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To: Jimbo Cobb who wrote (32753)10/17/1999 11:33:00 PM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
Gates interview on BBC(Yawn!)........Sci/Tech

Gates on 'future without
Microsoft'

Bill Gates: "Eventually all companies are replaced"

Bill Gates, the world's first $100bn man, admits his
company Microsoft will one day be replaced.

In a wide-ranging interview with the BBC's Jeremy
Paxman, the world's richest man describes his meeting
with Prime Minister Tony Blair as "neat", outlines his
vision of the technological future and claims never to
have heard a Bill Gates joke.

The Microsoft founder, whose company is currently
being sued by the US Government for anti-competitive
business practices, says he can envisage a future
without Microsoft.

He acknowledges that someone may be working on the
type of ground-breaking innovation he came up with in
the 1970s to revolutionise the industry.

"Eventually all companies are replaced," he tells Mr
Paxman.

The interview - Paxman Meets Bill Gates - will be
screened on 17 October. In the time it took to record Mr
Gates earned around $500,000.

World domination

Mr Gates also answers Rupert Murdoch's assertion that
he "wants to take over the world" by telling Paxman:
"He's hiding behind me. He's your man."

Gates claims that his
business is "not like owning
a newspaper".

He adds: "Someone who
owns a newspaper can pick
up the phone to the editor
and say 'run headlines I like'.

"What we do is create tools
like a word processor that
lets people express their
ideas and we're not at all
involved in how they choose
to use it.

"The thing we're involved with has democratised
communications and anyone can publish on the internet.
You don't have to own a TV channel or a newspaper."

Pornography and racism

Gates also denies there is a key to his software
programmes held by the security services of the US
Government.

He also talks about his dream of making medical
advancements available to all through the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, which will receive the bulk of
Gates vast fortune.

Later in the interview Mr Gates is asked about the
problems of pornography and racism on the Internet.

He tells Mr Paxman: "The Internet is a great
communications tool and so every human thought that
you like or don't like is going to be out there.

"Certainly, I want our software to be used for things that
are positive and good, and I don't have control over
exactly how that's done."

Talking computers

The next stage technologically is accessing the Internet
through the television and the telephone, says Mr Gates.

Operating the computer by speaking to it is also likely in
the near future, and the computer will answer back.

"One of the things you will be able to select is the
personality," Gates tells his interviewer.

"You're not serious?," Mr Paxman asks, "I'm totally
serious," Gates replies.

But a 'thinking' computer is still a long way off.

"None of the work being done on software today holds
the potential to create a truly intelligent device."

Other topics covered in the interview include how
uncomfortable Gates feels about being the central focus
of his company's remarkable success, and IBM's
missed opportunity to acquire 40% of Microsoft for "next
to nothing".

Paxman Meets Bill Gates will be broadcast on
Sunday 17 October, at 8pm on BBC Two.




To: Jimbo Cobb who wrote (32753)10/18/1999 12:01:00 AM
From: Annette  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 41369
 
Why not buy at 110 and wait for the run up to 222?
(Right, CGarcia??)