<div class="gmail_quote">2011/10/7 Gert van Santen <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:g.vansanten@chello.nl">g.vansanten@chello.nl</a>></span><br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">
I've read quite a bit about Jobs, and I translated his first (unauthorized) biography about 12 years ago. I don't think Jobs was such a nice guy, and to be honest, I was sort of shocked when I read all the stuff he had done and said.<br>
</blockquote><div><br>Put it this way. Andy linked a video of jobs in 2005, at Stanford. Jobs basically said that if it weren't for him taking calligraphy classes, computers wouldn't have had proper typefaces. So much for modesty.<br>
<br>One of the related videos is a speech of Bill Gates at Harvard. After a bit of self-deprecating humour, Gates only talked about millions of people and particularly children being disadvantaged, or even dying because there's not enough profit to be made on medicines.<br>
<br>Gates has given unimaginable amounts of money to charity; Jobs, to my knowledge, has not, and cancelled Apple's philanthropy projects when he took over. Their track record for care about the environment is nothing to write home about either.<br>
<br>The comments on Jobs are the usual worship (especially now he's dead), and the comment on Gates? "He sounds like Kermit the Frog." And he gets pies pushed in his face.<br><br>Knowing the previous business practices of Microsoft, I'm under no illusion that Gates would be a nice, affable person. You don't become the richest person in the world by being nice. But when it comes to actually measurable accomplishments, then Gates has saved lives and improved living conditions of many, whereas Jobs has made technology fashionable.<br>
<br>For this, Jobs gets worshipped, and Gates gets ridiculed. Which tells me that Gates' mission, to get people to care and try to make a difference, it ultimately doomed to fail.<br><br>- Peter<br></div></div>