File:Steve Jobs and Bill Gates (522695099).jpg

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Summary

Walter Mossberg and Kara Swisher interview Steve Jobs and Bill Gates at 'D5: All Things Digital' conference in Carlsbad, California, in 2007. Quotes made during the time of the photograph. <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="http://d5.allthingsd.com/20070530/d5-gates-jobs-interview/">[1]</a>

Kara: "What you think each has contributed to the computer and technology industry, starting with you, Steve, for Bill, and vice versa."

Steve: "Bill built the first software company in the industry and I think he built the first software company before anybody really in our industry knew what a software company was, except for these guys. And that was huge. That was really huge. And the business model that they ended up pursuing turned out to be the one that worked really well, you know, for the industry. I think the biggest thing was, Bill was really focused on software before almost anybody else had a clue that it was really the software."

Walt: "Bill, how about the contribution of Steve and Apple?"

Bill: "Well, first, I want to clarify: I’m not <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Lyons" class="extiw" title="en:Daniel Lyons">Fake Steve Jobs</a>. [Peals of laughter.]

What Steve’s done is quite phenomenal, and if you look back to 1977, that Apple II computer, the idea that it would be a mass-market machine, you know, the bet that was made there by Apple uniquely—there were other people with products, but the idea that this could be an incredible empowering phenomenon, Apple pursued that dream. Then one of the most fun things we did was the Macintosh and that was so risky. People may not remember that Apple really bet the company. Lisa hadn’t done that well, and some people were saying that general approach wasn’t good, but the team that Steve built even within the company to pursue that, even some days it felt a little ahead of its time—I don’t know if you remember that Twiggy disk drive and…"

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current10:31, 3 January 2017Thumbnail for version as of 10:31, 3 January 20173,076 × 2,194 (3.08 MB)127.0.0.1 (talk)<b>Walter Mossberg</b> and <b>Kara Swisher</b> interview <b>Steve Jobs</b> and <b>Bill Gates</b> at 'D5: All Things Digital' conference in Carlsbad, California, in 2007. Quotes made during the time of the photograph. <a rel="nofollow" class="external autonumber" href="http://d5.allthingsd.com/20070530/d5-gates-jobs-interview/">[1]</a> <p><b>Kara:</b> "What you think each has contributed to the computer and technology industry, starting with you, Steve, for Bill, and vice versa." </p> <p><b>Steve:</b> "Bill built the first software company in the industry and I think he built the first software company before anybody really in our industry knew what a software company was, except for these guys. And that was huge. That was really huge. And the business model that they ended up pursuing turned out to be the one that worked really well, you know, for the industry. I think the biggest thing was, Bill was really focused on software before almost anybody else had a clue that it was really the software." </p> <p><b>Walt:</b> "Bill, how about the contribution of Steve and Apple?" </p> <p><b>Bill:</b> "Well, first, I want to clarify: I’m not <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniel_Lyons" class="extiw" title="en:Daniel Lyons">Fake Steve Jobs</a>. [Peals of laughter.] </p> What Steve’s done is quite phenomenal, and if you look back to 1977, that Apple II computer, the idea that it would be a mass-market machine, you know, the bet that was made there by Apple uniquely—there were other people with products, but the idea that this could be an incredible empowering phenomenon, Apple pursued that dream. Then one of the most fun things we did was the Macintosh and that was so risky. People may not remember that Apple really bet the company. Lisa hadn’t done that well, and some people were saying that general approach wasn’t good, but the team that Steve built even within the company to pursue that, even some days it felt a little ahead of its time—I don’t know if you remember that Twiggy disk drive and…"
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