vela>
- Date: Mon, 4 Jan 1993 02:39:16 GMT
- Lines: 59
-
- In article <dlcogswe.726111080@vela> dlcogswe@vela.acs.oakland.edu (Dan Cogswell) writes:
- >Did anybody catch Bill Gates' interview on This Week with David
- >Brinkley? It had to be the most awkward ten minutes of television
- >history. What a geek.
- >One good point: he admitted that he's the richest man in the U.S.
- >because he was in the right place at the right time.
- >I especially like the bone he threw to IBM about how they were "still
- >likely to play an important role in the computer industry" followed by a
- >nervous grin (i.e., "I didn't really believe what I just said, but I
- >sure wish they still liked me...").
- >All in all, I'm glad I'm not buying this man's products.
-
- I don't share the general slant of this post. I really don't have
- much opinion on the interview.
-
- However, I did chuckle when David Brinkley asked Bill Gates,
- paraphrasing, "So, you and Paul Allen got together and wrote some of
- the first software for microcomputers, you kept writing software, and
- you made a lot of money. What have you done since?"
-
- It did sort of put things into cosmic perspective, didn't it?
-
- Brinkley also told Gates at the end of the interview that, eleven
- years ago, he bought one of his products, "EasyWriter 2," and that he
- liked it a lot. Gates tried to explain that his company didn't
- produce EasyWriter 2, but Brinkley would have nothing of it. He said,
- again paraphrasing, "It said right in the front of the manual that if
- I had any questions I was to write Bill Gates." (I'm not familiar
- with this bit of computing folklore, and I'd be real curious to see
- the EasyWriter 2 manual now, but my suspicion is that the programmers
- were expressing frustration with DOS.)
-
- At the beginning of the interview, Brinkley asked Gates if he had any
- opinion on his generation of Baby Boomers (the topic of the show,
- after all). Gates replied that he was born in 1955, and he really
- wasn't a part of the Baby Boomers, because he was too young to serve
- in Vietnam. A long, awkward pause followed (and Brinkley seemed about
- to ask something like, "Well, why are you here, then?"; or possibly
- "Did the producer check you out?"). Later, George Will tried to
- salvage things by referring to Gates as a member of that generation,
- albeit a trailing member. Which really didn't help any, come to think
- of it.
-
- Donaldson (the pit bull of the crew, you might say) pressed Gates on
- his net worth at one point in the interview. Donaldson asked Gates
- whether he was really worth $6 billion. Gates replied that he owned
- part of the company, Microsoft, and that the stock value tended to
- fluctuate from day to day depending on the market. Donaldson
- retorted, in essence, "Oh, so that means you're worth a mere $5
- billion one day and then perhaps $7 billion the next." Gates: "Yes."
-
- I had a good chuckle -- it really was entertaining. Perhaps for
- unintended reasons.
-
- --
- Timothy F. Sipples | Read the OS/2 FAQ List 2.0h, available from
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