Q&A - Gates: Innovator, deal-maker and philanthropist

January 7, 2008, 09:50 AM —  IDG News Service — 

Microsoft founder and Chairman Bill Gates has been giving keynote speeches
at Las Vegas conventions, including the Consumer Electronics Show and the now-defunct
Comdex, for decades. Before his last CES keynote speech as a full-time company
employee, he talked with IDG News Service Executive News Editor Marc Ferranti
about his legacy as an innovator, the background behind some of the deals announced
at CES this week and directions for Microsoft.

The following is an edited version of the interview:

IDGNS: We've been tracking your career for some 30 years. One bone of
contention has been when people have said that Bill Gates is a business mastermind,
but not really an innovator. Can you point out a couple of innovative things
you're particularly proud of?

Gates: In terms of what we're proud of, I think it's the personal computer
that we're proud of. It was a crazy idea at the time, that we could take the
microprocessor and create a software industry around it. There was no software
industry. Computing was about big businesses, and what we did in 1975, with
me dropping out of school, was to say that we could build an industry that was
about empowering people. We could seek out partners to build the hardware. We'd
let anyone write software for the work we did, and everything we've done, over
these 30 years, has been about that vision of personal computing. We were first
ones with that vision.

And now we're tackling the new frontiers. We're bringing TV, we're bringing
new educational experiences, health experiences, onto this device that empowers
people in a new rich way. And so it's pretty broad, the PC industry and our
innovations in it -- I don't think there's anything in the last 30 years that
has had as much impact.

IDGNS: In the consumer space, since we're at CES, can you point out
some recent innovations Microsoft can leverage in the next couple of years.

Gates: Well the dollars spent on games and Xbox in the U.S. is greater
than Sony PS3 and Nintendo Wii combined. Really, that's because of the innovation
in Xbox Live -- connecting people up, letting players find each other, matching
them, getting video online. It's a real breakthrough way of thinking about even
the future of TV.

We've got a million people using our Mediaroom, which is TV delivered over
the Internet. Companies like AT&T and 19 other phone companies around the
world bet their future on this being the new video platform. And what that means
is when you think about news, and you go and use Mediaroom news, you see the
things that you care about, the ads are targeted at you.

Look at what we've done with Surface, directly touching and manipulating things
-- that's gonna be a centerpiece.

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Where Google Chrome security fails: the password
I heard mention that the Chrome OS will have some sort of encryption available a la bitlocker. If it's possible to encrypt personal data using another password or key, then it may have potential for very secure data.... And Ubuntu has an 'encrypt home directory' option, perhaps google should follow suit.
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