The Engadget Interview: Bill Gates (again!)

CES wasn't only about crazy gadget news and booth tours – we also scored a second chance to sit down with
our new best friend Bill Gates and ask him all about the big announcements he made during his keynote last Wednesday.
Read on to find out what he had to say about online video download subscription services, whether or not he was happy
with the launch of the Xbox 360, which Xbox 360 games he's been playing, how he still thinks there's time to avoid a
format war between Blu-ray and HD-DVD, why he doesn't think that Apple's switch to Intel chips makes a difference for
Microsoft, and how he is now, finally, a Treo user.
Thanks, it's good to sit down with you
again, I hope you're having a good time at CES.
Oh, it's always fun.
Before we
start, I wanted to congratulate you and your wife on being named by Time as their Persons of the Year along
with Bono.
Thank you.
First off, I wanted to talk about some of the stuff you
talked about your keynote, specifically Vongo, which is going to be the first of what I presume will be several online
video subscription services that will be announced in the next few months. It's similar to the ToGo services that are
available already for music, but do you think that online video download subscriptions have a greater chance of being
successful than the rental model has so far been for music? Are customers already used to the idea of renting movies,
but it's taking them some time to getting used to the idea of renting music?
Yeah, I mean, movies
are a bit different in the sense that it's often that you'll want to see it once, and then having it in a library
wouldn't be that critical to you, whereas with music you're going to want to listen to it many, many times. In fact,
you can hear it once on the radio and get that sample, so it's the ongoing use that's the real value there.
Video is clearly behind music. It's not as easy today to get your videos on your disk and manage them that way,
that's why there's this Managed Copy thing that we do with the HD-DVD guys to make sure that you can always do that.
We're getting more of it on the Internet so it's easy to sign up and use, getting the portable devices so it's quick
and easy to download; there's a lot of work that we and others are doing, but that's going to be a mainstream
scenario.
So do you think that the rental model for video will be more successful than it will be for music?
Yes, but it won't -- movies will have all the different business models: buy it so you have rights to use it forever, have a subscription service that has a very big library, which is the Vongo approach, so both ala carte, single time usage and broad subscription.
How are the movie studios receiving this new model of downloading movies? Starz has their collection [with Vongo], so they obviously have some studios on board, but across the board what sort of reception are you getting?
Well, of course, in the dialogue with the rights owners, they're very interested in our rights management system, [asking if] there is something that we're doing that is both easy to use and yet makes them have some comfort. And we have that dialogue with the cable industry in terms of being able to connect up, they demanded enough that it will only be with Vista that we'll be able to meet their requirements, and with Vista Media Center that will be a new feature that comes along with that.
And so Media Center will finally have that CableCard support that people have been looking for?
Well, we've been working on getting the cable industry to authorize that for a long time, and so it's only with Vista and a lot of hard work that we're able to meet their needs there.
One of the products you showed off yesterday was the new Toshiba
Gigabeat S series, which is, I think, the first new Portable Media Center that has come out from a major
manufacturer in a while, almost since the introduction of the Portable Media Center it seems. Are we going to see
revitalization of the platform now that we have these subscription services that are going to be available for it?
Well, absolutely it's a case where we definitely pioneered the category, but only by constant innovation, making the downloading easier, getting the libraries to be bigger, really promoting our hardware partners and what they're doing there, can we retain leadership in that scenario, which is very important to us. So it's going to take a fair bit of work. It's more on the interface and content side, but it was amazing to see the device progress. I think we have a good lineup of devices.
PlaysForSure works on a variety of different audio-centric devices, regardless of what sort of operating system, so to speak, they run on, but will there be video subscriptions available for videos that aren't running Portable Media Center? Will there be PlaysForSure for video?
Yeah, PlaysForSure is about the rights management and format, so that you know that anything you buy will work on that system. Separate from that is the idea of having a consistent user interface. So with the Portable Media Center we think it's great to have both, but if somebody wants just PlaysForSure without our user interface, that's fine, too. The simplest thing for the user is to say, okay, I've seen the Media Center menus, I know those, as I take the portable device it's exactly that same structure.
They won't have to be tethered?
No, PlaysForSure is about format rights and format compatibility, whereas our Portable Media Center software is about that consistent user interface.

One other thing you talked about yesterday in the keynote was Urge, which was announced last month. I wanted to get a better sense from you of how Urge fits into the overall portable media strategy. How does this fit into what you're doing with PlaysForSure and the DRM-based subscription services that different companies are offering?
Well, we've always believed in an open platform so that you can have choice of device, choice of where you buy music, what music subscription you go to, and yet you know that those connect up and the user interface is quite reasonable. Doing that, and still making it very simple to use so you have the best of both worlds, the variety, and the simplicity, that's always a challenge as we tackle these new scenarios.
With music, having MTV as a partner is a great thing. We think they can get the word out, do some neat things. We're also doing a lot in Messenger to make it so you can share playlists, so you can listen to different things. The next version of Messenger has music as one of the big breakthrough scenarios.
Will there be any integration between these two things?
Well, the commitment we have from MTV is to take full advantage of the new Media Player technology, both as it ships in Vista and as we have that Media Player available as a download on XP, so they're really the first music service that's actually helped us design those new Media Player capabilities there. One of the things we're showing is that we actually take the music library database of all the things in the subscription list and bring those down onto the PC -- that's why you can get that super quick easy browsing interface even when you're dealing with literally millions of tracks.
It's automatically pulling down all the metadata?
That's right.
The last time we sat down the Xbox 360 hadn't been announced yet --- or at least
it hadn't been officially unveiled yet. It's been a couple months now, are you happy with how things have gone so
far?Well, I spent most of my Christmas playing Xbox 360.
Which games?
We played quite a variety. Actually, the Xbox Arcade was a big thing, a lot of the adults wanted to sit down and play for five or ten minutes. It was Hexic or Zuma that were easy for them to learn the rules, get used to the controller. We had some younger kids who were just beating the heck out of me at Project Gotham Racing, Kameo, basketball, Perfect Dark Zero. We have, I think, a dozen titles in total. And the thing that I thought would never happen really did happen to me, where I was standing 12 feet away and I thought, “Oh, they're watching a basketball game,” and then as I walked up I realized, “No, no, they're just playing Xbox 360.” So that was a lot of fun.
The only problem we've got is we've just got to make them faster, we've actually ramped up as fast as anybody ever has, but demand is still way ahead of us.
There were some shortages this holiday season.
The demand was phenomenal, and we did add Celestica as a third manufacturing partner. We think by the time we get to the 4.5 to 5.5 million unit level that the backlog won't be all that substantial. So obviously it's a good news situation, but we want to meet all the demand.
How many do you think you'll sell in the first year?
The only number we've given publicly is that for the end of June it'll be 4.5 million to 5.5 million. Then after June, of course, we'll get into another holiday season and that should be a very big deal because that will be a holiday season with a pretty unbelievable number of titles. We had about 18 at launch, we'll have 50 by the middle of the year, so as we get into the second half of next year we'll go up above 50 there as people learn how to take advantage of the graphics capabilities that much more, bring that much more depth to it. We'll have poker coming out in the first half of the year, a lot of people excited about that; we'll have new peripherals that we've talked about, the camera will come up; as well some of the connections to the PC on the communication side so you can text message between PC and Xbox. We'll get some of those things in place.
So there's a lot of things that will make it an even more attractive product and we'll be able to meet all the demand that's out there. So this will be a big holiday season. We planned Xbox 360 from the beginning as a multi-year cycle, making sure there were no periods of time where there weren't neat new announcements, peripherals, games and those things, and so that's worked well for us. We'll go into a lot of new countries over the next year, we're already in a lot, but we're adding a ton of countries we never went into with the first generation.
There's been some speculation about the Xbox 360 as a platform for IPTV. I know IPTV is something I asked you about back in April, primarily as a platform for set-top boxes and things like that, what do you see as the 360's potential as a means for delivering video to the home?
Well, the Xbox 360 obviously has the ability to do high definition and that's what makes it such a fantastic extender for the Media Center. That's another thing I set up, and just the speed of it, the fidelity of it is really better than the previous generation of extenders that we had.
It's rich enough that, yeah, it can do set-top box like things. If you just want a set-top box, [the Xbox 360] is somewhat overkill, the graphics power that we've got there is for the world's best games. Now that the cost of the chips in Xbox will be coming down over the next three, four, five years, it could get fairly cheap, but I still think you'll see dedicated set-top boxes. You can always think of something like the Xbox 360 as a super set-top box that can do everything the set-top box does, but then have the graphics to do the games as well.
Are you ready for Sony later this year?
Well, we think so. We've got a lot of things that they don't know that we're doing, so we'll keep them on edge a bit. We think that this whole thing has become very software centric; that is, the toolkits that let developers do their best creative work -- that plays to our software strength, as well as the idea of Live, where we had to learn a lot with Xbox 1, and the decision to require broadband, to go with VoIP, but we learned a lot about wanting to put things into the operating system so you can chat even while you're playing the games, it's really a level of richness that the games are built on top of that we didn't have that last time. We learned how to do that, we learned about contests and spectators, and so this is really a second generation of Live for us. It's very based on software expertise, so it will be interesting to see what Sony does in that dimension.
We also now have a situation where if your friend has already bought an Xbox and you go to buy something that you want to play with them, it's not like last time where at his house you play his game and at your house you play your game. Now it's all online, you've got your achievements and things, so it will be a fascinating competition.
How would you define success for the Xbox 360? What sort of percentage of market share do you think you have to have by the end of this year?
Well, you know, we're already successful. I mean, we're the hottest product there was at Christmas this year. I don't think there's any doubt we'll have a substantially higher share in this generation than we had last generation.
And it depends on our execution, it depends on Sony's execution. This is a business we're committed to, so we're just going to keep doing our best. We actually think the size of the market will grow quite a bit because of the idea that we've got music and photo capability, we've got this Arcade thing to appeal to different age groups, and we're going to get a better breadth of games this time, so we think the overall total units between us and our competitor will actually be quite a bit bigger this time around than it was last time, and that's good for all of us.
Are we going to see Halo 3 launch around the time of the launch of the PS3?
No, I have to make sure that any speculation I did about that is -- it's up to the team when they want to ship that, and they're going to take their time to make that a super great product. So even we don't know when that will come out. That's one of many games that are just phenomenal that are in the works, but it's up to the artists to do it when they feel good about it.
You announced yesterday that the Xbox 360 will have an external HD-DVD drive, and so it seems you've firmly committed to
that platform as opposed to Blu-ray, but do you risk fragmenting the Xbox 360
as a platform by introducing an HD DVD drive? Is that going to be an issue for developers if some consumers have a
version of the 360 with an HD-DVD drive and others don't?There's no fragmentation here. The developers are creating games that run on the DVD-9 format that's in every Xbox, and whatever we do with the drive, they'll all be upwards compatible with that. So that's how the games are written and it's a very clear message that lets game developers get huge volumes and payback for the big investments that they make.
In terms of movies, I often say that this is the last format battle there will ever be, because everything is going to go online -- you're going to download it. In fact, one of my favorite features on Xbox Live is where you can go and get the HD demos of the games or get HD videos like the making of the Xbox, the making of Titanic, they've got this Mission Impossible 3 thing. It's really cool when you're set up with an HD display, the fact that you can just click and it either streams or downloads, that's very nice.
The thing about HD-DVD that is attractive to Microsoft is thart it's very pro-consumer in letting you copy all movies up onto the hard disk. We hope that if there's an agreement around any format where things come together, we really believe that it's got to be consumer friendly in that respect, that the way the interactivity is done, the so-called IHD, really supports the kinds of things we think that creative people want to do. So the HD-DVD is a peripheral, that's a nice option for our users.
It seems like you're very firmly behind HD-DVD. Do you want Blu-ray to fail?
I think the best thing would be to have a common standard for the industry that would include great things like Managed Copy. The studios have to be willing to take that risk to let consumers have that flexibility, otherwise I think they're just making a mistake that the next digital format may not get to critical mass at all, no matter which one it is. I also think the interactivity, there should be some alignment around that, but eventually there probably will be some coming together and it's not easy to predict when that will be.
It seems like it's too late for a unification of the platform.
No, I don't think so.
You don't think it's too late?
No, I mean, in consumer electronics there's often been unification. The nice thing is that when you move away from the physical format it's all just software, so you can render Windows Media, H.264, all the different formats are very straightforward. As long as you're in the physical media world you get these standards battles, and here all the needs are not being met in our view by anything but HD DVD.
A few months ago Apple announced that it was switching to Intel for its processors. How does this affect Microsoft?
It doesn't really change anything for us. Apple has always leveraged technologies that the PC industry has driven to critical mass, the bus structures, the graphics cards, the peripherals, the connection networks, things like that, so they're kind of in the PC ecosystem and kind of not. Now they're taking advantage of the Intel chip. The users don't really care what's inside the machine in terms of the processor.
There is a certain irony that we've got a game box that uses the same processor Apple used to use, and now they don't use that. We have compilers that can take Intel code and make PowerPC code or take PowerPC code and make Intel code, we've got emulators. The flexibilities back and forth between the CPU environments is actually pretty high nowadays.
Do you worry that they might decide to make the operating system available to anybody?
No, that's fine. In a sense whenever you buy a new machine you've always had the choice of buying a Mac OS machine versus a Windows OS machine, so it's the same flexibility. We even had on the PowerPC this thing called Virtual PC that lets you get Windows capability over on their hardware.
So you don't worry about Apple opening things up so an OEM like Sony could offer OS X?
Well, the last time Apple went out and licensed their operating system to people they changed their minds and they bankrupted all the people who had been involved in that, and I don't know if we'll see another round of Apple tantalizing people with that or not.
I know we're running out of time, so I'm going to ask one last quick question. Well, I want to ask one quick question about Vista and Photon, which is the new version of Windows Mobile which I got a sneak peak at last month. It seems like usability and aesthetics are finally becoming a bigger part of the interfaces for the different operating systems. Is that something that you think there is a bigger emphasis on now?
Well, you've got so much information in the system -- music, photos, e-mail attachments, files. The ability to navigate that in a rich way, using the better displays we've got, the better graphics chips we've got, but with a very clean user interface environment, that is absolutely necessary. People are doing more with the PC, there're more scenarios where software is adding value, that you want to leverage a few simple techniques ,so when somebody goes from TV to photos to spreadsheets they already feel like, okay, I know how to navigate, I know how to search, and so a lot of work went into the user interface.
Two last questions, ones that I didn't get to ask the last time around, before I run out of time: Which cellphone do you carry now and what's your portable music or media device?
Well, recently I've been using this Treo 700w that I think is a great product, Palm has done a good job on that. We've got quite a variety in cell phones with Windows Mobile, more and more people backing that, but that's one I've been using recently.
And portable media? Or do you just use the phone?
Well, actually I do think the phone is a primary way that that will be done, but in my family we've got, I think there's an iRiver, a Zen, quite a bit of variety of PlaysForSure devices.
You probably own them all by now! Thanks so much, I appreciate your time.
All right, thank you.


Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
wolwol @ Jan 9th 2006 12:21PM
i'm guessing bill is trying to divert the attention away from the macworld....san francisco which is happening as of now...* i think not?*
Deets @ Jan 9th 2006 12:29PM
Class act, that billy Gates, but even with all the current and defined future features of the Xbox360, I still feel that Sony will win out.
Blue-ray DVD Vs. HD-DVD is going to be a big thing coming soon, since sony and Microsoft both showed what they are planning for them at CES.
2006 is going to be an interesting year to say for sure :P
Thanks for the awesome interview, it was a good read.
Rob @ Jan 9th 2006 12:36PM
He has to have an iPod, he's obviously not letting on about his iPod.
tank @ Jan 9th 2006 12:36PM
Vongo, ToGo Services, Rent and/or own videos, Media Center, Portable Media Center, Playsforsure, Urge...it all sounds confusing. Time to hire a live-in personal IT guy and fire the maid.
Can't wait until tomorrow...
carson @ Jan 9th 2006 12:41PM
Dude, lets see if you sold more xbox360's or ipods. I already estimated the ipod sales at 7 million units. 5 they did last year and lets say 2 million extra for hype. Saying the xbox360 was the hotest xmas item is a fat fat liar. Wankers!
no3rdw @ Jan 9th 2006 12:55PM
Wanted to say thank you to Engadget's writers for such a great interview! You guys know what to ask, unlike the bigger news companies' more generic questions.
Dasgooch @ Jan 9th 2006 12:57PM
How is he trying to divert attention from Macworld? He was just at CES and was nice enough to sit down and do an interview with the Engadget guys. Have you ever noticed in interviews Bill Gates always seems so down to earth, not bad for the richest man in the world. Then in contrast Steve Jobs has a major god complex.
I thought the interview with Gates was pretty good and he seems to really be concerned with what is best for the consumer.
Richard @ Jan 9th 2006 12:57PM
Carson, you're wrong. Nobody had a boner for iPods; they're last year's news.
The 360 was most definitely the hottest item of the Christmas season.
Hotness isn't just defined by units sold, you know.
Mandarin @ Jan 9th 2006 12:59PM
Dude only a real Cultist of the Steve Jobs would think Bill is trying to take attention away from Macworld with this interview...
He's just stating a fact.
Dominic Cordisco @ Jan 9th 2006 1:02PM
Was it me or does Bill come across as bored out of his mind?
helio @ Jan 9th 2006 1:08PM
Yeah, no question that he thought an interview on a blog, that revealed nothing new, would derail macworld.
Jason @ Jan 9th 2006 1:08PM
Come on, Bill, you can say which music player you *really* use - it's an iPod, isn't it?
Great work guys.
Bigfat @ Jan 9th 2006 1:21PM
"We have compilers that can take Intel code and make PowerPC code or take PowerPC code and make Intel code, we've got emulators. The flexibilities back and forth between the CPU environments is actually pretty high nowadays."
That's funny, seeing as how you guys own VirtualPC and with every point release it further completes the cycle of turning into a vaporware-esque piece of crap. Way to screw the pooch there, Billy.
Zach @ Jan 9th 2006 1:23PM
Great interview engadget! I wish you guys could round up more of these big CEOs (Jobs springs to mind) because the questions are always more interesting and the responses more informative.
As far as what Bill had to say, I was actually quite impressed. I own and use a Powerbook as my primary computer and will continue to buy Macs, but I think what Bill said about what's inside not mattering to consumers is right on (at least not the normal consumer). You'll probably see the mac user base grow slightly with if Intel chips yield smaller, cooler, and faster computers, but not much. The majority of consumers buy Microsoft PCs because it has Windows and they know how to use it (most just don't know the joys of OSX). I don't see Apple's switch to Intel affecting M$ too much. (I did think Gates' snide remark about Apple bankrupting its partners to be, well, a little snide....but funny).
As far as the hottest Christmas item, I would speculate that Apple sold more iPods (if you count all types) than Microsoft sold 360's. But if MS had made enough 360s.....then it's hard to say if the iPod would have outsold. Besides, Bill did say 'hottest' not 'best selling' and I tend to think of 'hottest' as 'most talked about' which the 360 certainly was.
I'm a little up in the air about their video services. I currently don't own a PMP, but both Apple and Microsoft's strategies will play a part when it comes time to buy one. I'll probably end up with an Apple product since they do UI, design, and integration better most of the time but it ultimately comes down to content. I'll buy a PlaysForSure or PMC device if MS pulls in more content providers.
Thanks again Engadget, now let's get some more CEO's!
jsis @ Jan 9th 2006 1:32PM
I have to disagree with Mr. Gates about HD-DVD vs. Blu-ray as the last format wars. Everything is not going to go online since most of us are still backing up our data.
narco @ Jan 9th 2006 1:55PM
I wonder if his comments about movie subscriptions vs. music subscriptions is him admitting that music subscriptions don't work. Basically, he said people watch movies once and they're fine, but people want to listen to songs multiple times.
I have to admit though, being a big Mac dude, I dislike Bill Gates a little less the more I read his interviews. He is someone I could probably approach in person, whereas I'd be afraid to death to even look at Steve Jobs.
Fishes,
narco.
Ed @ Jan 9th 2006 2:00PM
The facts:
+-they only shipped 330,000 360s to stores in the US
+-300,000 STILL sit on store shelves in Japan
+-360 is selling slower there than the refurbed dreamcasts that were released in Japan.
+-Nintendo DS sold nearly 4 million units this holiday in US and Japan combined... 4 MILLION.... GBmicro was the next top seller... then ps2, then psp... THEN 360.. sure it was hot, but only because they advertised everywhere.. buzz does not equal sales, Bill.. sorry, but your system didnt even beat the psp.
the 360 never had a chance to sell what it could have, and now, it wont.
Andrew Bragdon @ Jan 9th 2006 2:01PM
I think he's right about "The Last of the Format Wars." Seven years from now when it's time to upgrade HD-DVD/Bluray the market will have shifted to mostly download services. Retail discs will still be important - but they won't be important enough (in revenue dollars) to warrant a battle over them.
Eric @ Jan 9th 2006 2:23PM
LOL, who'd a thunk a Bill Gates article would be a good Rorschach test for pro- and anti-Macolytes?
z @ Jan 9th 2006 2:27PM
"Well, I spent most of my Christmas playing Xbox 360."
Damn, this is it! Finally we get clear through Mr Gates' mind. His main interest is not into technology, art, humanism or whatever could really make the world a better place. He's interested in playing with his Xbox! I can't believe that! It's a quote from the man himself! No way! The richest man on earth! That's crazy! He could be spending time for his Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, or simply for his family, but no, he's spending most of his Christmas playing Project Gotham Racing or whatever! Arghhh, the end of the world is near my friends...
Goodman @ Jan 9th 2006 2:37PM
>I often say that this is the last format battle there will ever be, because everything is going to go online
Actually I think he meant the last disk format war. Because music has gone online and there's still a format war (iTunes vs. PlaysForSure vs. MP3).
Glad he's still fighting for Managed Copy.
Deliberategamer @ Jan 9th 2006 2:39PM
Definately the "hottest" item this christmas season. And by hottest I mean the overheating problems. One of my friends got one and we clocked the temp at 150 degrees. Has anyone heard if the PS3 will over heat like this?
Marshall @ Jan 9th 2006 2:50PM
Great interview.
In the debate over whether the iPod or XBox was the "hottest" item this Christmas, I think we have to look at more than just numbers. The XBox could sell twice as many units as the iPod, but my mother would never speak the words "I was thinking maybe I need an XBox. Maybe I'll get one for your dad, he wants one, and if I like it I can get one too." Once the XBox gets marketed as a media device, like Bill seems to be indicating he hopes to have happen, it might flow into the baby-boomer and older markets, but until "everyone" is the demographic Microsoft is shooting for with the XBox, popularity comparisons are apples-to-oranges. The way they are marketed right now, the XBox is aiming for our hardcore gamer friends, the iPod is aiming for anyone breathing.
mjt13xx @ Jan 9th 2006 3:01PM
I think Billy just had Palm make a Treo for Windows so he could finally stop hiding his 650 when somebody called him. Perhaps I will be one of those Newton-esque hording loonies when I am still using Palm OS and the rest of the world has fallen to Photon or whatever.
Dissent @ Jan 9th 2006 3:36PM
The xbox 360 is the best gaming platform available right now. It has the best graphics, the best compatability, and the best overall user experience.
But when Playstation 3 is released, all that changes.
And yeah, Bill doesnt have any PMP of his own - his kids do, his wife might, but i doubt Bill does. Thats like asking your grandma whether she's got The Roots or The Shins on her playlist.
D2unk M0nk @ Jan 9th 2006 3:44PM
"Definately the "hottest" item this christmas season. And by hottest I mean the overheating problems. One of my friends got one and we clocked the temp at 150 degrees. Has anyone heard if the PS3 will over heat like this?"
As paris hilton would say : "Thats hot" (as she does to everything). Good interview though.
former Sega employee @ Jan 9th 2006 3:53PM
"{How is he trying to divert attention from Macworld? He was just at CES and was nice enough to sit down and do an interview with the Engadget guys. Have you ever noticed in interviews Bill Gates always seems so down to earth, not bad for the richest man in the world. Then in contrast Steve Jobs has a major god complex.
I thought the interview with Gates was pretty good and he seems to really be concerned with what is best for the consumer.}"
How true, Steve Jobs(Wannabe) has a real issue with dealing with humans. He is a heartless bastard, egomanic. I feel sorry for his daughter Lisa(Pirates of Silicon Valley). What a small prick Steve is.
While everyone seems to hate Bill Gates, yet because of his work now like 98% of pc users use a computer because of Windows progression and ease of use. Compared to 20 years ago when only "Geeks" used pc's.
Justin @ Jan 9th 2006 3:53PM
Wow, another awesome interview. Congrats Peter, Ryan and all... you guys have definitely hit the big time!
juliuss @ Jan 9th 2006 3:55PM
Ok, I read the whole thing, word for word. Here's what I took away:
Xbox neat. Played at Christmas.
Format war. Boring... Zzzzzz...
GUI important to Microsoft 10 years too late.
He and his kids own an iPod, just like everyone else as Microsoft; He lied about it though.
Annnnnnd that's it. Tada! Boring interview -- not that I blame Engadget -- Bill is just a boring guy.
Jame @ Jan 9th 2006 4:08PM
"The users don't really care what's inside the machine in terms of the processor."
Well then, why is this about apple switching to Intel such a big deal if the end users don't really care whats inside the machine?
Oh, BTW, good job w/the interview
carson @ Jan 9th 2006 4:16PM
#8 Yeah it does, hottest equals best selling. If i go to a McDonalds and talk about the Mcrib and I get the Quarterpounder is the hottest sandiwich the Mcrib? Not even. Because if it was the hottest item, it would sell well. And as a side note, dont go to McDonalds expecting anything other than a luke warm sandwich at best.
Its not philosophy ipod sales eclipsed all xbox sales including the future sales bill sez they'll sell this year. Factor in accessories and games and now your price point is very similier to that of the top tier ipod or more. Call me a fanboy, that is a fact not an opinion. If the units were available to the public, would they have sold 7 million units this season? Not even close. Thats like selling an ipod at launch with only 12 available Albums on itunes. Use the same generality for your old xbox games vs your own cd library if you want to get picky. Keep in mind I'm getting an xbox360 so am I still a fanboy? At least apple had the sense to increase the ipod production way before the holiday season. My only real point is Bill is a cracky if he thinks the xbox360 was the hottest selling item this season. They hardly sold any this season if you ask me if you factor in the fact that most people prepaid back in September.
Jeff Foster @ Jan 9th 2006 5:27PM
omg i would have fallen asleep in that interview! yeesh.
good job on your part though, EN.
uiguy @ Jan 9th 2006 5:51PM
Its ironic to hear Bill constantly talking about the importance of user interface design given the fact that Microsoft doesnt really hire any user interface designers. In comparison, Google has an actual position called User Interface Designer, and they hire some of the best UI designers in the country, out of programs at the countries top universities that actually take the field seriously. Microsoft has its core positions, Developer, Tester, TesterDeveloper, and Program Manager, and while the PMs usually spend all of their time organizing the team and making Gantt charts, a subset of them do some UI design on the side. Microsoft has the classic interface design is dessert mentality, where if you are at the company long enough in an engineering position, you get to have fun and design the user interface. Meanwhile students graduating from some of the top interface design programs in the country are going off to create interfaces like TiVo and Gmail.
Saying interface design is a priority is like saying that customers should be able to access their content anywhere, anytime and on any device, it is just in the playbook of generic positive things a spokesperson is supposed to say. Meanwhile Larry Page actually took an HCI course at Stanford, and is smart enough to figure out that companies who recruit the best user interface designers (or at least officially have the job position) get products with better interfaces.
Great interview guys!
b-dizzle @ Jan 9th 2006 6:03PM
Simply put, the 360 was not the hottest selling item, it was the hardest to get.
wizard @ Jan 9th 2006 6:32PM
Good interview.
Justin @ Jan 9th 2006 7:06PM
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22. Definately the "hottest" item this christmas season. And by hottest I mean the overheating problems. One of my friends got one and we clocked the temp at 150 degrees. Has anyone heard if the PS3 will over heat like this?
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I would be interested in the instrument you used to clock your friend's 360 temperature at 150 degrees (celsius/fahrenheit)
On another note, will work for xbox
;)
Murc @ Jan 9th 2006 7:30PM
I remember like 5-7 years ago not liking Microsoft, mainly because I was young and niave. But now I'm in my 20's and I like Microsoft. There are several reasons for the change. As he's the richest man in the world, I always hated him for having so much...but now I relize that he works hard for it and with his foundation among other events, he gives out a LOT of money every year. I used to hate him cause he owned everything, creating a monopoly...But know I relize that theres a lot a competition out there, and MS does a good job to stay on top.
I also like MS for going for HD-DVD, since with blu-ray you can forget about making a copy of your movie.
Microsoft likes everything to be compatible and to work with eachother......While Sony like everyone to use there stuff, and only there stuff.
BILL GATES...This Buds for you.
azz0r @ Jan 9th 2006 7:46PM
To number 17
- They cant keep up with demand and demand will stay for years to come
- Japan isnt important anymore, they flopped there, they dont really care, they beat Nintendo last time round without Japan
- 330k sold in the US? Wrong. More like 1.3mill.
Al @ Jan 9th 2006 8:00PM
"Meanwhile students graduating from some of the top interface design programs in the country are going off to create interfaces like TiVo and Gmail."
You have hit it! Gmail is the one with best UI out there! LOL
Changaz @ Jan 10th 2006 12:44AM
****** HOTTEST ITEM??? ******
Hottest item does NOT come down to how many were sold. Thats like saying a plastic bag was the hottest item since it technically got sold with every item everyone purchased over the Christmas period.
Comparing iPods and 360s is a stupid thing to do because they are totally different types of products. Just think about it...
An iPod is owned and used by individuals. If you have 4 people in your family, its possible to have 4 ipods, if not more in your household.
On the otherhand, game consoles like the xbox, while technically owned by one person, are used by many people simultaneously... hence the need for multiple controllers. An average household would only need 1 xbox. Im sure you know at least one person who owns more than one ipod (e.g. shuffle + video) but is it equally common for someone to own 2 xboxs?
Game consoles and personal music players are completely different types of products. Its pointless to argue whether one is 'hotter' than the other.
If you still want to argue, you might want to multiply the xbox sales by 4 (or more) to make things more accurate...
Jensen @ Jan 10th 2006 1:33AM
"The nice thing is that when you move away from the physical format it's all just software, so you can render Windows Media, H.264, all the different formats are very straightforward. As long as you're in the physical media world you get these standards battles"
Hmm... I can buy a DVD from every movie studio, and put it into any of the thousands of different DVD player models out there, and it will play the video.
If I want to download TV, I can watch ABC videos on only iTunes and the iPod, and I can only watch CBS shows on an XP/2000 pc with Google Video Player. I can probably buy movie download from a couple other places that won't run on portable media players.
Hm, which is more straightforward?
When will I be able to buy video downloads from several different stores and be able to play them on any media player? I don't see it happening any time in the next few years.
Mark @ Jan 10th 2006 2:12AM
Great interview. I'll take what he said about physical media becoming obsolete one step further. I don't think either next gen format will catch on. A media center PC (or similiar device) with a lot of storage space is a much better solution. And the cost of harddrives will continue to go down. Why even bother with these discs? Maybe for archiving...
Barbasol @ Jan 10th 2006 2:46AM
I love my 360 and I love my Mac!
Xbox Live is amazingly elegant, and Game Achievements add a lot to every game. It's awesome.
Philly Cheese @ Jan 10th 2006 2:53AM
"Apple has always leveraged technologies that the PC industry has driven to critical mass, the bus structures, the graphics cards, the peripherals, the connection networks, things like that, so they're kind of in the PC ecosystem and kind of not."
I love how he spins Apple as the company that borrows other companies innovations. Don't even get me started on the UI.
PalmPilot @ Jan 10th 2006 4:28AM
I said it before and I will say it again, Is the xbox number anywhere in the world? Answer is.....NO! Is the xbox 360 Number one anywhere in the world? Survey says......NO! Does Nintendo Have a number one system in the world? Ummm nintendo DS.....have they had one before that, Gameboy advance, Game boy Sp,. So Please xbox fans stop trying to take swats at nintendo to make yourself feel good after sony beats you like a red hair step child with buck teeth, a smart mouth and a bed wetting problem.
They beat nintendo with out japan? Nintendo never competed against them, they don't come close to sharing the same target market. But did Game Cube still turn a wicked Profit....Ummm yes yes I think they did sir. Last but certainly not least, you can't have the hottest Iteam if there is no item to attain. When xbox has a number one console anywhere then they can talk about what they did and didn't do to nintendo. Till then watch your back Sony's coming.
Great interview though...I still think bill gates is evil. There is no ammount of interviews that will change that. Beware of cakes mr gates..Beware oh Cakes!
daniel @ Jan 10th 2006 4:44AM
well actually yes his comments are accurate about apple, but it wasnt an insulting comment and he in no way said that microsoft have never done that it was just a response to the question.
I do think it is fair to say that the pc industry leverages from apple too. Firewire etc
Why would bill gates have an IPOD???? Ipods are great but because the primary support is for mp3 the sound is a bit naff compared to oggvorbis devices. he will have an iRiver with oggvorbis playback thats what I would have if i could afford it.
As a side note has anybody else noticed that their 360 got really hot the first few weeks but not after that?Both mine and my wifes 360 did this.
neura @ Jan 10th 2006 6:56AM
RE:#46
Actually, I think he'll have a device that supports WMA format. ;) Maybe one that doesn't use only DRM licensed from Apple... oh wait, Apple won't license it to anybody, that's out the window anyway. *sigh*
Mike Street @ Jan 10th 2006 6:58AM
Good job guys you really have the gadget coverage on lock
Chris @ Jan 10th 2006 8:31AM
Bill: "Well, we've always believed in an open platform "
Yeah, that's right. As long as MS can control the "open" platform and profit from it.
Bill, you are such a comedian.
Paul @ Jan 10th 2006 8:37AM
**And the thing that I thought would never happen really did happen to me, where I was standing 12 feet away and I thought, Oh, they're watching a basketball game, and then as I walked up I realized, No, no, they're just playing Xbox 360.**
Ha ha! Cheesiest line ever!