[Updated 12/27/2000]

Life and Love | Geek Speak | Television Industry | Speeches


    OK, I little bit of an explanation is needed here. I have been involved in training in the computer industry for many years. Back in the late 80's I worked many live shows that were produced to train corporate IS people (before they were called IS) how to install and maintain computer networks.

    I feel that my background gives me a unique view of the industry. In other words, I've seen the industry from the inside, and it aint pretty. You can accuse me of being a Mac fanatic if you like but when it comes to my views about Microsoft, I'm right.


    "I don't have any evidence of that... Just in terms of allocation of time resources, religion is not very efficient. There's alot more I could be doing on a Sunday morning."
    Bill Gates, when asked about religion and God's existence in "Time" magazine

    "Hey, Steve, just because you broke into Xerox's store before I did and took the TV doesn't mean I can't go in later and steal the stereo."
    Bill Gates, Microsoft, 3/14/89--as quoted in MacWEEK, 1/9/90 p. 23

    "There are people who don't like capitalism, and there are people who don't like PCs, but there's no one who likes the PC who doesn't like Microsoft."
    Bill Gates

    "You shouldn't get overly paranoid thinking that Microsoft's a broad competitor and it's not possible to work with us."
    Bill Gates at PUBLISHERS' CONVENTION April 1997

    "Anybody who thinks a little 9,000-line program that's distributed free and can be cloned by anyone is going to affect anything we do at Microsoft has his head screwed on wrong."
    Bill Gates to George Gilder responding to Java
    (shortly before licensing Java and dumping Blackbird)

    "There won't be anything we won't say to people to try and convince them that our way is the way to go."
    Bill Gates on Microsoft marketing

    "640K ought to be enough for anybody."
    Bill Gates circa 1981

    "If you can't make it good, at least make it look good."
    Bill Gates on the solid code base of Win9X

    "I believe OS/2 is destined to be the most important operating system, and possibly program, of all time. As the successor to DOS, which has over 10,000,000 systems in use, it creates incredible opportunities for everyone involved with PCs."
    Bill Gates, from "OS/2 Programmer's Guide" (forward by Bill Gates)

    "There are people who don't like capitalism, and people who don't like PCs. But there's no-one who likes the PC who doesn't like Microsoft"
    Bill Gates, Free Market and the LA Times

    "This is the right way to develop applications for OS/2 PM. OS/2 PM is a tremendously rich environment, which makes it inherently complex. Smalltalk/V PM removes that complexity and lets you concentrate on writing great programs. Smalltalk/V PM is the kind of tool that will make OS/2 the successor to MS/DOS".
    Bill Gates, from the back of an old Digitalk Smalltalk/V PM manual, 1990


      Developer: Does the announcement [of the OS/2 joint development agreement between IBM and Microsoft] mean that Microsoft is curtailing any plans for future development of Windows?

      Gates: Microsoft has not changed any of its plans for Windows. It is obvious that we will not include things like threads and preemptive multitasking in Windows. By the time we added that, you would have OS/2.
      -- Bill Gates, from "OS/2 Notebook", Microsoft Press, (c) 1990--an excerpt from an interview with Bill Gates and Jim Cannavino, p. 614

      Interviewer: Is studying computer science the best way to prepare to be a programmer?

      Gates: No, the best way to prepare is to write programs, and to study great programs that other people have written. In my case, I went to the garbage cans at the Computer Science Center and I fished out listings of their operating system.

      Bill Gates, from "Programmers at Work" by Microsoft Press, interview with Bill


    "If you don't know what you need Windows NT for, you don't need it."
    Bill Gates

    "New interface closely resembles Presentation Manager, preparing you for the wonders of OS/2!"
    -- Microsoft Advertisement On the Box of Windows 2.11 for 286

    "Microsoft programs are generally bug-free. If you visit the Microsoft hotline, you'll literally have to wait weeks if not months until someone calls in with a bug in one of our programs. 99.99% of calls turn out to be user mistakes. I know not a single less irrelevant reason for an update than bugfixes. The reasons for updates are to present more new features."
    Bill Gates, on code stability, from Focus Magazine

    "Imagine the disincentive to software development if after months of work another company could come along and copy your work and market it under it's own name...without legal restraints to such copying, companies like Apple could not afford to advance the state of the art."
    Bill Gates, on Microsoft's GUI innovations (unconfirmed quote)

    "The next generation of interesting software will be made on a Macintosh, not an IBM PC."
    Bill Gates (unconfirmed quote)


fen@chrisfenwick.com