How Will Bill Gates Be Remembered?

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs was a special person. He was able to combine some of the finer elements of the industry into products that made users worldwide drool. And along the way, he established himself as one of the most important figures in the technology industry. To say his contributions to the industry were significant would perhaps be too simple a summation of such an important figure.

A year after his death, Jobs was celebrated by consumers worldwide, giving a clear indication that although his company is now under the leadership of someone else, he will never be forgotten.

But all of the remembrances and tributes make me wonder how other prominent technology giants will be remembered. More specifically, I’m wondering if Bill Gates, a technology icon in his own right, will be remembered in the same way as Steve Jobs.

At first glance, there should be no reason Gates doesn’t earn the same respect and idolatry of Jobs. After all, without Bill’s decisions, we might not have Windows, the PC market wouldn’t be as advanced as it is today, and it’s hard to say how the corporate world would be operating. It’s easy to say that someone else could have come up with everything Gates did, but they didn’t. And his position as a tech icon has been cemented because of that.
“Without Bill’s decisions … it’s hard to say how the corporate world would be operating.”
But Gates wasn’t always as beloved as Steve Jobs. For a long time, Gates was viewed unfavorably because he was the richest person in the world. And in the late 1990s when Microsoft was at the height of its power, Gates was viewed as the evil leader that dominated other companies.

Now, though, things have changed a bit. Microsoft is no longer the big, brooding company that it once was. And although it’s still generating billions of dollars in revenue each quarter, it’s largely an afterthought in an industry dominated by Apple and Google.

Moreover, Gates is no longer running Microsoft, and long ago left day-to-day operations at the company. Gates is now a full-time philanthropist. And his contributions to the world and the people who are in need of help is nothing but commendable.

Still, I can’t help but wonder how Gates will be remembered. On one hand, I think that he might finally get his due as a technology icon after his death when people take an honest look at his contributions and the economic activity they spurred.
“Gates was great and all… but he wasn’t Steve Jobs.”
At the same time, I can’t help but shake the feeling that Gates inspired enough distaste among critics over the years that even over time, he won’t be viewed on the same level as Steve Jobs. Gates was great and all, those critics might say, but he wasn’t Steve Jobs.

Of course, the debate over whether that’s true or not will last forever. And chances are, no one will be able to arrive at a consensus. But if we can agree on anything, it’s that Gates did contribute quite a bit to the industry. And if nothing else, he should be remembered for that a long ways from now when the old guard gives way to the new upstarts.


How Will Bill Gates Be Remembered? is written by Don Reisinger & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Bill Gates assures Windows 8 will be “a big deal”

It’s always good to hear that the most famous face of the company that’s pushing a brand new operating system does think that it’ll be successful – thus is the situation with Bill Gates and Microsoft’s own Window 8 this week. In an interview given with the Associated Press, Gates spoke primarily on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s role in a new global campaign to eradicate polio, but as the conversation inevitably touched on the newest operating system to be offered up by the company that made him successful, Gates let it be known that Windows 8 will be great. Gates noted that he was already using Windows 8 regularly and that he was “very pleased with it.”

According to Gates, “hardware partners are doing great things to take advantage of the features [in Windows 8]” and that “it’ll be a big deal.” With the new version of Windows hitting shelves in late October and press events leading up to that date hitting left and right, everyone in the software and hardware world is getting pumped up about the touch-friendly operating system. Earlier today Intel held a press conference showing off a new processor (ATOM X2760) tuned specifically for Windows 8 devices.

Speaking on how the operating system compares to the previous systems that’ve been released for PCs from Microsoft, Gates let it be known that Windows 8 is indeed “a very exciting new product” and generally appeared to be ready to praise it from top to bottom. This bodes well for the company whose “Windows & Windows Live” division brought in 27 percent ($19 billion USD) of Microsoft’s total $69.9 billion in annual revenue in 2011.

Check out a selection of important Windows 8 stories and important bits we’ve collected recently in the timeline below. Note that Windows 8 will be appearing on a large cross-section of PCs, notebooks, tablets, and cross-overs at the end of October, and that Microsoft already has pre-release builds available for users to try right this minute. Let us know if you’re pumped up to use the next generation in Microsoft wares!


Bill Gates assures Windows 8 will be “a big deal” is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


When Microsoft Threatened to Sue Us Over the Letter “E” [Microsoft]

By 1997 E.piphany was a fast growing startup with customers, revenue and something approaching a repeatable business model. Somewhere that year we decided to professionalize our logo (you should have seen the first one.) With a massive leap of creativity we decided that it should it should have our company name and the letter “E” with a swoop over it. More »

Solar-powered toilet receives money from Bill Gates’ foundation

There is nothing quite like a solar-powered toilet now, is there, considering how we have other modes of transportation that run off solar energy? After all, this is the future of the developing world that is envisioned by none other than the software mogul of Windows himself, Bill Gates. The Bill Gates Foundation had just given a $100,000 prize to the California Institute of Technology on Tuesday in order to encourage and further develop their work on a self-contained, sun-powered system which is capable of recycling water while breaking down human waste into storable energy. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Silent Falcon solar-powered UAV gets launched, Transparent solar panels could be the windows of the future,

Bill Gates reportedly rejected a touchscreen e-reader prototype in 1998

Bill Gates at the Comdex computer show in 1998

Unknown to many, Microsoft engineers way back in 1998 presented an e-reader prototype that featured a touch screen interface to Bill Gates, which was eventually turned down and dismissed because the founder thought it wasn’t right. This interesting report and a few more are featured in Vanity Fair’s “Microsoft’s Downfall: Inside the Executive E-mails and Cannibalistic Culture That Felled a Tech Giant” report that was published yesterday. According to Kurt Eichenwald of Vanity Fair, in 1998, Microsoft had a prototype e-reader ready to go. But when the engineers presented it to Gates, he promptly gave it a thumbs-down.

“He didn’t like the user interface, because it didn’t look like Windows,” one engineer involved in the project told the publication. The group working on the prototype was eventually asked to focus on developing software for its Office suite. Microsoft also reportedly turned down the idea of a micro-messaging system. The said idea was the brainchild of a young developer of MSN Messenger who noticed that a few college students were using AOL’s AIM to constantly give status updates. Unfortunately, the idea was also turned down by Microsoft. Two days ago, in an interview with Charlie Rose, Bill Gates explained why the iPad was so successful saying, ” Apple did some things better than I did.”

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Bill Gates explains why the iPad was successful, Windows Phone 8 devices to be available later this year?,

Bill Gates explains why the iPad was successful

In an interview with Charlie Rose last night, Microsoft founder Bill Gates explained why the iPad was successful and why his original vision of a tablet PC didn’t do so much. Microsoft had an idea of a tablet PC way back in 2000. In fact, Bill Gates first unveiled the tablet PC concept to a crowd of over 12,000 people at the Computer Dealers’ Exhibition (COMDEX) way back in November 2000. Ten years later, Apple released the iPad, a tablet that sold over 14.8 million units around the world. During the interview, Rose asked Gates, “You thought about a tablet and a touch system way before Steve Jobs?”

Gates’ response was, “Way too early.” But when asked why the iPad was so successful, Gates reportedly replied saying “He [Steve Jobs] did some things better than I did. His timing in terms of when it came out, the engineering work, just the package that was put together. The tablets we had done before, weren’t as thin, they weren’t as attractive as what came along.” Although it was a bitter pill to swallow, Gates retorted that Microsoft’s Windows 8 and its newly launched Surface tablets will be a game changer. “Now Microsoft has something that may change the rules again,” Gates added.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft co-operative touch pen input mechanism , Microsoft Surface rumored to sell for $599 ,