Who is Your Hero, Gates or Jobs? 660
feranick writes "Wired and Ars Technica are both running articles comparing Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, not for their business/technological achievements but for their humanitarian involvement. I am curious to see what you are thinking about the issue. What is more important, be a showmen technologist like Jobs or an humanitarian missionaire like Gates? And even more important: Is it important that donations from rich billionaires be public or should they remain private?"
The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:2, Interesting)
Tough call, really. I tend to view every move of Gates in terms of wondering if he's doing these things with the ulterior motive of helping his company, Microsoft. There was a considerable ($300m, IIRC) gift to a cause in India about the time of debate over state use of Open Source in preference to Microsoft (closed source, foreign owned.) There's also the matter of how you feel people and businesses have been exploited and compromised by this behemmouth (granted users of Microsoft products, myself inc
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:5, Insightful)
I really don't think that using $49 Billion of your own money to start a charitable foundation could *possibly* be out of a motive to help your company financially. Why on earth wouldn't he reinvest it if his motives were to help Microsoft?
That's messed up, man.
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:2)
I believe - and I could be wrong that the administrators of Gates's charity make half a mil a year. If anyone knows for sure, please post references.
It definitely diminishes the altruism of the charity and also - after a point of accumulation, money doesn't matter, you've got more than enough. Gates might be doing a wonderful thing with the charity but that is with money made off of Microsoft's business practices, which we al
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Informative)
Don't you wish you could get away with paying taxes like Microsoft doesn't [seattleweekly.com]?
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Informative)
That's only sort of true. Bill Gates Senior is one of the three co-chairs of the charity (along with Melinda and Bill himself). As co-chairs, I'd be surprised if any of the three receives any salary from the foundation.
I'm sure most of the normal staff do receive salaries -- working for a charitable foundation doesn't relieve them from having to eat and such. The foundation website lists their executives [gatesfoundation.org]. According to the foundation's tax [gatesfoundation.org]
Re:Which Gates is the Best Gates? (Score:3, Insightful)
I used to be bothered by this line, too, before I started my own corporation and realized it's a load of crap. The reason that numerically so many corporations don't pay much in taxes is that the vast majority of corporations in America are small businesses. Mom and pop shops, or individuals working for themselves. Many or most of these corporations lose money each year or just barely break even. That's why t
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
A parent suggested Gate's charity gave away close to fifty-billion dollars. If I was hiring a team to manage that amount of money I'd want to ensure they were paid very well too, for two key reasons:
1) Paying well ensures you get good-quality people skilled in managing this much money
2) The motivation for embezzlement is reduced if you are well-paid. (This i
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Interesting)
There are several ways that he is the most extremely qualified for this position.
Chairs in family foundations are not open application positions, they are appointments by the benefactors. The benefactors appoint those that they trust. Bill and Melinda trust Bill Sr.
Then consider who was responsible for the starting of the Gates Center for Technology Access (the earlier foundation), it was Bill Sr. and Mary Gates that convinced Bill to start his philanthro
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Interesting)
As I understand it:
Gate's father is a partner in a law firm. His parents bugged him about charitable giving for years before he finally set aside some funds and put his father in charge of spending it (almost as if he wanted to just be left alone about it). Only in the last few years has he taken a personal interest, and this, it would seem was at least partially at prompting from his wife.
All that
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
In the public's and regulators' minds, Gates and Microsoft are one and the same. Thus, the public and regulators will tend to go easier on MS if they see Gates in a positive light. Regulators will be less likely to penalize anticompetitive MS behavior, switch to Linux,
CowboyNeal and open source (Score:3)
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
OS/2 died because of some really STUPID things IBM did.
1. Insisting that it ran on the 286. That held up development for a very long time and never was very useful. Yes the 386 was out at that time.
2. Too expensive.
3. Lack of driver support. Maybe not IBMs problem but if they hadn't tried to make Microchannel an IBM controlled standard things might have worked out better.
Linux?
When Windows 3.11 was taking off Linux was not usable on the des
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
He died from a fall he took when he was out drinking he was not murdered.
As I said I don't really like Microsoft or Bill Gates but the man is doing a lot of good with the money he has. I suggest you look at what they are doing in health care.
Yea Bill Gates uses illegal tactics in business but he isn't Hitler and he hasn't killed anyone.
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:5, Insightful)
I know a family practitioner who gave up his lucrative practice to work in Sudan under horrific conditions. He has no plans to return, I guess when the money runs out.
IMO, people like him are the real heroes.
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
Jesus Christ you ungrateful bastard.
Yes, I am posting this under my account.
Re:The Devil on the Left or the Devil on the Right (Score:3, Insightful)
throw the first stone (Score:5, Insightful)
It is a huge mistake to make assumptions and judge others when you really don't know anything about what is going on in their life, especially in regards to their finances.
I do admire that the authors of these articles are in favor of investing ones resources in ways that are intended to make the world a better place. I spend a good amount of my time trying to encourage people in the same way. But to criticize someone, even with the caveats about anonymous giving, is not really helpful. What a person does with their money, be it Steve Jobs or the kid grilling burgers at your local Jack in the Box, is their business. And we are in know place to judge them as human beings for what they do with their money, especially since we don't know what is going on in their lives.
When I approach people to support what I do, I try very hard to not develop preconceptions based on what I know about them, because I am almost always wrong when I do. People I think will give a lot, don't (often for very good reasons, whether I know those reasons or not) and people I think wont give at all, surprise me with their generosity. But judging one as better than the other without the whole picture would be a grave error.
Finally, when Christ wanted to give an example to his disciples of great giving, he pointed out the poor widow giving two mites. It was not the amount that mattered, but the attitude and the self-sacrafice. And from this distance who can judge those factors about Bill Gates or Steve Jobs?
Re:throw the first stone (Score:2)
It's too bad the most prominent US Christians aren't at all like Christ.
What is a "mite" anyway?
Re:throw the first stone (Score:5, Interesting)
There are many Christians who are like Christ, unfortunately a lot of high profile people like to use Christianity as a means to a very different end.
Depends on the question (Score:4, Insightful)
The question seems too simplistic. If you want to ask the question -- who has done more for humanity: Gates or Jobs? Then you can look at acts of charity or whatever. If you want to ask who is the "most capitalist", then look at net worth. If you want to know whose actions illustrate the values one wants to live up to, look at their respective actions. If you want to ask who is the most selfless humanitarian, the answer is probably neither, as the parent indicates:
> It was not the amount that mattered, but the attitude and the self-sacrifice
The poster's submission makes it sound like all four of those are the same type of thing (hero).
It's really easy for a billionaire to donate a million dollars to charity. It's a lot harder for someone making $20k a year to donate a dime to charity. But the latter qualifies more as a humanitarian because of the self sacrifice, at least from a Christian perspective. When the billionaire does it, it's often for tax purposes or for PR. If they do it anonymously, at least they're not trying to secure favorable impressions in the history books.
I read the Wired article, and it was basically an author baiting Jobs to try to one-up Gates and his highly-publicized public giving. The author at least admitted that Jobs might be giving money anonymously, which is probably more in Jobs' character -- I'm thinking about Jobs meeting with a young man through the Make a Wish foundation [wish.org]. As far as I know, the meeting didn't appear on Apple Hot News [apple.com] for publicity.
As for a more riveting personal/business story, Jobs wins hands down. Gates used ruthless tactics to build his empire and then showed nothing but contempt for the justice system. Now that he's rich, he can through a few crumbs (albeit, crumbs to him are billions to the rest of us) to build his PR.
Jobs' story is more compelling to me: Apple's founding, buying Pixar from Lucas and turning it into a billion dollar business, failing at NeXT, but selling it back to Apple, and then rebuilding Apple with the iPod to chagrin of the loud protests from critics [nytimes.com]:
Founding a successful company is some skill and a lot of luck. Doing it three times (Apple, Pixar, Apple again) is more skill than luck.
Re:Depends on the question (Score:4, Informative)
I wouldn't be surprised if Jobs is donating money to charity anonymously, and if so he would be wise to not take the bait.
It's easy to do it, and you don't have to be a millionare. I opened an account with Fidelity's Charitable Gift Fund [charitablegift.org] a few years back, and since then have made every charitable gift through it, anonymously.
The Fund is a public charity. The donor makes a non-revocable contribution and receives a charitable deduction at that time (subject to the usual limitations). Subsequently, the donor makes grant recommendations to the fund. The recommendation is reviewed for compliance (i.e. the recipient is a US charitable organization), and the grant is made. The donor's name can be included, or the donor can request anonymity.
The donor cannot receive any benefit in return or recommend a grant to satisfy a pledge. The grant cannot be used for political purposes. There are other restrictions, described here [charitablegift.org].
In the past fiscal year, the Fund made grants totaling nearly $700 million, and has exceeded $5 billion in grants since inception in 1991.
Re:Correction (Score:5, Informative)
You are so ridiculously incorrect that it's not even amusing. I know, this is Slashdot, and we've become used to this sort of thing. The Bible doesn't say a single thing about "hate gays, hate other religions, hate sex, hate the darkies". Not once. Sorry, bub. Jesus repeatedly demonstrated that it was more important to love than it was to enforce the law. An example of this is when the pharisees looked to condemn him for healing a man on the sabbath (in the OT, it is unlawful to perform any work on the sabbath). At no point was the message to "hate" anyone for anything. Regardless of whether homosexuality is a sin or not, we are told to love each other (friends and enemies both).
I'm sorry, but reasonable Christians have to simply accept that there are some real atrocities in their religion's history and that there was valid grounding in their holy scriptures for them.Must the muslims accept what happen to the World Trade Center? I don't see either as needing acceptance. If I bomb fundamentalist Christians in the name of Durandal64, is it your problem? You clearly seem to not like them and I took it to mean that you thought the world would be a better place without them. Please accept my actions as they were done in your name.
Those people had unquestioning faith. Saying that they weren't Christians belies a staggering ignorance of history.
Was Ptolemy not a scientist? Did he not get the whole solar system completely wrong? Does that invalidate all of science? No, but you learn from it that sometimes scientists are wrong. The same goes for Christians. Big whoop.
But what's bad is pretending that their take on Christianity is the only valid one. They start from the assumption that Christianity must be tolerant and loving and interpret the Bible from that framework, completely disregarding history and the text on the page.
You really don't get the Bible or the religion. Sure, you can pull out one liners and short stories, but when you take them out of the context of the entire thing, they're useless. It's not surprising that you don't get it. I don't, either. Jesus three times told his disciples (who followed him around constantly and heard everything he said) that they didn't get it.
I'll give credence to this "true Christianity" claim when major churches start putting their money where their mouths are and declare the racist, sexist, morally abhorrent parts of the Bible invalid.
Won't ever happen. It's part of the story of God's relationship with man. It's a part that you don't seem to understand, but that doesn't make it wrong or morally abhorrent. It's neither of those things.
Re:Correction (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Correction (Score:3, Insightful)
The Creationist (or "Intelligent Design") drivel that is destroying our school system is from the Old Testament. It's Christians, not Jews, who want this and not the Theory of Evolution taught in schools.
Sure, Christians don't stone people to death for planting the wrong crops side-by-side -- but who does?
Re:Correction (Score:4, Interesting)
Let me rephrase that to more correctly reflect reality:
People who follow select parts of the old testament (ie. God Hates Fags) while ignoring others (ie. God Hates Blended Fabrics) are known as hypocrites. People who promote the legal enforcement of posting of the ten commandments on public buildings, while saying "Jesus Saves" are also hypocrites. People who say that paying taxes to support the poor on welfare is immoral, while ignoring Jesus's directives on charity, and rendering unto Caesar that which is Caesar's, are also hypocrites.
Many of these hypocrites self-identify as "Evangelical Christians".
Re:"True" Christianity (Score:4, Insightful)
Sophistry. Being a flawed human being and being a good person are not mutually exclusive. As for you thinking you deserve the wrath of a God who apparently impulsively flooded the entire planet and killed everything ... that is unfortunate. You're probably a decent person in real life.
Wait, so the atrocities in the Old Testament are humanity's fault? God ordered most of them! Hell, he committed a few himself!
That's very poetic, but it makes no sense. God comes down to Earth to lift a curse that he himself put on us? Why not just snap his fingers and make it all better? Isn't he omnipotent? Why all the theatrics? Could it be because Jesus was ripped off of earlier Messiah stories?
Yes, when we try to live by the laws of the Old Testament, everything gets fucked up. But God himself gave those laws to us, and they are clear as day. He himself ordered many massive slaughters in the Old Testament. He even created a slave class out of the Sons of Ham. Humanity isn't perfect, but we're nothing near the monster the Judeo-Christian God is.
Re:throw the first stone (Score:5, Insightful)
If they screw it up, that's too bad, and if we're in a position to give them advice that will help them to do a thing that will produce more happiness for them, that's wonderful, but usually we're not in that position, and if we aren't, then making judgements about it boils down to gossip.
One might make the argument that it's wrong for a person to amass great wealth in the abstract, and that therefore a person who accidentally amasses great wealth should do their best to divest themselves of it in a constructive way. But again, this falls to the person who makes the "mistake" of amassing this great wealth to judge, not to me.
Now if Mr. Jobs or Mr. Gates were to do something illegal to get their money, or something that we think should be illegal, then we could have a debate about whether the legal system had failed, and what to do about it, but again we wouldn't be talking about whether or not Mr. Jobs or Mr. Gates were a good or bad person - we'd be debating matters of public policy, which in itself would require no judgements to be made about the motivations of either party.
Re:throw the first stone (Score:3, Insightful)
It isn't about judging, there are certain facts here. I'll use Gates as an example. He has made no financial sacrifices. WHAT?! But he has given millions upon millions to charity - maybe billions!
About 5 years ago, I did a rough calculation on his net worth. If he gave $1 million away, it was the equivalent of someone worth $100,000 giving awa
Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the fine article, near the end, drawing a conclusion:
I respectfully disagree with the author's conclusion, unless by indicating "much more deserving", he is setting the bar incredibly low. Gates' fortune is every bit as obscene as the author claims Jobs' fortune is, and probably much more suspect in how Gates acquired it.
I get sick of the implied (or inferred by the masses) rags-to-riches yarn of Gates, college dropout made good. It's not true, Gates is of wealthy background, was a spoiled brat from the start and never had anything to lose, i.e., he was always destined to be rich and that would never have been in doubt. Unfortunately, he chose to become a goon and run roughshod over the technology world, amassing wealth unethically, and eventually (by DOJ judgement) illegally.
While I expect good to come of money Gates gives away, it's certainly less because Gates is a good guy and more that money can buy good things.
As for the slashdot question posed: Is it important that donations from rich billionaires be public or should they remain private?, probably yes. But probably more important is the motivation. I don't get any sense Bill's motivation is humanitarian, but do sense much of the work and generosity comes more from his wife Linda.
Re:Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:3, Interesting)
That was sarcasm btw. I put Jobs and Gates in exactly the same ethical category. Low to none.
Re:Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft is a convicted monopolist. And there is a long history of abusive behavior investigated by the government, and consent decrees signed by Microsoft that were later ignored by the government. Or the response to Microsoft's violation of the consent decree is yet another investiga
Re:Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've heard quite a lot of people claim that we shouldn't care if Microsoft is a big, evil corporation, because Bill Gates is very charitable. One of my friends has even said something to the effect of, "Well, yeah, Microsoft rips me off, but
Re:Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:4, Insightful)
Anonymous or not? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, from a pragmatic point of view, I don't care whether it's anonymous or not. He wants the credit? Fine. Let him have it. I mean, imagine that you're some dude living in the third world, and some rich American is willing to spend a few bucks so that you don't die from some easily-preventable disease. He's doing it because he wants to be considered a good guy, rather than because he really cares about you, poor third world person that you are. Do you care? Or are you grateful that he did it, for whatever reason? You bet you're grateful. What's more, you probably consider him to be a pretty good guy.
It's like the actor who, immediately after Katrina, went down to New Orleans, rented a boat with his own money, and started pulling people out of houses. So he had a video crew with him. So? If I'm one of the people he saved, do I care that he wanted some publicity? Not at all. In fact, if I ever wound up talking to a reporter, I'd be sure to mention how this wonderful guy spent his own money to rescue me (thereby giving him some publicity).
I'm no Bill Gates fanboy. I despise his business ethics. But I appreciate his charity work.
Don't require the motives to be perfectly pure. Just be glad that he's doing something, for whatever reason.
I would be better to invest in start-ups (Score:4, Interesting)
Basically, the one that I admire is not jobs (a showman), or gates (doing this to turn his reputation), but Paul Allen. Paul is investing in risky start-ups. Some make it big, others do not. He was the largest investor into internet over cable in 1994. He basically, created that market and all the jobs associated with it. Now he is investing into space. His invstment won the X-prize and I am guessing that he will make several other key investments that will create far more jobs and do more good than simply throwing a few dollars would ever do.
Re:Gates deserving of "rock star status"? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think you can classify a person's acts as good and bad, rather than tagging them as fundamentally good or bad. Gates has been a rapacious capitalist, and a generous philanthropist. Jobs has been a sleazeball (ripping off Woz very early in their relationship), but without him, Apple would be a shadow of what it is. In some ways, it's because Jobs is (from the sound of it) an a**h*** that Apple has contributed to the computer industry as much as it has.
What was the quote about you can still be moral and earn a million, but not a billion?
If I have a choice.. (Score:4, Funny)
Who Else but.... (Score:5, Funny)
Woz. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Woz. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
can it be neither? (Score:2, Interesting)
Hear hear (Score:2)
Re:can it be neither? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:can it be neither? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, see, I didn't know you knew them both well enough to say this. Just out of curiosity, why does Melinda Gates do it then?
Re:can it be neither? (Score:2)
Obvious Third Option: The Woz (Score:5, Insightful)
Does Ballmer donate anything? (Score:2)
Re:Does Ballmer donate anything? (Score:5, Funny)
funny internet videos for our entertainment
Re:Obvious Third Option: The Woz (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, no. Gates hasn't worked on any hacks personally since Altair Basic, and even then he was a part of a team. Microsoft in general buys way more technology than they ever innovate. Compare that to the elegance of using the off cycle of a 6802 microprocessor instead of a video card just to create a computer with fewer chips, and thus cheaper for consumers....one is of these things is not like the other.
be rich in fam
Re:Obvious Third Option: The Woz (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, yes. Bill worked on vast amounts of software himself as a developer for the first decade
Tough (Score:2)
Giving.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Here's a thought though: Does it matter how much people give, or is it the reason that they give?
The edge of the market (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The edge of the market (Score:5, Funny)
Well, then, stick it to Microsoft. Kill yourself now.
Bill or is it Melinda (Score:5, Insightful)
As for the question, I favor Jobs.
-S
Re:Bill or is it Melinda (Score:3, Insightful)
Buffett has a very similar attitude in that he thinks he is a better accumulator of money while he is alive, but near death most of it will be sent back out into the world.
s
Steve Jobs will bring down Microsoft. (Score:2, Insightful)
Steve Jobs.
Pro prio: He has done a remarkable job with Apple. From securing the first steps of Maslow, to the rocket Apple is destined to be for the next five years.
Pro secundo: He has won every victory, fighting honestly with QUALITY as the preferred weapon. Pixar never had a "B Team". People invest in Apple because of innovation and quality. People invest in Dell because they are slightly better than other PC distributors when it comes to logistics.
Pro tertio: Steve Jobs ultimate motive is to brin
Interesting, but yet another rehash of mac v. pc (Score:2, Troll)
is totally off. In short, the elements being compared and how they
relate to your daily life are skewed.
If I were the receipient of one of Gates' grants, I'm sure he would be
my hero. At the same time I think it's great that he's putting his vast
fortune to so much good. That's all brilliant.
However, on a day-to-day basis, I get joy and productivity gains from
using Apple products and Apple OS. I get pain and suffering from using
Microsoft pr
Neither. (Score:2)
Gates (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is why, I'd rather have Microsoft be a monopoly and make billions and use a chunk of that to help the world, rather than a lot of other companies and executives (Darth McBride, Larry Ellison) who just have all that money and do no good with it. Well, no good for the world that is.
For humanitarian things, definitely Gates.
If I wanted opinions on being stylish and wearing turtlenecks, I'd ask Jobs.
Who is the bigger hero? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Who is the bigger hero? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm extremely disappointed to see the slashdot crowd almost entirely bashing Gates becuase they don't care for microsofts software. This assumption that somehow Jobs is a better person because you like his software more is stupid, the companies are run with the same goals, Apple just has a different marketing strategy and alot less brute force to throw behind their decisions. I'm quite confident that if Apple had 96% of the OS market, and Microsoft had 4%, then peoples opinions would be exactly the opposite as they are now. It's the same old "Hate the big guy!" attitude, and its not exactly novel or interesting anymore.
Gates has helped millions of people by donating more money than most large countries. This is a wonderful thing and I applaud him for it. Jobs may or may not be donating money, as the article says that no documentation of this could be verified, but It really doesn't matter to me, it is completely up to him what he does with his money. And now that my rant is over, I'll throw my opinion out there.... I was more than a little disappointed when Apple ran their marketing campaign a few years ago using pictures of many famous civil rights people and other people like Einstien. The exploitation of good people for making money seemed awfully sickening to me. But this is likely a result of a powerful marketing team and not really the fault of Jobs.
Re:Who is the bigger hero? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not neccesarily because they don't care for microsofts software.
Perhaps it is because microsoft is a convicted monopolist and Bill Gates is the worst of the bunch. They have been found guilty in court of illegally crushing their competition in the name of profits. Had they not done that, there would have been more competition and prices would have been driven down. Gates and microsoft would not be so rich in the first place and the money would instead distributed in the rest of society where it should have been in the first place.
Gates gestures are nothing IMO compared to the harm he and others have caused society with their monopolistic practices.
This is nothing to do with software, and everything to do with a bunch of over powerful, greedy, damaging people who will stop at nothing to "stay ahead" in their industry.
Forgive me for not falling at their feet when they give a few percent of their immorally gained wealth back to society in some way.
Why compare Steve Jobs and Melinda Gates? (Score:4, Funny)
I'd say my hero is Bill Gates, because he showed the world, there is no reason to be afraid to be openly evil. I love him for paving the way for all of us villains to be. He shows us it is good to be evil :)
Answer By Definition (Score:2)
What about Richard Stallman and Linus Torvalds? (Score:2, Informative)
Linus is also a great manager [businessweek.com] and both he and Richard won the 1998 EFF Pioneer Award. [wikipedia.org]
Free is the best charity of all.
Mad, bad and dangerous to know - Jobs by a mile! (Score:5, Insightful)
As a creative sort of chap, I've always thought Jobs' heady mix of insanity, cunning and insight to be quite refreshing. Bill Gates is a nasty cold fish who seemingly knows nothing about humanity save that which he can buy.
Jobs makes things that are not just useful to me - they've helped bring out my artistic talents over the years - they've enabled me to create.
What has Bill Gates done for me and my world? Nothing, actually. He perpetuated some highly dysfunctional ways to interact with machines and generally works at dominating the distribution of information.
So he uses he obscene wealth (and it is obscene - and a bit of a fluke combined with Sam Walton-like business sense) for good. Well, that's great and I expect nothing less. Maybe he'll be considered another Andrew Carnegie someday, but I see very little to be interested by or admiring of about the man.
The things that Jobs and Co dream up bring pleasure and fun into my life.
Jobs (Score:2)
Bill Gates was also (on numerous occassions) at the right place at the right time but he chose the dark path. Now, after a quarter of a century he's trying to atone for his sins by giving his money away. I hate the man with a passion because thanks to him and his company the com
Maybe Gates gives so much because... (Score:2)
Probably not though. People aren't pure evil or pure good and are very inconsistent.
There's no reason why someone can't be a total selfish fuckwit and responsible for a huge amount of damage in one area (technology), while simultaneously being a generous humanitarian in another area (disease charity).
Whats important... (Score:2)
Not having billions, I would love to make my donations anonymously to keep from being on the fund raising mailing list of thousands of organizations. I figure if you are a billionare, you are on the list anyway, and you can pay someone to through out all the damn return addr
Loaded Questions (Score:5, Insightful)
Rich billionaires can't hide (Score:3, Interesting)
"Rich billionaires"!!
Moving right aloing, this isn't an "important question", it's a stupid one. No one can spend a billion dollars on anything in secrecy; most especially not the CEO of an American company.
Do what you do best. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's more important to do what you do best. Jobs really is a showman, and he really is technologist. Gates? Gates was a damn good coder, and he is a damn proficient businessman. The humanitarian stuff only started in earnest when he realized he had to do some serious brown-nosing with the government in order to get a free pass from the DOJ for his abuse of his monopoly.
On that score - it's Jobs by a million miles. He knows what he's good at. He does it.
Besides, you really don't wanna see Gates putting on a show with technology [snopes.com] anyways, but at least now you know where Steve "monkeyboy" Ballmer got his dance lessons.
Private or public donations? Not my money, none of my freaking business.
If it were my money, it'd be donated in private.
You don't have to believe in Jesus -- hell, you don't even have to believe in God to see that the long-haired hippy freak had a pretty good point. If you support a cause - donate. There doesn't have to be a God for you to feel pretty fucking good about what you've done to advance your views.
Greedy capitalists? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd say Woz. (Score:3, Insightful)
I met him at Apple Boston in 1983 and he had a great attitude, even when I asked him about the Franklin.
Warren Buffett (Score:5, Interesting)
The most interesting thing that I learned is that while Buffett isn't a well philanthropist, when he dies, something like 1% of his wealth will go to his children as an inheritance, and the other 99% (currently about $39.6 billion) will go to a charatable foundation. He's told the administrator of that foundation that he wants him to try and "do something huge" with the money, not just spread it out to lots of smaller causes.
His justification for doing it this way instead of giving to charity right now is that the more money he has, the more money he can make, and the more money he puts into the foundation before he dies.
Now, it could be easily argued that he just likes making money, and doesn't want to give it away, but his impressively simple lifestyle argues that he certainly doesn't like spending money on himself.
I imagine that if I had billions of dollars, it would be much more fun to see that money go to work helping people while I was around to see it, but Buffett's plan makes sense from a practical standpoint.
Re:Warren Buffett (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe someone else has answered this, but where the hell does one park 40 billion d
neither actually (Score:3, Insightful)
Jobs on the other hand has always associated himself with cool stuff though none of it can really be attributed to him. He was just sort of there at the right moment, surrounded by brilliant people doing really great stuff.
If I'd have to pick one it would be Jobs. Mainly because I like people capable of thinking out of the box. There's too few of those in this world. And Jobs has certainly proved that he's capable of that. Gates on the other hand
The Woz? (Score:3)
http://www.woz.org/ [woz.org]
Whos the Best Technica Ars? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, given the choices, all in all, I'd say I'd have to go with Steve Wozniak as my choice for hero, or possibly Larry Wall.
Giving, doing, being (Score:3, Insightful)
Later, I decided that attention to the letter of the law was less important than doing what I thought was right in the higher sense. My opinion of others followed.
Still later, I realized that giving to others of my money, my time, and personal kindness was the key to being a good person. Still, that's how I began to judge.
Now, I don't care about being a "good person" in anyone else's eyes, and I tend to be a lot less judgy than before.
Anonymously helping others, showing kindness when you can, taking care of your responsibilities, and being a good citizen are all faces on the same multisided die.
Giving a trunk full of cash to the needy is no more important than dealing fairly with your customers, your employer, or your employees. An overflowing generosity in public doesn't make up for churlish behavior in private, nor do kind words and clean hands cover stingyness.
It's all the same.
So tip the waitress the price of the meal, and tell her she's great. Hug a child. Vote well. Be virtuous, and you know exactly what I mean.
Life is sweeter if you play nice.
Ok, for those of you who don't know what I mean by virtue: you're not trying.
Jobs saved me (Score:5, Informative)
I was on my deepest depression crisis ever and I was already planning my suicide. I was sure that day would be my last day when I came across his speech at Stanford University [stanford.edu]. And his words made me rethink everything I was going through at that moment, and gave me enough strength to give up the plan and keep going.
So yeah, Jobs is my personal hero. No matter how great amount of money Gates throw at projects, Jobs is the guy who said the right thing at the right moment.
[And I tried to send him my story, but I'm almost sure he would never see it]
Generous Criminals (Score:3, Insightful)
TWW
Gates isn't Microsoft and Microsoft isn't Gates (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think the same can be said about Jobs and Apple. To me Apple is Steve Jobs and Steve Jobs is Apple. It is so hard to see the two apart because with Jobs I don't think we would still have Apple Computers and the PC world would be less for it. We can have Microsoft without Gates as there are many people who can keep the behemoth moving. The problem with Apple is is that it doesn't work as a Behemoth. It really survived on the personality and drive of one person, no one else in the organization had the right stuff to make it work. It takes a special person to push the limits and know what will appeal. Sure Jobs has made some blunders but his successes are always so much greater that they outshine his failures. That is kind of how Turner is too, the difference is that Jobs has the right flair.
If Gates has one major problem is that he really is boring. But Microsoft didn't get where it was because of it being flashy. It got there through methodical plodding that is required to make good companies large ones. They didn't take big risks, they take calculated risks. It did make a lot of people wealthy and some fabously wealthy. It is very good to see that Gates, with probably a big amount of his wife's influence, do something truly effective with his money. He does have more than any one person or family could use and even after his donations he still does, the great thing about him is that he does not appear to have any ending in sight for his giving. He could be buying up the world's businesses and building a personal empire but he instead is building up the world he lives in and the best part is that most of those he helps will never know who he is. That last part is what truly makes him my favorite. It is one thing to help people who you know and will know you for that help, its a whole 'nuther thing to help those who will never know you or of you.
I find the whole thing disturbing (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do they need so much money? I respect the fact they worked bloody hard to get it, but you reach a point where having $1 Billion vs having $10 Billion really doesn't make that much off a difference! Now, imagine what that $9 Billion could do for humanity.
Most donations I see from celebrities and other wealthy individuals represent less than 1% of their net worth. This makes me sick.
Donald Knuth (Score:3, Insightful)
My hero would be somebody like Donald Knuth [stanford.edu]. He is a true computer scientist and wrote TAOCP [stanford.edu] and TeX singlehandedly, amongst many other accomplishments.
As a future computer scientist, I would rather be in Knuth's shoes than in Gates's shoes or Jobs's shoes (even though I like Jobs a lot).
Three words... (Score:3, Funny)
After all, he already declared his undying love to us developers, developers, developers!
Bill Gates.... (Score:5, Funny)
a robber barron... (Score:4, Insightful)
Steve Wozniak versus Paul Allen (Score:3, Insightful)
What's the third choice? (Score:3, Insightful)
From the Forbes 2005 net worth list:
$3 billion dollars net worth
$46.5 billion dollars net worth
There is no denying that Bill Gates has donated alot of money. But that isn't too surprising considering he makes a ridiculous amount of money. His money makes ridiculous amounts of money just sitting around. Bill Gates is also seeking good will from the public because his image needs the good will.
While his donations DO help people, it is doubtful that the intentions originated from charitable origins.
Steve Jobs, on the other hand, has a fairly good public image. His goodwill currency is good and he has no need to be charitable. In fact, it could very well be that he donates anonymously so that there isn't publicity drawn to him.
Articles like the one Wired and ArsTechnica leads one to believe that those who donate more are better people. The natural conclusion from such an observation is that richer people are better people because they can donate more. History has shown this to not be the case.
There are quite a few stories, sayings, and proverbs which illustrates the the above. My favorite is one involving donations at a temple during the New Years. Many people are donating money at the local temple. Whenever someone makes a particularly generous donation, there is a gong sounded. A fairly wealthy man comes in and donates chest after chest of gold. He is thanked, but there is no gong sounded. Shortly after, as he is leaving, a poor begger woman approaches and tries to donate a handful of copper coins. When she drops her few coins into the charity box, a monk sounds a gong, signifying a great contribution.
The wealthy man notices this and angrily questions why his many chests of gold did not sound the gong but her's did?
The monk answered that she had very little and yet gave as much as she could. While her few copper coins were not worth much to wealthier people, it was a great sum of money for her. Whereas the amount given by the wealthy man represented a much lesser sum. It was money the man can easily afford to part with whereas the coppers were not for the begger woman.
I do not deny the good the money will do. But I have to say that to judge someone by how much they donate is a poor means of judging.
The wealthy tend to donate because it is something which gives them the attention of others or because the charitable donation garners them profitable returns elsewhere.
Charity really should be for the benefit of those receiving the charity, not for the adulation of the giver. To know that you have done good for an organization, a group, or a cause should be enough. For someone like Bill Gates, such charitable givings are like bandages to his and his company's public image.
In stark contrast, Steve Jobs is a fairly private man. Mainly keeps to himself and doesn't make a scene unless it's at one of his company's presentations or unveilings. He's either at work or he's not. If he donates to charity, he certainly isn't making any noise about having done so.
Given the chance, I'm sure Steve Jobs' company would behave much like a Microsoft Monopoly. But it isn't. And neither is Steve's worth.
Given the choice, I would choose neither Bill nor Steve as my hero. They are both geniuses and visionaries in their own way. But they are not heroes.
You want to pick a hero? Pick Steve Wozniak. Now there is a hero. Pick the local volunteer at the homeless shelter. There's a hero. Pick the dutiful daughter or son who attends to their elderly parents and/or grandparents. Now there's a hero.
There are everyday hero's all around us. But most of us ignore them like we do the beggar woman who gives, because we are so distracted by the chests of gold. I wouldn't choose Bill or Steve.
Its a toss-up (Score:3, Insightful)
Steve Jobs I admire for not taking second best, he may be a tyrant to get things done but he knows (or at least knew, I'm not too fond of OSX's shortcommings either) how to get his crew to code the extra hour and make something absoutely great into insanely great (at least he did).
What's real? (Score:3, Interesting)
Perceptions can be wrong. And the media can supply plenty of incorrect perceptions.
I thank both men for giving us the computers we all have become so use to. And both men have had a huge influence on the computer market too, imho.
But to answer the question; Gates is a very shrewd business man who is known for creating a market for himself. My experience is these types of people generally are not of the humanitarian type until they are forced to be.(nothing wrong with that and nothing wrong with Gates having a good PR team and wife to making him look humanitarian). Jobs OTOH is a people driven person, even though he may drive them too hard. Because he understands the value of streaching folks to get their best. So he is more likely to be a real humanitarian under non-work conditions.
Re:let bono decide (Score:2)
Re:uh... neither? (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe they should be guest speakers at this years LinuxWorld Expo then?