Re: [LONG} Funding Cypherpunks Projects
At 01:54 PM 9/7/97 -0400, Robert Hettinga wrote:
At 3:35 pm -0400 on 9/3/97, Tim May wrote: ... Certainly a bass-ackward way to do it. Unfortunately, that's the way Disney did it, or L.B. Mayer did it, or Gates, or Edison, or Parekh did it. They had a picture in their head of the way the world worked, or should work, they did things, as cheaply as possible, which should work in that picture, and they were right. They still invested something, is my point, whether it was their money or their time, or their inspiration. ... Gates? The closest he had to a grand vision is being able to predict the financial gain behind programming computers. That in my opinion was marketing savvy, not a grand vision, for lack of a readily available substitute. You know about traf-o-data. This was a far cry from what he now has. He rode the wave by changing with the times, hedging his bets, being in the right place at the right time, etc. That, however is about all I know as the book he wrote was a little too basic alone the lines of my interests for my tastes and I had to put it down for more enjoyable activities like staring at the wall. When I can next stomache reading more kindergarten level computer analogies, I'll finish reading his book. ...
Asking Jim Clarke or Bill Gates to opine on his strategies for success is not quite as pointless, but is not real useful either. Ask also Manny Fernandez about Gavilan Computer. Or ask the financiers of Ovation, Processor Technology, Mad Computers, Symbolics, Thinking Machines, Trilogy, or a hundred other examples of companies that burned through a billion dollars of hard-earned investor money. ... Interesting note. I heard that the guy that started Thinking Machines is now an imagineer at one of the evil empires. Who would have thought that one of the guys responsible for parallel computing development would now be building theme park rides.
BTW. I love this little game of artistic response. It actually reads like a conversation and makes it a whole lot easier to take the origional post out of context. Remind me to use line numbers when I respond to one of your posts with a long message. Or at least number the paragraphs. Not that it would matter.
At 9:48 PM -0700 9/9/97, Robert Hettinga wrote:
At 11:21 pm -0400 on 9/9/97, Sean Roach wrote:
Gates? The closest he had to a grand vision is being able to predict the financial gain behind programming computers.
Yes. And I'd call that a "grand vision", even in Tim's use of the phrase. He understood that computer software, and not the computer, especially in a world of microprocessors, was the most important part of the market. It might even be safe to say that BillG is responsible for at least the last 10 years or so of Intel's existance...
Nonsense. A lot of those machines are running Linux, or other flavors of Unix. And lots of other microprocessors comparable in every way to Intel's processors are running the Mac OS, or some flavor of Unix, or whatever. Had MS never existed, the world would still be consuming vast amounts of microprocessors. Possibly more, many of us think. ( I use a Mac, as may be known to many of you. The issue of the OS is separable from the issue of the processor...the Mac OS is no more tied to the Motorola 680X0 than the MS OS is tied to the Intel x86. Indeed, the Mac OS runs on the IBM/Motorola PowerPC, and the Windows NT OS runs on the DEC Alpha (and used to run on the PPC).
My understanding is that for all his apopletic "code reviews", Billzebub couldn't code his way out of a paper bag.
Also nonsense.
Nonetheless, people who didn't share his "vision", like IBM, and DEC, and now Apple, and all the rest of his competition, got their clocks cleaned.
Utter nonsense. I lack the time to write about the early history of MS, Seattle Computers, and Gary Kildall, but to make this claim above indicates Bob is sacrificing objectivity for some sort of cheap shot in favor of MS. I used to know Kildall, when he was hanging around Intel in the mid-70s, and up until two weeks before his death. The situation was a lot more nuanced than this "vision of Bill" argument suggests.
Lot of dirty laundry there. Like the hint that Gates was actually thrown out of Harvard (well, "asked to leave", anyway, and all is certainly forgiven, now, after a $decamillion donation to the Harvard endowment...) because he used their computer resources, including their Zylog(?) chip emulator and PDP-11 BASIC source code to essentially port DEC BASIC to the Altair for resale. (Now what was that, Bill, about people duping *your*
Are you making this stuff up as you go along? You spout about the "vision of Bill," but then you fantasize about how he and Paul got Altair Basic out. As it happens, I also know the founders of Zilog, and the Z-80 was not available at the time the Altair and IMSAI machines were gaining popularity. (A friend of mine designed the IMSAI 8080, the first semi-decent S-100 machine. I'm tempted to e-mail this fantasy to him and give him his laugh for the evening.) The larger issues of Bill Gates' contributions, or whatever, to the world are much more nuanced than these fantasies would have it. The issue of chip production is largely orthogonal to the issue of which OS is being used. Like I said, if one believes the critics of Windows, Intel would have sold _more_ chips had machines been less brain-damaged. Or maybe it takes a 200 MHz Pentium Pro to make up for the inefficient OS. But I won't buy the canonization of Bill Gates as the Engine of the Revolution. If, as one wag put it, Princess Di was "Joan of Arc with a good haircut," then does this make Bill Gates "Joan of Arc with a bad haircut"? --Tim May There's something wrong when I'm a felon under an increasing number of laws. Only one response to the key grabbers is warranted: "Death to Tyrants!" ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1398269 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."
At 11:21 pm -0400 on 9/9/97, Sean Roach wrote:
Gates? The closest he had to a grand vision is being able to predict the financial gain behind programming computers.
Yes. And I'd call that a "grand vision", even in Tim's use of the phrase. He understood that computer software, and not the computer, especially in a world of microprocessors, was the most important part of the market. It might even be safe to say that BillG is responsible for at least the last 10 years or so of Intel's existance... If you "change with the times", but don't know where you're going, you'll go nowhere at all. Knowing where you're going when you change, (and actually being right :-)) is called "vision". For instance, Bill figured out that he couldn't sell operating systems to people, he had to sell them to computer manufacturers. That's what "vision" gets ya. And I didn't say that technical "vision" was the only kind there is, especially when it comes to making money. :-). My understanding is that for all his apopletic "code reviews", Billzebub couldn't code his way out of a paper bag. His last effort was on the second version of Altair BASIC, and they had to do a ground-up rewrite after he was through with it. After *his* version shipped, of course. :-). Nonetheless, people who didn't share his "vision", like IBM, and DEC, and now Apple, and all the rest of his competition, got their clocks cleaned. Ah, the wonders of pickleball, and dorm room poker, and a grandmother who wouldn't let you have dessert unless you won the sack race. If you can find it, go read "Hard Drive" (no, not *that* one..). An unauthorized biography by a couple Seattle Post-Intelligencer reporters. Written before, of course, Win 3.1 actually took over the world, otherwise they would have been fired. :-). Heck, if they weren't then, they probably are now, anyway. Lot of dirty laundry there. Like the hint that Gates was actually thrown out of Harvard (well, "asked to leave", anyway, and all is certainly forgiven, now, after a $decamillion donation to the Harvard endowment...) because he used their computer resources, including their Zylog(?) chip emulator and PDP-11 BASIC source code to essentially port DEC BASIC to the Altair for resale. (Now what was that, Bill, about people duping *your* paper BASIC tape and *you* losing *your* "investment"?) And how his first software "deal" was sneaking off with someone else's PDP-11(?) operating system tapes and reselling them for a cool $10k at the tender age of 16. Hmmm. Sounds familiar, yes, CPM/QDOS fans? See, boys and girls? All it takes to be the supreme monopolist (okay, not quite a monopolist, but close enough for government work) and the World's Last Industrial Tycoon is a taste for larceny. Okay. And a 1600 SAT score... But it's still very hard to see why they call it "intellectual" property. We might as well legalize software "piracy" and be done with it. Recursive auctions, anyone? Cheers, Bob Hettinga "But, he didn't understand. The point was to *win*." -- Richard Nixon, on his first congressional opponent, who Nixon falsely accused of communism (well, he *was* a pinko, anyway...) ----------------- Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com), Philodox e$, 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' The e$ Home Page: http://www.shipwright.com/
At 1:36 am -0400 on 9/10/97, Tim May wrote:
Nonsense. A lot of those machines are running Linux, or other flavors of Unix. And lots of other microprocessors comparable in every way to Intel's processors are running the Mac OS, or some flavor of Unix, or whatever.
I'd love to see the numbers on that. Though, I wonder where the "90% of the world's computers" hype comes from...
Had MS never existed, the world would still be consuming vast amounts of microprocessors. Possibly more, many of us think.
Yes. But would they be, in such a large proponderance, Intel processors? Granted, I was a little quick on the draw with the "last 10 years of Intel existance" crack. Intel would certainly still be here, but, without the x86 demand, caused primarily by DOS, and especially by WIN3.1, maybe they wouldn't be so much in the catbird seat. Of course, they've had a "vision thang" of their own at Intel. They own the Valley franchise, certainly.
( I use a Mac, as may be known to many of you. The issue of the OS is separable from the issue of the processor...the Mac OS is no more tied to the Motorola 680X0 than the MS OS is tied to the Intel x86. Indeed, the Mac OS runs on the IBM/Motorola PowerPC, and the Windows NT OS runs on the DEC Alpha (and used to run on the PPC).
Yes, yes, yes. And Apple, according to Don Crabb this week, is gonna use IBM and probably Intel chips, too, some day, though I'm not sure what machine *you* use has to do with this discussion. The comment about Intel was certainly not a shot at you, Tim, after all...
My understanding is that for all his apopletic "code reviews", Billzebub couldn't code his way out of a paper bag.
Also nonsense.
Really? I have cited a source to the contrary. Would you like to provide your own proof of Bill Gates' programming ability instead? I'd love myself to see the commented code, even from, say, QuickBASIC, with the ';--BG' or something, next to the revisions... Don't even need whole modules. Frankly, I've never heard of any, and you can bet that the Redmond publicity machine would have said something by now after 10 years.
Nonetheless, people who didn't share his "vision", like IBM, and DEC, and now Apple, and all the rest of his competition, got their clocks cleaned.
Utter nonsense. I lack the time to write about the early history of MS, Seattle Computers, and Gary Kildall, but to make this claim above indicates Bob is sacrificing objectivity for some sort of cheap shot in favor of MS.
I didn't think I was saying anything that wasn't conventionally accepted opinion, there. :-). I think you're just disputing this because *I* said it, Tim. Sort of a bad reason to argue, isn't it? After all, I'm a certified Mac Bigot, myself, if you insist on psychoanalyzing my motivation from a two line sentence. :-). It seems to me a fortune now measured in tens of billions of dollars, and the most plutographic magazine in the world calling him the richest man on the planet kind of speaks for itself, wouldn't you?
I used to know Kildall, when he was hanging around Intel in the mid-70s, and up until two weeks before his death. The situation was a lot more nuanced than this "vision of Bill" argument suggests.
Yeah, I know, Tim. You *knew* Gary Kildall, and Bill Gates is *no* Gary Kildall. :-). He certainly wasn't.
Are you making this stuff up as you go along? You spout about the "vision of Bill," but then you fantasize about how he and Paul got Altair Basic out.
Actually, don't blame me. My fantasy life isn't *that* healhy. It's in that 'Hard Drive' book, and I expect that the authors, particularly as they hoped to remain employed in Seattle at the time :-), probably had their facts straight.
As it happens, I also know the founders of Zilog, and the Z-80 was not available at the time the Altair and IMSAI machines were gaining popularity. (A friend of mine designed the IMSAI 8080, the first semi-decent S-100 machine. I'm tempted to e-mail this fantasy to him and give him his laugh for the evening.)
Okay. Granted I had the chip name wrong. That was what the little (?) was for next to the chip's name for, anyway. Sorry, but at midnight I wasn't about to wake the fact checking department for the company name. However, the fact is that the chip emulator was at Harvard, as was the PDP-11 BASIC source, and the claim was made by several people who were there at the time, to the authors of "Hard Drive", that Allen and Gates did use both the emulator and the BASIC source, on the Harvard machines, to port the DEC BASIC to the chip which the Altair used (whatever it was), which they in turn took to Albuquerque and MIPS. (Or whatever the company's name was which made the Altair, which is, like its chip manufacturer's name, irrelevant to the point I was making.)
The larger issues of Bill Gates' contributions, or whatever, to the world are much more nuanced than these fantasies would have it.
Sticks and stones, Tim. Insults don't become such well-known expositor of rational thought... And then Tim says:
The issue of chip production is largely orthogonal to the issue of which OS is being used. Like I said, if one believes the critics of Windows, Intel would have sold _more_ chips had machines been less brain-damaged.
And refutes it with:
Or maybe it takes a 200 MHz Pentium Pro to make up for the inefficient OS.
Which, of course proves, my point. Thank you. :-). My own specious gerrymandering of your words aside, I do think that software does drive hardware, as Microsoft folks, like Mhyrvold, often claim, "Software is a gas", and all that. How else do you explain things like the x86's imbedded floating point circuitry, and now the MMX stuff, which will certainly end up on the x86 someday if Intel doesn't get RISC religion... Heck, the demand for RISC is, paradoxically, driven by software itself, don't you think? Just move some microcode over to software and the chip runs faster, or whatever the rationale is. Could it be your desire to rip my heart out and show it to me before I die is clouding your judgement about something you know a lot about? Nawwww...
But I won't buy the canonization of Bill Gates as the Engine of the Revolution.
Neither do I, even on the canonical inverse, my smart cracks about "Billzebub" not withstanding. However, if money's the way you keep score, n-dy billion dollars pretty much speaks for itself, I figure... Seriously, there is something to be said for BillG's assimilative impulses and understanding of the markets he's in. I would more certainly attribute his fortune to his own "vision", than to dumb luck and path determinacy, which is what I think I hear you saying. Clearly, the market would look different without Bill Gates in it. I attibute that to "grand vision". Cheers, Bob Hettinga ----------------- Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com), Philodox e$, 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' The e$ Home Page: http://www.shipwright.com/
participants (3)
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Robert Hettinga -
Sean Roach -
Tim May