On one side of the desk, Bill Gates, the worlds richest geek, a brilliant and aggressive competitor who played so hard that the U.S. government stepped in and declared the company he led a monopoly. A man not known for casual chitchat and easy laughter.
On the other side, Jon Stewart, a left-leaning TV host whose sometimes goofy sense of humor accompanies a penchant for tweaking the powerful and famous. An interviewer who relishes the unscripted question.
Yes, oddly, Bill Gates decided to go on the Daily Show. You knew his motivation had to be compelling. The software titan rarely allows himself to be in a public situation thats not tightly controlled, much less the set of a live-taped TV show hosted by an irreverent comic.
The reason, of course, was the launch of the long-birthed Vista OS, due for release just a half-hour after the Daily Shows airtime. Whatever you think of Gates, you have to hand it to him: after all these years hes still willing to do whatevers needed to sell Microsoft.
The problem is, its harder to sell Microsoft than it used to be. The release of Vista to corporate users, in November, was met with a collective yawn. Possibly next year or the year after was the enterprises attitude toward upgrading.
As for consumers and Vista, the consensus seems to be that most users will wait for a new PC to upgrade. Compare that to the old days, when breathless fans lined up at midnight to clutch Windows 95 as soon as humanly possible.
But its not 1995 anymore. The Internet has grown up into a robust child, running around the room knocking over most everything, including possibly Microsofts business model. Internet-based software-as-services (SaaS) challenges Microsofts primacy. If your apps are reduced to the services they provide with no on-premise installation wont that destabilize customer-vendor relationships?
Additionally, the rise of virtualization enables computers to run more than one OS, meaning Microsoft is expected to share space with competitors. Speaking of which: Microsoft was pushed into last years alliance with Novell because its customers needed Microsoft software to be more interoperable with gasp Linux, once just an upstart and now a hard-muscled competitor.
Microsoft certainly has the top talent and market muscle to navigate all these challenges, but the old sense of invincibility is gone. If its going to keep on thriving, the company will have to dig a little deeper.
That might be one reason that the figurehead himself, Bill Gates not the most jocular fellow decided to leave his immediate comfort zone and go on the ultra-trendy Daily Show.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Bill Gates!
Jon Stewart, in his opening remarks, enthused about having Gates on. He will explain to us how we will all soon be enslaved by our CPU masters.
After a commercial break featuring an ad for iPod Gates walked out in his trademark pullover sweater and button-down shirt. Someone in the rowdy audience shouted, Yo Dog! to which Stewart explained to the smiling Gates, Theyre big Windows fans, my friend.
Stewart wasted no time before gently poking Gates about how long Microsoft had taken to release the oft-delayed Vista. After Gates said that the last release was five years back, Stewart noted that five years is so long in the tech world that, back then, People were using abacuses.
Gates was ready. Yeah, its usually between three and five years, so this is at the long end, he said, in a statement that must have provoked guffaws among shareholders. So its all the more impactful when its done.
To which Stewart ribbed him about his low-key enthusiasm: Settle down, sir.
The conversation moved on to the release itself. Stewart explained he wasnt much of a computer expert, so hed need some tutoring.
Stewart: What does the F12 button do? Does it do anything?
Gates: Id stay away from it if I were you. Start with the F1 and work your way up.
Stewart: Does the F12 do something to someone elses computer?
Gates: No.
Gates talked about the process of incorporating tester feedback as Vista was developed, explaining that fifty families in eight countries, along with five million expert users, gave feedback for the beta version.
Stewart: What is a beta version? Does that in any way make you sterile?