Imagine that you don't know either of the two individuals in the photo at right.
Now, who is the world's wealthiest man?
Bill doesn't look comfortable. Check out that tie! Did Bill just get off the red-eye flight from Seattle? Sen. Leahy, by contrast, probably adjusted his tie before sitting down. Nice choice of colors, Senator!
I remember talking to Bill Gates at a party in Las Vegas in 1990. He had on a Polo shirt, those signature glasses. He was relaxed, confident, energetic, talking about C++ and how important it was. I was one of many people who thought: "This is the symbol of the techncial and intelligent entrepreneur". He embodied what all of us wanted to be, and it was an exciting time.
No more.
I do not want to be Bill Gates. I know many technically brilliant people who share my belief. I'm not sure even Bill wants to be Bill anymore. You can tell if people are comfortable in what they are wearing, and Bill is a dead giveaway these days. I don't think he goes shopping like he did back then. He's listening to P-R people instead of being himself. Where's that confident "dare to be smart" person I met in Las Vegas?
If Microsoft wants to rekindle the kind of admiration and respect they used to enjoy from the technical community, maybe it starts at the top. Let's see the Polo shirt again, Bill. Be a bit daring. I miss it.
(The photo is from today's H1-B visa article on news.com)
[tags: Microsoft]

Bill Gates has always wanted to be Steve Jobs, and couldn't. Steve Jobs, of course, also wanted to be Steve Jobs, not being constitutionally able to conceive of an alternative. I'm not really a Steve Jobs junkie, but being both the leader of the most technological creative firm, and the most creative technology firm, is a level of orthogonal success that Bill always thought he would achieve and be admired for, but couldn't quite obtain. I think that's the source of his discomfort, and even the real source of motivations and decisions behind his foundation. Still, he IS the richest man in the world. That counts, doesn't it?
Posted by: Jeff Cooper | July 05, 2005 at 03:44 AM