Bill Gates calls for research innovation Video
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Bill Gates sees software opportunities
At the Microsoft Research Faculty Summit in Redmond, Wash., Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates shared his high expectations for continued hardware and software breakthroughs in coming years.
UC Berkeley students sound off on Bill Gates
Student opinion varied on a recent presentation by Microsoft Chairman \r\nBill Gates before a packed house of engineering students and faculty at University of California at Berkeley.\r\n\r\n
At WinHEC, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates calls the releases a "milestone," the first time all three products have been at the same stage of development.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer gives Bill Gates a teary thank-you as the founder says farewell to company employees at a town hall meeting Friday in Redmond, Wash. Gates is stepping down from full-time work to focus on his philanthropic efforts.
Gates on how XP changed computing
From CES 2007: CNET News.com's Ina Fried speaks with Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates on how he saw Windows XP change computing.\r\n
Gates pitches tablet PCs to top CEOs
Bill Gates talks about the tablet PC and ways to enhance productivity in an uncertain economy during his keynote address at the sixth annual Microsoft CEO Summit.
During his keynote address at the Microsoft Mix '06 conference in Las Vegas, Chairman Bill Gates talks about tools developers can use to make work on the Web simpler.
Gates stepping down from full-time Microsoft role
On June 15, 2006, in Redmond, Washington, Bill Gates announced his plans, to go in effect July 2008, to work full-time with the Gates Foundation and part-time with Microsoft.
At the Gartner Symposium/ITxpo in Orlando, Fla., Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer speaks to Gartner research analysts about filling the gap and sharing the leadership role with top executives after Chairman Bill Gates transitions away from his day-to-day duties at the software maker next year.
Gates: Some 'holy grails' to be found within decade
At the Gartner Symposium/ITExpo in San Diego, Microsoft's Bill Gates discusses how innovations such as reliable speech recognition software will succeed in the next 10 years.