Gates outlines vision for tech in 2005 Video
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Gates promotes portable media center at CES
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates is joined by late-night TV host Conan O'Brien at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to showcase new products for the digital home, including new devices powered by Microsoft's Portable Media Center.
At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Chairman Bill Gates talks about the company's Smart Personal Object Technology, which will appear in watches and magnets in the fall.
Gates shows off portable media device at CES
At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft chairman Bill Gates touts the Portable Media Center, a pocket-size device that plays music, movies, TV shows and other content.
Microsoft's vision for the home
At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft's Bill Gates and Steven Guggenheimer show Microsoft's vision of the smart home, which includes SPOT, the Media Center PC and MSN 8.
Woody Allen's wonderfully neurotic Alvy Singer falls for the equally neurotic Annie Hall and movie history is made. As talk-show host Conan O'Brien put it, no one plays "lovable befuddlement" like Diane Keaton, and no one creates romantic comedies quite like Woody Allen. Existential angst has never been so entertaining. Arguably Allen's best film, "Annie Hall" took home Oscars for Best Picture, Actress, Direction, and Screenplay (cowritten with Marshall Brickman).
On a lark, the host of a late-night political talk show (Williams) decides to run for president. The thing is, he never expected to win.
At the 2005 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Microsoft Chairman\r\nBill Gates ran into more than his share of problems. Here's a look at a\r\nfew clips from his keynote address, which underscores the theory that if\r\nsomething can go wrong, it will.
Gates on Apple's 'huge disadvantage'
From CES 2007: Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speaks with CNET News.com's Ina Fried about why Microsoft's recent moves will trump Apple in the digital living room.
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates sits down with News.com's Ina Fried to talk about how Microsoft can outflank rivals as software moves to the phone, TV and other devices
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates speaks with CNET News.com's Ina Fried and discusses his vision of each home having a server that will host files for multiple PCs.
