Gates vs. Jobs: Who's the Star?OR Powerful
Bill Gates v Steve Jobs
Microsoft vs apple
Did you know....
1. Bill Gates had sold his first programme by the age of 17. His school paid him $4,200 for a programme on time-tabling.
2. He dropped out of Harvard to concentrate on his business.
3. Bill Gates co-founded Microsoft in 1975 and served as Chief Executive Officer until 2000.
4. The secret of Microsoft's wealth was to license its software so that earnings rose in proportion to the number of users.
BILL GATES Aged 48 Chief Software Architect at Microsoft Wealth estimated at $40bn |
6. He has donated many billions of dollars to charity through the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
7. A spoof internet report that he had been shot dead knocked $3bn off the Korean stock market.
8. His fortune was recently put at $40bn down from $100bn during the dot.com boom.
9. Around 90% of the world's computers run on Microsoft's Windows software leading to complaints of anti-competitive tactics.
10. E-mails from bill@microsoft.com sent to thousands of people this summer were fakes and carried a computer virus.
1. Steve Jobs was born in 1955 in the area now known as Silicon Valley.
2. Adopted in his infancy, as an adult he traced his biological sister, the novelist Mona Simpson.
3. He ran his first business from a garage with his friend Steve Wozniak.
4. He built his business on delivering a user-friendly personal computer for ordinary people.
5. He named the Apple Corporation after his favourite fruit.
7. Apple became the largest internet music business earlier this year, selling 10 million tunes in four months.
8. He built up the Pixar computer animation studio which has made films including Finding Nemo, A Bug's Life and the Toy Story films
9. The philosophy of one of the characters in "A Bug's Life" mirrors
Jobs' own motivation to "make a difference".
STEVE JOBS
STEVE JOBS
Aged 48
Chief executive of Apple and Pixar film animation studio
Wealth estimated at $2bn
Until recently, Bill Gates has been viewed as the villain of the tech world, while his archrival, Steve Jobs, enjoys an almost saintly reputation.
Gates is the cutthroat capitalist. A genius maybe, but one more interested in maximizing profits than perfecting technology. He's the ultimate vengeful nerd. Ostracized at school, he gets the last laugh by bleeding us all dry.
On the other hand, Jobs has never seemed much concerned with business, though he's been very successful at it of late. Instead, Jobs has been portrayed as a man of art and culture. He's an aesthete, an artist; driven to make a dent in the universe.
But these perceptions are wrong. In fact, the reality is reversed. It's Gates who's making a dent in the universe, and Jobs who's taking on the role of single-minded capitalist, seemingly oblivious to the broader needs of society.
Gates is giving away his fortune with the same gusto he spent acquiring it, throwing billions of dollars at solving global health problems. He has also spoken out on major policy issues, for example, by opposing proposals to cut back the inheritance tax.
In contrast, Jobs does not appear on any charitable contribution lists of note. And Jobs has said nary a word on behalf of important social issues, reserving his talents of persuasion for selling Apple products.
According to Forbes, Jobs was recently worth $3.3 billion which puts him among the 194th richest in the world, and makes him the 67th richest American. But the standings were shuffled on Tuesday with Disney's $7.4 billion acquisition of Pixar Animation -- a deal that makes Jobs' Pixar holdings alone worth some $3.7 billion.
But great wealth does not make a great man.
Giving USA Foundation,a philanthropy research group which publishes an annual charity survey, said Jobs does not appear on lists of gifts of $5 million or more over the last four years. Nor is his name on a list of gifts of $1 million or more compiled by Indiana University's Center on Philanthropy.
Jobs' wife is also absent from these philanthropic lists, although she has made dozens of political donations totaling tens of thousands of dollars to the Democrats, according to the Open Secrets database.
Of course, Jobs and his wife may be giving enormous sums of money to charity anonymously. If they are funneling cash to various causes in private, their names wouldn't show up on any lists, regardless of the size of their gifts.
For a person as private as Jobs, who shuns any publicity about his family life, this seems credible. If so, however, this would make Jobs virtually unique among moguls. Richard Jolly, chairman of Giving USA Foundation, said not all billionaires give their money away, but a lot do, and most do not do it quietly.
"We see it over and over again," he said. "Very wealthy individuals do support the organizations and institutions they believe in."
That's certainly true of Gates, who not only gives vast sums away, but also speaks up in support of the organizations and institutions he believes in.
This is not the case for Jobs. To the best of my knowledge, in the last decade or more, Jobs has not spoken up on any social or political issue he believes in -- with the exception of admitting he's a big Bob Dylan fan.
Rather, he uses social issues to support his own selfish business goals. In the Think Different campaign, Jobs used cultural figures he admired to sell computers -- figures who stuck their necks out to fight racism, poverty, inequality or war.
Jobs once offered to be an advisor to Sen. John Kerry during the 2004 presidential election, and he invited President Clinton over for dinner when Bubba visited Silicon Valley in 1996 -- hardly evidence of deep political convictions.
Jobs can't even get behind causes that would seem to carry deep personal meaning, let alone lasting social importance. Like Lance Armstrong, he is a cancer survivor. But unlike Armstrong, Jobs has so far done little publicly to raise money or awareness for the disease.
Given Jobs' social detachment, I'm confused by the adulation he enjoys. Yes, he has great charisma and his presentations are good theater. But his absence from public discourse makes him a cipher. People project their values onto him, and he skates away from the responsibilities that come with great wealth and power.
On the evidence, he's nothing more than a greedy capitalist who's amassed an obscene fortune. It's shameful. In almost every way, Gates is much more deserving of Jobs' rock star exaltation.
In the same way, I admire Bono over Mick Jagger, and John Lennon over Elvis, because they spoke up about things bigger than their own celebrity.
It's time for Jobs to do the same.
WHO IS TH MOST POWERFUL GATES OR JOBS by commenting on the gates or jobs we can understand who is great?????Lets Find Out!!!!!!!
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1 comments:
Write commentsNot sure where to post this but I wanted to ask if anyone has heard of National Clicks?
ReplyCan someone help me find it?
Overheard some co-workers talking about it all week but didn't have time to ask so I thought I would post it here to see if someone could help me out.
Seems to be getting alot of buzz right now.
Thanks
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