From: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: At the moment, the best way to
Date: Wed, 07 Aug 2013 03:25:11 +0000
Inline-Images: booknoise_stories.gi£
At the moment, the best way to communicate with another person on the information
highway is to exchange electronic mail: to write a message on a computer and send it
through the telephone lines into someone else's computer. In the future, people will send
each other sound and pictures as well as text, and do it in real time, and improved
technology will make it possible to have rich, human electronic exchanges, but at present
E-mail is the closest thing we have to that. Even now, E-mail allows you to meet and
communicate with people in a way that would be impossible on the phone, through the
regular mail, or face to face, as I discovered while I was working on this story. Sitting at
my computer one day, I realized that I could try to communicate with Bill Gates, the
chairman and co-founder of the software giant Microsoft, on the information highway.
At least, I could send E-mail to his electronic address, which is widely available, not tell
anyone at Microsoft I was doing it, and sec what happened. I wrote:
Dear Bill,
I am the guy who is writing the article about you for The New Yorker. It occurs to
me that we ought to be able to do some of the work through c-mail. Which raises
this fascinating question--What kind of understanding of another person can e-
mail give you? ...
You could begin by telling me what you think is unique about c-mail as a form of
communication.
John
I hit "return," and the computer said, "mail sent." I walked out to the kitchen to get a
drink of water and played with the cat for a while, then came back and sat at my
computer. Thinking that I was probably wasting money, I nevertheless logged on again
and entered my password.
"You have mail," the computer said.
I typed "get mail," and the computer got the following:
From: Bill Gates Ok, let me know if you get this email.
According to my computer, eighteen minutes had passed between the time I E-mailed
Bill and he E-mailed me back. His message said:
E-mail is a unique communication vehicle for a lot of reasons. However email is
not a substitute for direct interaction.. . .
There are people who I have corresponded with on email for months before
actually meeting them--people at work and otherwise. If someone isn't saying
something of interest its easier to not respond to their mail than it is not to answer
the phone. In fact I give out my home phone number to almost no one but my
email address is known very broadly. I am the only person who reads my email so
no one has to worry about embarrassing themselves or going around people when
they send a message. Our email is completely secure. ...
Email helps out with other types of communication. It allows you to exchange a
lot of information in advance of a meeting and make the meeting far far more
valuable.. .
Email is not a good way to get mad at someone since you can't interact. You can
send friendly messages very easily since those arc harder to misinterpret.
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We began to E-mail each other three or four times a week. I would have a question about
something and say to myself, "I'm going to E-mail Bill about that," and I'd write him a
message and get a one- or two-page message back within twenty-four hours, sometimes
much sooner. At the beginning of our electronic relationship, I would wake up in the
middle of the night and lie in bed wondering if I had E-mail from Bill. Generally, he
seemed to write messages at night, sleep (maybe), then send them the next morning. We
were intimate in a curious way, in the sense of being wired into each other's minds, but
our contact was elaborately stylized, like ballroom dancing.
In some ways, my E-mail relationship with Bill was like an ongoing, monthlong
conversation, except that there was a pause after each response to think; it was like
football players huddling up after each play. There was no beginning or end to Gates'
messages--no time wasted on stuff like "Dear" and "Yours"--and I quickly corrected this
etiquette breach in my own messages. Nor were there any fifth-grade-composition-book
standards like "It may have come to your attention that" and "Looking forward to
hearing from you." Social niceties arc not what Bill Gates is about. Good spelling is not
what Bill Gates is about, either. He never signed his messages to me, but sometimes he
put an "&" at the end, which, I learned, means "Write back" in E-mail language. After a
while, he stopped putting the "&," but I wrote back anyway. He never addressed me by
name. Instead of a letterhead, there was this:
Sender: Received: from by dub-img-
(5.67/5.930129sam) id AA03768; Wed, 6 Oct 93 14:00:51
-0400 Received: by (5.65/25-eel) id AA27745; Fri, 8 Oct
93 10:56:01 -0700 Message-Id: <93 I0081756.AA27745®
X-Msmail-Message-Id: 15305A55 X-Msmail-
Conversation-Id: 15305A55 From: Bill Gates To:
For years after the telephone was invented, in 1876, people thought it was a device
that would transmit news, drama, and music: the idea that the telephone was a way
to talk to other people took about twenty years to sink in here, and about thirty
years in Europe. Similarly, today one hears about shopping, banking, and renting
movies on the information highway. These arc all possible ways of making money,
of course, but the point of the information highway, it seems to me, is that it offers
a new way of talking to other people. The trouble people have understanding this
simple point is the same trouble people in the nineteenth century had
understanding the telephone.
Bill Gates, aged thirty-eight, is one of the richest men in the country--the richest in
1992, and the second richest, after the investor Warren Buffett, in 1993, with a fortune of
six billion one hundred and sixty million dollars, according to Forbes. Last March, when
he announced his engagement to Melinda French, a twenty-nine-year-old manager at
Microsoft, the news made the front page of the Wall Street Journal. Gates controls the
computer industry to an extent matched by no other person in any other major industry.
The Justice Department is currently trying to determine whether his control constitutes a
monopoly.
Microsoft now supplies eighty per cent of all the personal-computer operating-system
software in the world--that is, the layer of software that translates your commands so that
the computer can act on them--and fifty per cent of all the application software, which is
the tools, like Microsoft Word (writing) and Excel (accounting), that run on top of the
operating system. Microsoft uses its leverage in the operating-system market as a
competitive advantage in the applications market--a practice that is not nice but is not
necessarily illegal. "You could say, as I have said to Bill, that having achieved this much
power you should turn your attention to being magnanimous," a rival software executive
told me. "But Bill believes that now is not the time for statesmanship. Now is the time to
conquer new foes, plunder new lands. He doesn't like being compared to John D.
Rockefeller--he goes, 'Hey, I'm not a grasping monopolist, am I?'--but he doesn't know
how to behave any other way. To hold war councils and to design strategies with the
explicit aim of crushing an opponent--this is very American. You know, Mother Teresa is
not going to build the broadband network of the future."
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Recently, the wife of a software developer was listening to her husband describe for me
what it was like to be in the same industry as Bill Gates: he was saying, in a pained but
stoical way, that maybe Gates didn't have to be quite so competitive now that he had
achieved great power, and that it might be better for the computer industry as a whole if
he behaved in a more benevolent way, when his wife interrupted and said to me, "No.
You don't understand. We talk about Bill Gates every night at home. We think about Bill
Gates all the time. It's like Bill Gates lives with us." This enveloping sense of Bill Gates
is hard for someone outside the computer industry to fathom. To people who arc
unfamiliar with computers, Gates is just a nerd, and if you try to get them to square the
negative connotation of the word "nerd" with Gates' incredible success, and with the fact
that, far from being on the margin of society, Gates is now in a position to determine
what society is like, they're likely to say, "Well, I guess it really is the revenge of the
nerds." Actually, Gates probably represents the end of the word "nerd" as we know it.
But all Gates' influence and success are small potatoes compared with the influence he
could have and with the opportunity that now lies before him. The computer, which in
twenty-five years has evolved from a room-size mainframe into a laptop device, appears
to be tuming into a new kind of machine. The new machine will be a communications
device that connects people to the information highway. It will penetrate far beyond the
fifteen per cent of American households that now own a computer, and it will control, or
absorb, other communications machines now in people's homes--the phone, the fax, the
television. It will sit in the living room, not in the study. The problem of getting people to
feel comfortable with such a powerful machine will be partly solved by putting it inside
one of the most unobtrusive objects in the house--the set-top convener, which is the
featureless black box on top of a cable-connected TV set (the one the cat likes to sit on if
the VCR is occupied).
Gates would like to have his software inside that box. Microsoft's ambition is to supply
the standard operating-system software for the information-highway machine, just as it
now supplies the standard operating-system software, called Windows, for the personal
computer. Microsoft has two billion dollars in cash, and no debt, and is spending a
hundred million dollars a year developing software for the new machine, which is a lot
more than anyone else is spending. The plan is first to supply the software that allows
people to rent videos over the TV and makes home shopping more attractive, and then to
use money from the video-rental and home-shopping businesses to pay for the
development of the rest of the software. Therefore, Gates is now meeting with people
like Mikc Ovitz and Barry Diller to discuss better ways of delivering their products into
people's homes. "I actually requested a meeting with him," Ovitz told me last October. "I
flew up to Seattle and we had dinner together and spent three or four hours just talking
about the future."
"Could you say specifically what you talked about?"
"It was just very deep stuff about the future."
"Well, for example, did you talk about information-highway software?"
"It goes much deeper than that."
At Microsoft's main office, in Redmond, a suburb of Seattle, I saw a demo of an early
version of the company's operating software for the information-highway machine, in
which the user points at the TV screen with a remote control, clicks onto icons, and
selects from menus. I heard a lot about "intelligent agents," which will at first be
animated characters that occasionally appear in the corner of your TV screen and inform
you, for example, that President Aristide is on "Meet the Press," because they know
you're interested in Haitian politics, but will eventually be out there on the information
highway, filtering the torrent of information roaring along it, picking out books or
articles or movies for you, or receiving messages from individuals. As the agents become
steadily more intelligent, they will begin to replace more and more of the functions of
human intelligent agents--stockbrokers, postal workers, travel agents, librarians, editors,
reporters. While I was at Microsoft, I sometimes felt like prey.
Gates' greatest disadvantage in this new market is that Microsoft doesn't own any wires
into people's homes, nor does it have the computers installed to handle all the switching
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and billing that two-way communication requires. To solve this problem, Microsoft
needs to make an alliance with a cable company or a telephone company, or both.
Microsoft has an alliance with Intel Corporation, the world's leading manufacturer of
microprocessors, and General Instrument, a maker of set-top converters, but it is not a
very powerful alliance compared with Bell Atlantic's alliance with Tele-
Communications, Inc., the largest cable company in the United States, or with U S
West's alliance with Timc Warner, the second-largest cable company. Gates is currently
negotiating an alliance involving Timc Warner and Tele-Communications, Inc.--a kind of
granddaddy of all alliances, which would have the power to set the standard for the
information--highway machine. A major issue in the negotiations will be the extent to
which Microsoft would own the software in the machine. Gates would like to retain the
rights to the software; Gerald Levin, the C.E.O. of Time Warner, and John Malone, the
C.E.O. of T.C.I., will not want to give Gates those rights.
If Gates does succeed in providing the operating system for the new machine, he will
have tremendous influence over the way people communicate with one another: he, more
than anyone else, will determine what it is like to use the information highway. Another
advantage Bill Gates has is that he already lives on the information highway.
New employees at Microsoft arc likely to encounter Bill Gates electronically long before
they meet him in person. Some get to thinking of him by his E-mail handle, which is
"billg," rather than by his real name. You'll be chatting with a Microsoft employee in the
employee's office, the computer will make a little belch or squeak, indicating an
incoming piece of electronic mail, and it'll be E-mail from Bill. It is not unusual to hear a
young employee say, "Hey, that's a good idea, I'm going to E-mail Bill about that." While
I was attending a lunchtime cookout at Microsoft headquarters one day, I heard several
people start conversations by asking about E-mail from Bill: "Did you get mail from Bill
today?" "Did you see Bill's mail?" Bill and Melinda were in Africa at the time, touring
the valley where the oldest human skeleton, Lucy, was discovered, but I had the sense
that he was present, in the network, flying around the Microsoft campus and popping
into peoples computers.
The Microsoft campus looks like a college campus: there arc playing fields, and
employees in T-shirts and jeans who aren't much older than college students. Nowhere
on earth do more millionaires and billionaires go to work every day than do so here--
about twenty-two hundred of the fifteen thousand employees own at least a million
dollars' worth of Microsoft stock--but the campus is in no respect worldly. Workers
spend much of their day staring into large computer monitors and occasionally exploding
into a rapid fingering of keys. Empty soda cans and cardboard latte cups collect on their
desks. Designing software--or "writing code," as people in the trade say--is a sort of
intellectual handiwork. Operating systems, the most monumental of all software
constructions, arc like medieval cathedrals: thousands of laborers toil for years on small
parts of them, each one working by hand, fashioning zeros and ones into patterns that
control switches inside microprocessors, which constitute the brains of a computer. The
platonic nature of software--it is invisible, weightless, and odorless; it doesn't exist in the
physical world--determines much of the culture that surrounds it. At Microsoft, workers
often describe each other as "smart" or "supersmart" or "one of the smartest people you'll
meet around here," and it is almost an article of faith that Bill Gates, who co-founded the
company with Paul Allen, a friend from his high-school days, in 1975, when he was
nineteen years old, is the smartest person of all.
"Bill is just smarter than everyone else," Mike Maples, an executive vice-president of
Microsoft, says. "There arc probably more smart people per square foot right here than
anywhere else in the world, but Bill is just smarter."
Gates' office is exactly twice as large as the offices of junior employees, and his
carpeting is a little richer than the carpeting in other offices; otherwise, there is nothing
fancy about the place. A large monitor sits on his desk, and on the wall behind the desk
are pictures from important moments in Gates' career, many of which coincide with
important moments in the history of the personal computer. There arc also pictures of
Gates' two sisters, and of his mother and father. (No picture of Melinda French is visible,
partly because Gates wants to keep her job as normal as he can.) As in all the Microsoft
offices, one rarely hears the sound of a ringing phone. The employees send a total of two
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hundred million E-mail messages to each other every month. (Over at McCaw Cellular
Communications, another prominent high-tech company, whose headquarters is a few
miles from Microsoft's, phones ring all the time, and everyone wears a beeper.) Gates
spends at least two hours a day at his desk staring into his monitor, reading and writing
E-mail. E-mail allows Gates to run the company in his head, in a sense. While he is
working, he rocks. Whether he is in business meetings, on airplanes, or listening to a
speech, his upper body rocks down to an almost forty-five-degree angle, rocks back up,
rocks down again. His elbows arc often folded together, resting in his crotch. He rocks at
different levels of intensity according to his mood. Sometimes people who arc in the
meetings begin to rock with him. "I think it's just excess energy," Gates said to me about
his rocking. "I should stop, but I haven't yet. They claim I started at an extremely young
age. I had a rocking horse and they used to put me to sleep on my rocking horse, and I
think that addicted me."
Gates does not have the physical charisma of, say, Steve Jobs, the co-founder of Apple
Computer. Like Lenin, Gates leads by sheer force of intellect. He looks like a teen-ager,
but not because he actually looks younger than thirty-eight. In some ways, he looks
older--a very old little boy. It is the oddly undeveloped quality in his pale, freckled face
that makes him seem boyish. His hair is brown and is almost always uncombed. He has
heavy lips, which contort into odd shapes when he talks. His characteristic pose when he
is standing is pelvis pushed forward slightly, one ann wrapped around his body, the other
arm occasionally going up into the air as he talks--kind of flying up, almost spastically,
with the palm outstretched, then settling again somewhere on his chest. His voice is
toneless, with a somewhat weary note of enthusiasm permanently etched into it, and his
vocabulary is bland: "stuff is "cool," "neat," "crummy," "super," "supercool."
When Gates was in his twenties, his mother color-coordinated his clothes--he had green
days, beige days, blue days--and then the job was taken over by girlfriends, and now it
will presumably fall to his wife, but so far no one has really handled the task
successfully. "A lot of his friends have said, 'Bill, come on, let's go on a shopping spree,
we'll buy you some clothes,' but it never works," Ann Winblad, who is now a highly
respected venture capitalist in Silicon Valley, and was the woman in Bill's life for five
years, told me. "Bill just doesn't think about clothes. And his hygiene is not good. And
his glasses--how can he see out of them? But Bill's attitude is: I'm in this pure mind state,
and clothes and hygiene arc last on the list." Esther Dyson, who edits a computer-
industry newletter called Release 1.0., says, "I'm told that within Microsoft certain
people are allowed to take Bill's glasses off and wipe them, but I've never done it. You
know, it's like--'Don't try this at home.' "
Gates is famously confrontational. If he strongly disagrees with what you're saying, he is
in the habit of blurting out, "That's the stupidest fucking thing I've ever heard!" People
tell stories of Gates spraying saliva into the face of some hapless employee as he yells,
"This stuff isn't hard! I could do this stuff in a weekend!" What you're supposed to do in
a situation like this, as in encounters with grizzly bears, is stand your ground: if you flee,
the bear will think you're game and will pursue you, and you can't outrun a bear. I had a
chance to try this approach one day in Gates' office, when I made a remark to him about
Microsoft's antitrust problems, and he got mad at me. I had mentioned the theory that
Anne Bingaman, who is the head of the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice,
would not have taken the highly unusual and public action of requesting the Microsoft
file from the Federal Trade Commission, which had pursued a three-year investigation of
Microsoft, if she had not felt she could make a good case against the company. (In the
end, the F.T.C. did not file any charges.) All the soft planes in Gates' face contorted into
an expression of pure sarcasm. "I think you're a little confused," he said. "You're saying
that before they read even a single piece of paper they judge what kind of case they
have?" He choked slightly on his disgust for my stupidity. "I think you're confused," he
said again. "The Justice Department chose to get the information to decide what to do.
Saying they have a pretty good case before they've read anything--is that how these
things work?" Going by the book, I answered that someone at the F.T.C. could have told
someone in the Justice Department that the case against Microsoft was strong. This
seemed to make the situation worse. "Look," Gates said. "The Department of Justice is
looking at these files. You know? It's justice? You're supposed to have facts before you
decide things?" I felt a trickle of sweat run down my back.
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All the executives directly under Gates arc male, and almost all arc in their mid-thirties.
Nathan Mhyrvold, thirty-four, who as a graduate student at Cambridge University
interpreted for Stephen Hawking, is in charge of new technology. Steve Ballmer, thirty-
seven, who is Gates' best friend, runs the numbers side of the business. He and Gates met
during freshman year at Harvard, when they lived down the hall from each other.
Cramming together for an advanced-economics exam was a determining event in their
relationship. Ballmer acted this scene out for me, pacing around the room, waving his
arms, the shirttail of his oxford shirt poking out of his khakis, as he cried, "'Yes! Wc'rc
golden! We're going to pass! No! Shit! We're screwed! We're going to fail! No! Yes!
We're golden! Were screwed!' We'd get real up or real down, and it's still that way. We
love to get up and down."
Ballmer is the reason Gates always flies coach when he is traveling on business. "If
you're going to work for this company," Ballmer told me, "you're going to rent a certain
kind of car and stay in a certain kind of hotel and fly coach, because that's business, and
anything else is just aggrandizement." Gates once chartered a plane because he had to
get somewhere in a hurry, but Ballmer gave him so much grief that Gates is still
explaining why he did it. Experienced fliers into and out of Seattle know to scan the
cabin for a man with a blanket over his head-that's Bill Gates, taking a nap.
Because Bill Gates was my first E-mail relationship, I wasn't always sure how to
comport myself electronically, and occasionally I solicited advice from experienced E-
mailers. Once, while I was questioning a media analyst named Mark Stahlman about a
point of E-mail etiquette, he said to me, hey, you're not a digital guy!" This line
often popped into my head when I was E-mailing Bill. Was I behaving like a digital guy?
Is digital guyhood what nerds will molt into when the information highway reaches
everyone's door? One evening, I was at home listening to some music, doing this gccky
dance I do and, as usual, wondering whether the Wall Street types across the street were
watching me, when I suddenly thought, Would Bill Gates care about those guys? I took
this as a sign I was becoming a digital guy. Around the same time, I read an essay in
Wired magazine by Paul Saffo, who is a director of the Institute for the Future, a think
tank in Menlo Park, which argued that the information highway is going to cause a
flowering of personal expression not seen in our society since the sixties, and that when
this happens (maybe in five years) people whom we now think of as computer nerds will
have the same hipness that in retrospect we now assign to beatniks.
I wrote Gates a message with the title "How does the future make you feel?" (Putting a
title on messages is one of the different things about E-mail communication. It is a little
like writing a publicity release for what you have to say. However, it does focus the
message.)
How does the rapid change in the power of microprocessors make you feel? The
certainty that microprocessors will grow twice as fast every eighteen months and
that nothing in Nature, no fire or earthquake or tidal wave, is powerful enough to
stop this from happening. Are you thrilled by this? Do you think that this power is
God, as you understand God? Is it possible this power could be bad?
Gates wrote back:
Feelings are pretty personal. I love coming up with new ideas or seeing in advance
what is going to count and then making it happen. I love working with smart
people... . Our business is very very competitive-one or two false moves and you
can fall behind in a way that would wipe you out. Market share does not give you
the right to relax. IBM is the best example of this. This is very scary but also
makes it very interesting.
The digital revolution is all about facilitation--creating tools to make things easy.
When I was a kid I was a lot more curious than I am today--perhaps I have lost
less curiosity than the average adult but if I had had the information tools we arc
building today I would know a lot more and not have given up learning some
things.
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These tools will be really cool. Say today you want to meet someone with similar
interests to talk or take a trip together or whatever? Its hard and somewhat random.
Say you want to make sure you pick a good doctor or read a good book? We can
make all of these things work so well--its empowering stuff. Enough for now.
I wrote a message titled "TV as the Opium of the People":
Some people arc afraid of interactive TV. TV is a drug, goes the argument, and the
technology that Microsoft and others arc supplying is going to make the drug
stronger. People will be inside more than ever, cut off from their neighbors,
watching interactive monster truck contests. Or porno. They will pile up large
cable and credit card charges. A "T. S. Eliot wasteland . .. a nation of housebound
zombies," as Michael Eisner put it recently in a speech. Do you think this could
happen? What difference does it make if you invent smart boxes to deliver dumb
programming?
Gates wrote:
Interactive TV is probably a really bad name for the in-home device connected to
the information highway.
Lets say I am sitting at home wondering about some new drug that was prescribed
to me. Or wanting to ask a question to my children's teacher. Or curious about my
social security status. Or wondering about crime in my neighborhood. Or wanting
to exchange information with other people thinking about visiting Tanzania. Or
wondering if the new lawn mower I want to buy works well and if its a good price.
Or I want to ask people who read a book what they thought of it
before I take my time reading it. In all of these cases being able to reach out and
communicate by using a messaging or bulletin board type system lets me do
something I could never do before. Assume that the infrastructure and device to do
this is easy to use and it was funded by the cable or phone company primarily
because I like to watch movies and video-conference with my relatives.
All of the above is about how adults will use the system. Kids will use it in ways
we can't even imagine.
The opportunity for people to reach out and share is amazing. This docsnt mean
you will spend more time inside! It means you will use your time more effectively
and get to do the things you like more than in the past as well as doing new things.
If you like to get outside you will find out a lot more about the places that arc not
crowded and find good companions to go with.
The bottom line is that 2 way communication is a very different beast than I way
communication. In some ways a phone that has an unbelievable directory, lets you
talk or send messages to lots of people, and works with text and pictures is a better
analogy than TV. The phone did change the world by making it a smaller place.
This will be even more dramatic. There will be some secondary effects that people
will worry about but they won't be the same as TV. We arc involved in creating a
new media but it is not up to us to be the censors or referees of this media--it is up
to public policy to make those decisions.
Because TV had very few channels the value of TV time was very high so only
things of very broad interest could be aired on those few channels. The
information highway will be the opposite of this--more like the library of congress
but with an easy way to find things.
I sometimes felt that this correspondence was a game I was playing with Gates through
the computer, or maybe a game I was playing against a computer. What is the right
move? What question will get me past the dragon and into the wizard's star chamber,
where the rich information is stored? I had no idea where Gates was when he wrote to
mc, except that once he told me he was on a "think week" at his family's summer place
on Hood Canal. I could not tell whether he was impatient or bored with my questions
and was merely answering them because it served his interest. Because we couldn't talk
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at the same time, there was little chance for the conversation to move spontaneously. On
the other hand, his answers meant more, in a certain way, being written, than answers I
would have received on the phone. I worried that he might think I was being "random" (a
big putdown at Microsoft) because I jumped from topic to topic. I sometimes wondered
if I was actually communicating with Bill Gates. How hard would it be for an assistant to
write these messages? Or for an intelligent agent to do it?
I wrote a message titled "What motivates you?":
You love to compete, right? Is that where your energy comes from--love of the
game? I wonder how it feels to win on your level. How much do you fear losing?
How about immortality--being remembered for a thousand years after you're dead-
-does that excite you? How strong is your desire to improve people's lives (by
providing them with better tools for thinking and communicating)? Some driven
people arc trying to heal a wound or to recover a loss. Is that the case with you?
Gates wrote back:
Its easy to understand why I think I have the best job around because of day to day
enjoyment rather than some grand long term deep psychological explanation. Its a
lot of fun to work with very smart people in a competitive environment. . .. We
get to hire the best people coming out of school and give them challenging jobs.
We get to try and figure out how to sell software in every part of the world.
Sometimes our ideas work very well and sometimes they work very poorly. As
long as we stay in the feedback loop and keep trying its a lot of fun.
It is pretty cool that the products we work on empower individuals and make their
jobs more interesting. It helps a lot in inventing new software ideas that I will be
one of the users of the software so I can model what's important. . ..
Just thinking of things as winning is a terrible approach. Success comes from
focusing in on what you really like and are good at--not challenging every random
thing. My original vision of a personal computer on every desk and every home
will take more than 15 years to achieve so there will have been more than 30 years
since I first got excited about that goal. My work is not like sports where you
actually win a game and its over after a short period of time.
Besides a lot of luck, a high energy level and perhaps some IQ I think having an
ability to deal with things at a very detailed level and a very broad level and
synthesize between them is probably the thing that helps me the most. This allows
someone to take deep technical understanding and figure out a business strategy
that fits together with it.
It's ridiculous to consider how things will be remembered after you are dead. The
pioneers of personal computers including Jobs, Kapor, Lampson, Roberts, Kayc,
are all great people but I don't think any of us will merit an entry in a history book.
I don't remember being wounded or losing something big so I don't think that is
driving me. I have wonderful parents and great siblings. I live in the same
neighborhood I grew up in (although I will be moving across the lake when my
new house is done). I can't remember any major disappointments. I did figure out
at one point that if I pursued pure mathematics it would be hard to make a major
contribution and there were a few girls who turned me down when I asked them
out.
At the end of one message, I wrote:
This reporting via c-mail is really fascinating and I think you are going to come
across in an attractive way, in case you weren't sure of that.
Gates wrote:
I comb my hair everytime before I send email hoping to appear attractive. I try and
use punctuation in a friendly way also. I send :) and never:(.
EFTA00966558
I wrote a message asking Gates whether it was possible that the alliance with Time
Wamcr and T.C.1. was on shaky ground because Gerald Levin and John Malone were
afraid that Gates was too smart for them.
Gates wrote:
Your mail is the first time I have ever heard anyone suggest that John Malone and
Jerry Levin deserve sympathy. They are both great people. They arc both smarter
about deal making than I will ever be. John and Jerry and I share a vision of what
the Information Highway can become. Its an incredible opportunity for all 3
companies and we have been spending time to discussing how we might help each
other. We don't have anything concrete at this stage although we have developed a
high level of trust for each other.
I sent a message asking how much of his money Gates was planning on giving away:
Will there one day be a Gates Foundation, the way we have Rockefeller, Ford,
Carnegie Foundations? Whcn? How acutely do you feel a sense of social
responsibility? What kinds of philanthropy would you like your money to
perform? How do you feel about leaving a lot of money to your kids?
Gates replied:
I think that giving money away takes a lot of effort. Not as much effort as making
it but still a lot to do it properly. Therefore when I am old and have time I will put
some effort into that. Assuming I still have a lot of money by the time I retire
which is certainly no certain thing I will give away well over 90% of it since I dont
believe in kids having too much money. I am like my friend Warren Buffett in this
respect. I have already done some giving like to LPN for a biotechnology
department [Gate gave the University of Washington twelve million dollars] and
some to Stanford for a computer science building [six million] and some to United
Way which I really believe in. I do believe in funding great research so some of
my philanthropy will relate to that. Some to humans service activities. Some to
education. Some to population control efforts if it looks like donations can really
help there.
I wrote mail about "The Great Gatsby," which is one of Gates' favorite books. ("The
Catcher in the Rye" and "A Separate Peace" arc other favorites.) Gates dressed as Gatsby
for his thirtieth birthday, and again for an engagement party that friends and colleagues
in Silicon Valley threw for him and Melinda in September. (Melinda dressed as Daisy
Buchanan.)
Gates wrote:
Gatsby had a dream and he pursued it not even really thinking he might fail or
worse that what he dreamed of wasn't real. The green light is a symbol of his
optimism--he had come so far he could hardly fail to grasp it. At the end Fitz is
reinforcing what a romantic figure Gatsby is. Its also sort of about America but I
think of it more in terms of the people.
Once, when I was composing E-mail to Gates on an airplane, I felt physically closer to
him than when I was composing from home. Perhaps I was thinking of all the thousands
of people who have encountered this remarkable person on airplanes, restlessly
wandering the aisles with his shoes off, or sitting in a scat staring into the screen of his
laptop computer, rocking, writing E-mail that will be fired into the network when the
plane lands and send hundreds of people at Microsoft scurrying into action.
Many executives in the telegraph industry, which had enjoyed control of the
communications field since about 1840, believed that the telephone did not present a
threat to their business, because no one would want a communications machine that did
not leave a written record of the conversation, as telegrams did. Whcn William Orton,
the president of Western Union, which was the Microsoft of its day, was offered the
opportunity to buy Alexander Graham Bell's patent on the telephone for a hundred
thousand dollars, he is said to have replied, "What use could this company make of an
electric toy?" This remark seems less dim to me now.
EFTA00966559
Technological change is not democratic, but if we did have a choice would we vote for
a man who sometimes behaves like a ten-year-old boy to be the principal architect of the
way we communicate with each other in the future? Or is it Gates' gift that he isn't
socialized in a way you'd expect a corporate executive to be. When I was ten, I would sit
around with my friends watching it snow, and someone would say, "1 wonder what the
deepest snowfall ever was," or something like that, and someone else would say, "Yeah,
it would be cool to know that." It seemed that there should be this giant, all-knowing
brain, which could answer that kind of question. One of the lessons you learn in
becoming an adult is that it doesn't always pay to be curious. Some people learn to avoid
curiosity altogether. Gates appears to have completely failed to absorb this lesson. My
impression is that he still has the fantasy of the giant, all-knowing brain, and that this is
what the information highway means to him. It's a place where curiosity is rewarded.
Not long ago, Paul Saffo, of the Institute for the Future, said to me, "Bill Gates is an
introvert. He is not the kind of person you want building the social network of the
future." Ann Winblad, Gates' former girlfriend, told me, "People who know Bill know
that you have to bring him into a group--say, 'Hey, Bill, tell us the story of such-and-
such'--because he doesn't have the social skills to do it on his own. But that doesn't mean
he isn't social. Bill is an open, emotional guy--very. He's actually more open with his
feelings than most men I know. He is not afraid to express fear, or sadness, but hardly
anyone secs that. You can't show that when you're in Bill's position, when everyone is
watching your tiniest gesture. It's not good leadership to show weakness." An executive
with a leading competitor of Microsoft's says of Gates, "Hey--I think the guy is truly
dangerous. Bill is the most surprisingly conscience-free individual I've ever met, and that
amount of power in the hands of a guy without a conscience is dangerous. Big Brother
did not happen in 1984, but it could happen in 2004. Ask yourself, 'If there was to be a
technology-oriented dictator by the year 2004, who would he bc? Bill Gates?' "
Gates argues that Microsoft has to behave aggressively because of a principle called
Moore's Law, which is named after Gordon Moore, one of the founders of the Intel
Corporation. Moore's Law is the reason the computer industry is fundamentally different
from any other industry in history. It states that microprocessors get twice as powerful,
or twice as cheap, every eighteen months. This means that in twenty years what now
takes a year of computing will take fifteen minutes. We have no idea what we arc going
to do with this power, but it will exist whether we want it to or not.
No natural calamity or political upheaval short of world-wide anarchy is powerful
enough to stop it. Nathan Mhyrvold, of Microsoft, said to me, "Nature has already signed
off on this stuff." Moore's Law is the primary reason that all the companies that
dominated the computer industry in the nineteen-seventies arc now struggling or gone,
and the reason that Microsoft, for all its power, could disappear in a decade.
Scott McNealy, the head of Sun Microsystems, which is a leading manufacturer of
computer workstations, told me, "I like Bill. Bill is a smart guy. But I think the problem
is that Microsoft has caught the bunny. You know, when you go to the dog track they
have that mechanical bunny that makes the dogs run? Well, sometimes a dog is so fast he
catches the bunny and then the other dogs don't run anymore. That's the situation in the
software business today: Bill has caught the bunny. I admire Bill for catching the bunny,
but now we can't have a race. He ought to be loosed from the bunny, to give the other
dogs a chance."
The argument that Microsoft is shaping up to be the Standard Oil of the Information Age
and that the government ought to loose Bill from the bunny before this happens is now
being heard within the Department of Justice. As the head of the Department's Antitrust
Division, Annc Bingaman is an anti-monopolist, the sort of person who was common
around the Justice Department in the nineteen-thirties and forties, and was thoroughly
weeded out in the eighties, a period during which the laws on what constitutes a
monopoly were relaxed, making it harder for people like Bingaman to operate. Now
Bingaman is expected to regain some of the ground lost by the anti-monopolists, and she
seems to be using Microsoft as her vehicle. Justice Department lawyers arc currently
studying the file that Bingaman requested from the Federal Trade Commission, and arc
said to be readying a case against Microsoft, though whether Bingaman will bring
narrow antitrust charges, which would require the company to pay a fine it could easily
EFTA00966560
afford, or will bring a broad antitrust case, or will even attempt to break Microsoft up,
has not been decided.
There is substantial political pressure not to prosecute Microsoft. Microsoft is the
principal reason that the United States is by far the world leader in software production,
an industry that has an unimaginable potential for growth. Also, the government's huge
antitrust case against which was filed in 1969 and ended with the government's
giving up on it in 1982, distracted and weakened that organization, and helped
companies like Microsoft to get the better of it. Some people argue that the computer
industry actually wants and needs a monopolistic presence like Microsoft, because such
a presence can work to create a standard computer language that other coma. can
design products for and that the public can use in common. That is the role
played, and now that =. has been dethroned, thanks partly to Microsoft, people
expect Microsoft to perform it.
One big difference between Gates and other early software entrepreneurs is that,
whereas the others were bright kids from middle-class homes who achieved success
beyond their expectations, Gates was born to rule. His childhood was emphatically not
the stuff of Horatio Alger novels. His father, Bill Gates, Jr., is a well-known corporate
lawyer in Seattle and a former president of the Washington State Bar Association, and
his mother, Mary Gates, is a former regent at the University of Washington and was on
the national board of the United Way and of U S West. Washington State governors and
senators were guests at the house when Bill was a boy. At dinner, the parents would lead
the children--Bill and his sisters, Kristi and Libby--in discussions of current affairs. The
family also played a lot of games and horsed around together. "I really like Bill's family,
but it would be nice if you could talk to them once in a while when they weren't in a
human pyramid," Ida Cole, a former Microsoft executive, has said. Water-skiing was and
remains a passion of Gates': several Scatticites have described for me the experience of
coming across the Evergreen Bridge early on a Sunday morning in the summer and
seeing Gates' big powerboat on Lakc Washington, with Gates white, toneless body
water-skiing behind it and throwing up a big coxcomb of spray. Young Bill was
obsessive about improvin cts of himself he didn't like. "He was alwaysiaset about
his little toe curling in, so work on it. spend time holding it out so have a
straight toe," his sister Kristi told Stephen Manes and Paul Andrews, the co-authors of
"Gates," a recently published biography. Gates used to try to impress his sisters by
jumping out of a trash can, and he still occasionally jumps over his office chair from a
standstill. Sometimes, on his way to a business meeting, he suddenly jumps up and tries
to touch as high as he can on a wall, or to touch higher than the spot he touched last time,
but he says, in "Gates," "I don't jump spontaneously the way I used to, in the early years
of the company .. . or even in a meeting. . . . Now the jumping is not that common."
However, he has planned a full-size trampoline for a house he is building. In Japan, a
comic book about the adventures of a boy modeled on Bill Gates is called "Young
Jump."
Gates attended Lakcsidc School, one of the best private schools in the Seattle area, and
there he met Paul Allen, who was three years older. The two began spending a lot of time
in the school's computer room. In 1971, when Gates was sixteen, he wrote a program
that made it easier for cities to collect traffic statistics. That same year, he and Allen
started a company called Traf-o-Data. In the Lakeside yearbook for 1973, Gates' senior
year, there is a picture of Gates in the computer room with a stocking cap pulled over his
head and lying on a table, over the caption "Who is this man?"
Joseph Wcizenbaum, a computer scientist at perhaps overstating the case a little
for effect, wrote, in "Computer Power and Human Reason," this early portrait of
computer hackers: "Bright young men of disheveled appearance, often with sunken
glowing eyes, [who] can be seen sitting at computer consoles ... on which their
attention seems to be as riveted as a gambler's on the rolling dice. . . . They work until
they nearly drop, twenty, thirty hours at a time. Their food, if they arrange it, is brought
to them: coffee, Cokes, sandwiches. . .. Their rumpled clothes, their unwashed and
unshaven faces, and their uncombed hair all testify that they arc oblivious to their bodies
and to the world in which they move." This description matches Gates' outward
appearance, but Gates was different from most hackers in one important respect: Hackers
EFTA00966561
were interested in computers as a hobby, mostly just for fun, whereas Gates always saw
computers as a way of making money.
Gates and Allen sometimes talked about how cool it would be to design the software for
the first personal computer, which appeared to be on the horizon, but this was not a
serious career goal of Bill's. His father wanted him to become a lawyer. "When I was in
college, it was really hard to pick a career, bccausc everything seemed so attractive, and
when you had to pick a specific one you had to say no to all the others," Gates told me.
"I'd think, Well, if I went to that law firm some partner might not like me, and they might
assign me to these crummy cases, and I'd think, Well, God, that could be really crummy."
The question was settled in dramatic fashion in December, 1974, when Allen, who was
working in Boston, passed a newsstand in Harvard Square and saw on the cover of
Popular Electronics a computer called the Altair 8800. The Altair 8800 was the first
computer that ordinary electronics hobbyists could afford to buy and that people with
reasonable technical knowledge could assemble in their homes. Basically, it was the first
personal computer. Allen bought the magazine, rushed over to Gates' dorm, and showed
it to him. "Look!" Allen said. "It's going to happen! I told you this was going to happen!
And we're going to miss it!"
They called Ed Roberts, the man who created the Altair, and told him that they had
written a version of a programming language called basic for his computer. That wasn't
true. It was an early use of a now common strategy in the computer industry, and at
Microsoft in particular: announcing products that don't exist (known in the industry as
"vaporware") in order to discourage possible competitors. After talking to Roberts, Bill
and Paul went on an eight-week code-writing binge, with Gates writing most of the code,
often falling asleep at the keyboard, dreaming in code, waking up, and immediately
starting to write code again, with no real transition between dreaming and wakingjust
code. ("It was the coolest program I ever wrote," Gates later said.) At the end of the eight
weeks, Allen flew out to Albuquerque, met with Roberts, loaded the software into the
Altair, and typed "print 2 + 2." The Altair spat out "4." The program worked.
By the end of 1975, Gates and Allen had founded a company, Micro-soft, to sell their
basic. (The hyphen was dropped a few years later.) Now came what is perhaps the
pivotal moment in the early history of the software industry. Computer hobbyists who
had bought the Altair were dismayed to find that it didn't come with the software to
operate it, and were even more dismayed when they learned that they had to buy the
software for four hundred and fifty dollars from Micro-soft.
At that time, no one thought of software as something you paid for. Software was just
rolls of paper tape with little holes punched in it. A hacker would write a cool piece of
software for fun, copy it, and give it away to his friends. Altair owners began to do the
same thing with Micro-sort's basic. Then, in February of 1976, Gates published "An
Open Letter to Hobbyists" in the Altair newsletter, and the letter now stands as a sort of
Magna Carta of the software industry--the underpinning of the intellectual--property
structure. It stated, "As the majority of hobbyists must be aware, most of you steal your
software," and went on to argue that software was just as much a commodity as
hardware, because it represented someone's intellectual work, and that the creators of the
software should be compensated just as creators of hardware were.
Gates shuttled between Harvard and Albuquerque until the start of his senior year, when
he dropped out forsod. The business expanded, and he and Allen relocated it to Seattle
in 1978. In 1980, . approached Gates to write an operating system for the personal
computer it was designing, the . PC. Gates flew down to Florida to meet the
executives working on the project, realized on the way that he had forgotten to bring a
tic, and drove around looking for a place to buy one. The . executives, who had
never laid eyes on Gates, were stunned to see that their prospective partner looked
exactly like one of the hackers they were beginning to read about in the press. They told
Gates they needed an operating system in three months--an impossibly short time--and
Gates accepted the job. Upon returning to Seattle, he bought an operating system called
qdos, which was short for Quick and Dirty Operating System, from another software
developer, Seattle Computer, for around seventy-five thousand dollars renamed it ms-
dos, and, in a three-month code-writing marathon, convened it to .'s specifications.
EFTA00966562
Software is sometimes said to be to the age of information as oil was to the age of the
machine. Software is what makes information systems operate. Software is like a natural
resource, except that its source is not in the earth but in the human mind: people carry
pools of software in their heads. Its lack of physical existence makes its importance easy
to underestimate. ., which was one of the great business organizations in history,
and which was perfectly placed to own the personal-computer business, disastrousi.
failed to appreciate the importance of the software Gates designed for it. Because
thought that the money was going to be in the hardware, in the computers themselves, it
allowed Gates to retain the rights to ms-dos. During the nineteen-eighties, the PC was
cloned by other American manufacturers and by the Japanese, who could make and sell
the machines more cheaply than . could, but no one knew how to clone ms-dos,
and Bill Gates collected a fee for every PC and every PC clone sold in the world.
Two books about the fall of and Gates' role in it have recently appeared--"Big
Blues," by Paul Carroll, and "Computer Wars," by Charles H. Ferguson and Charles R.
Morris--and an occasional chill runs up the spine of anyone reading them at the case with
which Gates eviscerated men much older and more experienced than he was. "I kept
wanting to say to Cannavino, 'We need a shorthand because these meetings arc taking
too long,' " Gates says in "Big Blues." James Cannavino was an M. executive with
whom Gates negotiated about operating systems. Cannavino would begin meetings by
making small talk about, say, his new car, in a misguided effort to establish some sort of
personal rapport with Gates. Also, like many other American corporate executives of his
generation, Cannavino would spend a lot of time talking about his company's values.
This would drive Gates mad. "Every time you say 'thirteen,' I'll know that what that
means is that all you want to do is what the customer wants," Gates says he imagined
himself saying to Cannavino.
"And for every one of these other gibberish slogans, we can also get little numbers.
There arc a lot of small integers available. We'll just tighten these meetings up. You
know, Cannavino, if you want to talk about how you're going to save the U.S.
educational system, okay, we've heard that story. That's a good fifteen-minute one. That
can be number eleven." However, Gates managed to swallow these thoughts and let
Cannavino talk. "I'm really very good at this stuff," he says. "I know how to be
somebody's son. You know, 'Yes, Dad.' "
A prominent software executive told me, "M. thought they had Gates by the balls.
He's just a hacker, they thought. A harmless nerd. What they actually had by the balls
was an organism which has been bred for the accumulation of great power and maximum
profit, the child of a lawyer, who knew the language of contracts, and who just ripped
those . guys apart." Another leading executive in the software industry said, "Think
of . and Microsoft as being a chess game, whcrc Microsoft plays black. So they're
at a disadvantage. So they have to set up a trap. Microsoft becomes the only supplier of a
commodity that . could not produce itself. Having done that, it proceeds to market
that asset to weaken its partner's position. It's brilliant!"
Now, thirteen years after that contract, Microsoft is by far the largest software company
in the world. It has a market ca of twenty-three billion dollars--more than
General Motors, Xerox, or M. To what extent Gates is mainly a product of 's
blunder, and therefore a kind of historical accident, and to what extent he is the first
person to imagine software as a shrink-wrapped commodity, and is therefore a visionary,
is a good question to ask if you arc seated next to a computer-industry executive at a
dinner party. Althou Microsoft continues to manufacture ms-dos, it has severed most
of its tics with The break came over the operating system Windows, which Gates
introduced in 1985. (Paul Allen, who had a scary encounter with Hodgkin's disease in
1983, retired, cashed in some of his Microsoft stock, bought the Portland Trail Blazers
basketball team, and built a house with a basketball court on the property, whcrc the
team could practice. He also provided the funds for a Jimi Hendrix museum in Seattle.
Lately, Allen, whose Microsoft stock is now worth $2.9 billion, has been in the news for
buying nearly twenty-five per cent of America Online, an information service, and, most
recently, for buying eighty per cent of TicketMaster.)
Windows is a graphical user interface, or gui (computer people pronounce it "gooey").
Instead of operating the computer with keyboard commands, as you do in dos, in
Windows you use a pointing device--a mouse--to access little folders and documents on
EFTA00966563
your electronic desktop. Xerox developed the desktop metaphor in the late seventies, and
in the early eighties Apple Computer commercialized it. Gates saw that Apple's gui was
an easier system to use than dos, and borrowed it. When Windows first appeared, it was
widely viewed as a kludge (a dog): it was buggy (it had glitches) and was a memory pig
(it used up a lot of space in the computer's hard drive), and it was generally less elegant
than Apple's gui. But Gates stayed with Windows and kept improving it. Gates
understood that it did not matter if the software used lots of space on the hard drive as
long as hard drives kept getting twice as powerful every eighteen months. Also, whereas
Apple chose to keep its software proprietary--it could run only on machines that Apple
made--Gates licensed Windows to any computer manufacturer that wanted it, just as he
had done with dos.
When Apple realized its mistake--its strategy limited Apple's share of the operating-
system market to the number of computers Apple could sell--it sued Microsoft for
copyright infringement, but a federal court ruled that "the look and feel" of the desktop
metaphor was not covered under Apple's copyright.
It is often said by Gates' detractors that he has never invented anything, and this is true in
a sense, but you could say the same thing about Henry Ford. When the Model T
appeared, in 1908, it was by no means the best car on the road, but it worked well
enough, and it was affordable and easy to produce, and Ford stayed with it. Even today,
most users still find Apple's operating system more intuitive than Windows, but, because
the market for Windows is so much larger, other software manufacturers arc more
inclined to make applications for Windows than for Apple's operating system. If there is
to be a standard computer language--which from the point of view of the public is
greatly desirable--it now appears that Windows will be the one. But Gates has to worry
that someone will do to Microsoft what Microsoft did to Apple. Apple is designing a new
operating system with =.; it's code-named Pink, and is expected to appear sometime
in 1995.
After a month of E-mail between Gates and me, my hour in his physical presence
arrived. As we shook hands, he said, "Hello, I'm Bill Gates," and emitted a low, vaguely
embarrassed chuckle. Is this the sound one E-mailer makes to another when they finally
meet in real space? I was aware of a feeling of being discovered. In the front part of
Gates' office, we sat down at right angles to each other. Gates had on normal-looking
clothes--a green shirt with purple stripes, brown pants, black loafers. He rocked
throughout our time together. He did not look at me very often but tither looked down as
he was talking or lifted his eyes above my head to look out the window in the direction
of the campus. The angle of the light caused the purple stripes in his shin to reflect in his
glasses, which, in turn, threw an indigo tinge into the dark circles around his eyes.
The emotional boundaries of our encounter seemed to have been much expanded by the
E-mail that preceded it: Gates would be angry one minute, almost goofily happy the
next. I wondered if he was consciously using our present form of communication to
express feelings that E-mail cannot convey. Maybe this is the way lots of people will
communicate in the future: meet on the information highway, exchange messages, get to
know the lining of each other's mind, then meet face to face.
In each other's physical presence, they will be able to eliminate a lot of the polite
formalities that clutter people's encounters now, and say what they really mean. If this
happens, it will be a good thing about the information highway: electronic
communication won't reduce face-to-face communication; instead, it will focus it.
I had been told not to ask Gates about his marriage, because he didn't want to talk about
it, but I was emboldened by the familiarity that E-mail had established between us and
asked anyway. Gates was silent, rocking gently (I interpreted that as a good sign) and
staring down at his shoes. "Well, it's a pretty conventional marriage," he said after a
while. "I'm male, and I'm marrying a female. And there's just two of us. And we plan to
have rings on our fingers. And there'll be a minister. Or, actually, a priest, I think. Since
I'm marrying a Catholic." He giggled. "Pretty standard stuff In most dimensions,
including this one, I'm just like everybody else. I found a girl and fell in love with her.
I'm kind of old." As he talked, he began to make a peculiar ahhh sound--a sort of
rapturous vocalized pause, with a little shyness in it, as if he were confiding in me.
EFTA00966564
"Some of your competitors arc hoping that marriage is going to make you spend less
time in the office," I said.
"Yeah, I think . . . ahhh that's a pretty strange thing. Being married I don't think is
that big a change. It did take up a lot of energy and time being single. I think in a way it's
more complicated than being married. I mean, marriage has its own complexities, but
they're different . . . ahhh ... and I don't think timcwisc they're much different. And I've
been going out with this person off and on for a number of years, so it's not like the day I
get married it will be, like, whoa, wait a minute, she uses curlers to curl her hair, my
God!"
Gates and his bride are constructing a thirty-five-million-dollar house on the eastern
slope of Lakc Washington, just outside Seattle --a series of five pavilions connected by
underground passageways, with display screens scattered throughout the rooms and
linked to a central data base containing hundreds of thousands of famous works of art in
digital form. Gates does not own the art; he owns the right to reproduce the art digitally,
and he and his assistants continue to throw museum officials around the world into
confusion by offering to buy the digital rights to works in their collections.
"Do you worry that your wealth is going to corrupt you?"
"Absolutely." Gates sat upright and raised his arms in the air. "Absolutely. Hey. Being in
the spotlight is a corrupting thing. Being successful is a corrupting thing. Having lots of
money is a corrupting thing. These arc very dangerous things, to be guarded against
carefully. And I think that's very, very hard to do."
"How do you do it?"
"I'm very close to my family. And that's important to me. It's a very centering thing. I
live in the same neighborhood I grew up in. One of my sisters lives there. We get
together as a family a lot. The woman I'm marrying wants when we have kids to have a
normal environment for them. So we'll mutually brainstorm about how to do the best we
can at that." Gates thought for a while, then said, "I am a person who is very conscious
of, like, why don't I have a TV in my house? I think TV is great. When I'm in a hotel
room, I sit there and try all these new channels and see what's going on. I probably stay
up too late watching stuff. TV is neat. I don't have a TV at home, because I would
probably watch it, and I prefer to spend that time thinking-or, mostly, reading. So I'm
pretty conscious about not letting myself get used to certain things."
"So do you consider yourself a puritanical person?"
"Oh, no no no. I'm not a puritan," Gates said. "Hey, if I was a puritan--" He grinned,
apparently mentally flipping through a sequence of unpuritanical acts he had committed.
"O.K., it's a little bit like this. I go to a baseball game, and I'm having a good time,
watching the game, but then I feel myself getting drawn in. I start wondering, Who arc
these guys? Who are the good ones? How much arc they paid? How arc the other teams
compared to this one? How have the rules changed? How do these guys compare to the
guys twenty years ago? It just gets so interesting. I know if I let myself go to ten games
I'd be addicted, and I'd want to go more. And there's only so much time in the day. And,
frankly, it's easy for me to get interested in anything. I think, Gosh, am I going to get
good at tennis? Well, we got these kayaks recently. I think, you know, Arc we going to
get into that? I was just in Africa. I think, Should I do my next two or three trips there--
there's just so much there--but I'd sort of like to go to China, and actually I think I'll end
up doing that for my next big trip, in two or three years. So there's all these choices, but
time is this very scarce resource."
As we were saying goodbye, Gates said, "Well, you're welcome to keep sending me
mail."
I walked out to my car, drove off the Microsoft campus, and headed back over the
Evergreen Bridge to Seattle. When I got to my hotel, I logged on and saw I had E-mail
from Bill. It had been written about two hours after I left his office. There was no
reference to our having just met. He was responding to mail I had sent him several days
earlier, asking what he thought of Henry Ford:
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L Ford is not that admirable--he did great things but he was very very narrow
minded and was willing to use brute force power too much. His relationship with
his family is tragic. His model of the world was plain wrong in a lot of ways. He
decided he knew everything he needed to fairly early in his life.
Copyright (c) John Seabrook 2003. All rights reserved
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