SmartLess - "Bill Gates"
Episode Date: February 10, 2025Open the Windows, let’s be BASIC, but don’t XP your pants… it’s the one and only Bill Gates. Pointing, clicking, The Golden Rule, and the dangers of peanut brittle. You have violated the pun l...aw— it’s an all-new SmartLess. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Good morning, everybody.
Or afternoon or evening.
You always ignore the afternoon people.
Yeah, I'm sorry.
Good afternoon.
You know, but do people listen to podcasts in the afternoon?
I guess they do.
By the way, hello to all the people who are on a jog right now.
Hello.
How are you?
Keep pace.
Watch the cracks.
Hello, everybody at the supermarket.
Hello, everybody who's driving.
Check your mirrors.
Those on the subway.
Don't miss your stop. That's right. Hello, everybody on a walk. Hello everybody who's driving, check your mirrors. Those on the subway, don't miss your stop.
Hello everybody on a walk, just a regular walk.
Everybody who's at work, come on, Janet.
And for everyone else, welcome to Smartless. Smart. Bless. Smart. Bless. Oh wait, I got a quick one.
I got a quick dad joke.
What kind of bees make milk?
Hmm.
Will?
I don't know. Oobies. Will? I don't know.
Boobies.
Boo?
Boobies.
Boobies, yeah, I guess.
Okay, I'll go with it.
Sure.
I think it's funny.
Fuck, you wanted to say no so bad.
You wanted to say no.
No!
I wanted to say no, that's not funny.
Fuck.
You have violated the pun law.
All right, another dad joke, please. Sure.
Go ahead, Sean.
My friend keeps saying, cheer up, man.
It could be worse.
You could be stuck underground in a hole full of water.
I know he means well.
Oh, I know he means well, right?
Yeah, well, I didn't hit it.
No, no, I know, but you might need to
for some of our listeners.
What about this one?
What about this?
Did that italics the well in your book?
No.
No.
No?
Go ahead.
You know, a good elevator joke works on so many levels.
Sure.
Ah!
He got me.
He got me.
Nice reading.
Come on, that's good.
Okay.
It's pretty good. Guys, I've said it before and I'll say it again.
We three fools are incredibly lucky at times on this show
to be able to ask some questions and hear some answers from folks
who wouldn't otherwise spend even a second with us.
Today's one of those days.
Oh, I like that.
Our next guest is one of the most important people
to have been born in our generation.
He is responsible for some of the most transformative ideas technologies and events the world has ever known and probably ever will
These discoveries advancements and innovations have made parts of our lives in the world around us far different than anyone could have even ever imagined
Just 40 years ago. His work has brought him enormous wealth, which is enabling him to once again
40 years ago. His work has brought him enormous wealth,
which is enabling him to once again change
and help our planet and our lives in ways
that are exciting, confusing, and in some ways, life-saving.
Please welcome Mr. Bill Gates.
Oh my gosh! Wow!
Mr. Bill Gates!
Yeah.
Hello, Mr. Gates.
Hey guys.
Wow!
How lucky are we that we've got you now?
This is so cool.
We've got questions.
Yeah, we've got questions.
First of all, it looks like you're sitting in a high chair.
I am.
Oh.
Well, this is a guy who probably does.
I was gonna say, the guy does a lot of podcasts.
I was thinking, why are you,
I know you've got a very,
thank God you've got a book coming out.
I can't not wait to read it.
But is that the only reason you're talking to us dummies?
I mean, why, you've got so much important stuff to do.
Sparing an hour for us is generous, but maybe foolish.
It's relaxing.
I don't know.
So far.
So we're not making you nervous at all.
That's good. So far.
Jason, I also can't wait for you to not read his book,
but Bill Gates, welcome to the podcast. And I say that not because he won't be interested just the barely know us how to read
And I will say is so exciting having you here as somebody who has been responsible for
Not just innovations
but just you know the impact that what you have done over the years has been incredible and not just in technology, etc and
Really being on the on the cutting edge of that for years,
but all the philanthropic work you've done.
I want to, I didn't know you were going to be here today,
but I've been a big fan of your work
in the philanthropic area.
You've been a leader in that.
You've really set a tone.
So I applaud you and I thank you.
And I wish more people would take your cue.
Well, you're setting a great example.
I think they will.
I hope they will.
Yeah, we really do.
Pat, are they?
I know you did something.
What is it called?
The giving pledge.
The giving pledge, yes, with Warren Buffett, right?
Are guys, are men and women following along with that?
Yeah, we have about 250 people
who've made the commitment to give away
the majority of their wealth.
And we get together and learn from each other
because philanthropy is actually a little confusing.
You don't have like a rating system or profit
and it brings you into a new area.
And so we can inspire each other,
and hopefully anybody who's got lots of money
feels like pitching in.
Yeah, and because wasn't it,
I think Warren Buffett said,
because if you can't figure out
how to live off of $500 million, there's a problem.
Isn't that what he's, isn't that part of that pact?
That's right.
I think I read that somewhere.
I know, which is funny,
because I was thinking about writing him a letter
and asking him if he'd give me $500 million
to see if I could do that. Yeah, just a little experiment. Do you know what I mean, read that somewhere. Which is funny, because I was thinking about writing him a letter and asking him if he'd give me 500 million to see if I could do that.
Yeah, just a little experiment.
Do you know what I mean, as an experiment.
So Mr. Gates, I'd like to ask you,
if it's possible, Jason, sorry, I don't mean to hijack this.
But- Be my guest.
I've got some questions here if you run out.
I'm sure, at risk of you having said this
a million times before,
would you talk a little bit about the genesis of Microsoft?
Because I don't know if I've ever really heard
a clear story of how it came to be,
how you had the idea for it,
and how it came into fruition.
Yeah, I was super lucky.
You know, my parents found me a little confusing in terms of I was very
good at some things and not good at other things. So they sent me to a private school
and that school got a computer. So when I was 13, I had my first exposure and I got
kind of obsessed with figuring it out, what it could do. And so even during high school,
together with a friend, Paul Allen,
I got thousands of hours of time
learning how to write software.
So forgive me for interrupting,
what year was that that you got first exposed
to the computer?
And where?
That's 1968, I'm up in Seattle, Washington,
at an excellent private school. And then Paul's 1968, I'm up in Seattle, Washington, at an excellent private school.
And then Paul's reading and he sees that
a computer's going to be done on a chip,
the microprocessor made by people like Intel,
and that those chips are gonna get twice as good
every year or two.
And so I say to Paul that that's exponential improvement,
that then computers will be almost free
and they'll need a lot of software,
we should do that software.
And he follows, when I go back to Harvard,
because my parents wanted me to go to college,
he follows me there to kind of bug me and say,
well, this revolution is gonna happen, let's get going.
And finally, when the first personal computer comes out
in late 1974, I drop out and Paul and I found the company.
And you told Steve Ballmer to stay behind,
finish his education, because you're gonna need him later.
Yeah, in fact, he shows up about four years
into the company and he's the other person
who plays an unbelievable role.
I did manage to catch him in the middle of business school,
so I got him to drop out of business school.
There you go.
So you see these computers in the sort of the late 60s
that you're first exposed to are by comparison,
of course to today, but maybe even to the computers
in the mid 70s,
rudimentary at best probably.
Yeah, also very expensive.
And so, you know, we only big companies
and the government have them.
And so we would have to sneak in at night to get access.
And, you know, we kept saying to people,
these things are gonna be cheap,
but they didn't, you know, they didn't agree, and so we got to be
the very first people.
And then you have people like Steve Jobs at Apple,
where they're doing the hardware, the Apple II,
and we're doing the software.
So the Apple computer came with our software.
Oh, it did?
Yeah, and was it, correct me if I'm wrong here,
but I for some reason always thought that
one of the major things that for small brains like me
that really was like, oh,
because I remember computers, there was the coding thing,
and then all of a sudden one day there was,
I think it was Windows,
which was just point and click stuff,
and it was like, oh, this is a whole different thing.
Was that not you, Mr. Gates?
Yes, absolutely.
So the idea of the graphics interface,
where you use images, not just characters,
that's pioneered at Xerox,
which made a lot of money on copying machines,
and they didn't manage to make a good product.
So it's actually Apple with the Macintosh
and Microsoft with Windows that takes this idea
of graphics interface and takes it to the masses.
And now everybody knows that's the way you use computers.
You just point and click.
But what we don't know is that underneath,
what you're pointing on underneath that is a bunch of code that you're activating when just point and click. But what we don't know is that underneath, what you're pointing on underneath that
is a bunch of code that you're activating
when you hit a click.
Yeah.
It's actually pretty complicated underneath,
which is why we had to hire lots of smart engineers
and write a lot of code.
But I will say, well, I have kind of two questions,
which is A, so you learn on these rudimentary huge computers
that only the government
and educational institutions have, et cetera.
So then, so you and Paul Allen realized that,
okay, this is the future.
Are there people who can teach you
how to do the stuff you did,
or did you have to figure a lot of that stuff out yourselves
as you were going?
We pretty much had to figure it out.
I mean, we did hire a few adults, you know,
who knew things like finance and accounting,
but because we were at the forefront of a revolution,
you know, this idea of, okay, how do you manage these people?
How do you price this stuff?
You know, and we decided we'd sell all over the world,
so I have to build a team in Japan and Europe
and deal with all the languages.
I have to say it was super fun.
And because we were right, these computers got so popular,
we made enough money, we just kept hiring more
and more people and eventually built Windows and Office,
you know, which had Excel spreadsheet
and Microsoft Word and those became.
You remember all that, yeah, yeah.
So by the late 90s, we are doing well
and it's kind of a standard way
that people use personal computers.
Yeah, I was.
But, sorry, Sean, if I just,
just on that last little bit of the code stuff,
and you touched on that,
so that Apple products came with your software built in,
and then you guys split,
and it became kind of like the,
and forgive me for the comparison,
you became like the VHS Betamax.
It was either or, it was like,
you either did this or you did that.
Was there ever a discussion between you and Steve Jobs
about, hey, let's continue in this partnership
using your, et cetera, et cetera?
Did you guys, or was there a moment that you split?
Because we're always pure software,
the only competition is that they,
Apple does its own operating system,
which competes with Windows,
but we write software on the Macintosh.
In fact, we had as many people as Steve Jobs did
when he's doing the Macintosh,
because we do our word processor,
we do our spreadsheet,
and it was amazing because, you know,
Steve did the Mac. That was wonderful.
Then he leaves Apple.
Apple's being very mismanaged.
When he comes back, I reach a deal with him
where we actually invest in Apple
and commit to do our software.
And then he runs that company so well
that going from the verge of failure,
it actually becomes the most valuable company in the world,
even slightly more valuable than Microsoft.
That's amazing.
So we ended up working together.
And then in the last few years when he was sick,
we got to reflect on our lives
and talk to each other quite a bit.
We were kind of competitors.
I mean, he would criticize Windows pretty brutally,
but that's okay. But his skillset, which was kind of design
and user interface, he was not an engineer.
And so my skill is very much as an engineer.
So we appreciated each other.
You know, of course.
Yeah.
Was there a lot of competition though?
Like there had to be, when you're sitting in your garage
or wherever you were with Paul thinking, you know,
designing this and coming up with this and all that stuff,
back then you didn't have the,
people didn't know what you were doing, right?
Everybody knows what everybody's doing now.
And so you didn't, you had this kind of secrecy
so you could protect yourself.
But as it grew and became the thing that it became,
how do you protect yourself
and how did you protect yourself from competitors?
And was Apple the only competitor?
Because Microsoft wasn't about any one piece of software,
not just Windows, not just Office,
we were doing Xbox, which had games.
We thought of ourselves as a software factory
and we wanted to be faster than anyone else
and have lower price software than anyone else.
And so the other people doing software
found it pretty intimidating that we moved at that speed.
And that's why when Steve does the Macintosh,
he comes to us and says,
hey, are you willing to bet on this?
Can we work on this together?
It got quite competitive.
Eventually other great companies like Google come along,
and they're also very good at hiring smart people.
And there's been room, you know,
if you think of what are the most valuable companies
in the world today, it's all these companies
that ushered in this digital revolution.
Right, yeah, I was gonna say, because now you have,
instead of Google, Microsoft, and Apple,
you have 200 AI companies now,
because people see the future much more quickly now
than they did then.
Sean, Sean, and tell Mr. Gates,
you're an Ask Jeeves guy, right?
Like that's been your whole-
An Ask Jeeves.
Mr. Gates, do you remember having conversations
with Paul or Steve or any of your contemporaries at the time, do you remember
sitting there having conversations with them and allow yourself the imagination for what
the future could bring and were there any things that were worrisome or exciting like
you hear about the conversations that are happening now regarding AI,
where we're kind of on the doorstep of another big move.
Do you remember having those concerns back then?
Were there any?
Yes, so the digital revolution with PCs and internet,
we thought of as very empowering.
And so you could say we were kind of naive
in thinking this was all good.
In fact, when we worried,
we were worried about what we called the digital divide,
that having access was so valuable
that we should make sure that schools in the inner city
and poor countries had the internet and the PC.
It's only when social networking comes along
that this kind of, oh, isn't it always for the good
to give people new capabilities,
we realized, wow, the social criticism,
the waste of time that in some ways,
we were playing to human weaknesses
that you seek out outrage
and that kind of can drive people apart.
And now, that we've seen
that those advances aren't always good.
Now with AI, which is far more powerful than social network,
we're going, wow, how do we shape this thing
to get the good, which is definitely there,
but avoid the bad stuff?
And it's a little bit scary right now.
Well, a little bit trying to put the genie back in the bottle,
unfortunately, with the social networks
and also just with phones in general and their impacts.
You know, as a father of three boys
under the age of 16 and younger,
I would ask you, and I know your kids are a little bit older,
and I, look, I don't like answering
the hypothetical questions myself,
but I'm gonna ask you a hypothetical, which is,
and feel free to not answer it.
If your kids were teenagers again, if they were adolescents,
if they were 11, 12, 13, 14,
would you let them have access to social media?
Yeah, my youngest, I stopped her from having a cell phone
until she was 14.
And she was quite upset because the other kids had access.
It works a lot better if groups of parents
or even the school come in and saying,
hey, during the school day, this is pretty distracting.
And Australia is now trying to pass a set of rules.
There's a book by Jonathan Haidt
called The Anxious Generation.
Oh, we've talked about it a lot.
I've read it.
Okay, good, good.
And his point that we're kind of overprotecting kids
in the real world and underprotecting them
in the digital world, I think he's got
a super good point there and we've got to step up on it.
I took his advice and I said to my boys,
to my teenage boys, I said, I will give you a lot
of freedoms in the real world that are commensurate
with your reduction in your time in the digital world
and I will give you much more leeway to do stuff
and spend time in real time and give you a later curfew
on the weekend,
sort of 11.30 if you will, or whatever that is,
if you guys, if I see a market reduction
in your time online.
But what I dream about, this is what I'm getting to,
what I dream of is six months of no social media
on this planet, and what would that do
in a sort of a social, in a reset?
Imagine a world where we didn't have that.
I personally think that we would be in a much better place.
Yeah, when you see how polarized we are
and that, you know, even I,
if there's some article criticizing somebody I don't like,
I'm like, oh, yeah, I wanna be outraged
against the people I think have shortcomings.
And so, you know, you want an algorithm
that brings us together,
and maybe a moratorium would help us get there.
Yeah.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
My, you know, as a kid who grew up in the seventies,
as a Gen Xer, you know, your rise
and your significance in the world coincided
with sort of my teenage years
and understanding that kind of thing.
And it felt like the first time that we had things like
the, you know, the fortune lists or the Forbes
or the richest people in the world.
And your name was in and out of the top of that
for many, many years.
And I can't imagine just how absurd that must be
on a certain level.
Did you have those moments of like,
not even pinch me, but of like, is this me?
It feels almost abstract, how bizarre.
Did you have that at all?
Or just leave me alone?
Well, it's definitely wild.
At a young age, I was in my 30s
when I become the richest person. At a young age, I was in my 30s
when I become the richest person.
And my parents, fortunately,
their values helped anchor me.
And they were always saying,
okay, to whom much is given,
much is expected.
So I did start in my 40s to really study philanthropy,
Rockefeller, Carnegie, what had they done,
and try and figure out,
could I be as careful about giving it back?
And then in my 50s, I retired from Microsoft
and moved over to do foundation work full-time.
But yes, it's bizarre.
Having close friends who really know you,
who can laugh about your success,
I think, you know, does help keep you grounded.
Yeah, I love that.
That transition to philanthropy,
I'm sure there are many parts of it
that are even more complicated than your life beforehand.
Many, many challenges.
Can you speak about those?
I'm sure there's a lot of it that is much more enjoyable
too, probably most of it.
How is that feeling, that transition?
Well, I loved being a individual contributor in my 20s
and then managing Microsoft in my 30s,
where you're just very hands-on and you can say,
my product is selling well or this one is not.
How do we fix that?
And so it's a real switch, you know, where you're not having
that immediate market feedback to go and say,
hey, why do children die?
How many children die?
Can we reduce that?
And then I had to learn about poor countries and vaccines.
But I have to say it's been as fulfilling.
In the turn of the century,
we have 10 million children dying every year.
And because we got out new vaccines
and worked with partners,
that's now down below five million a year.
And if we keep doing our work well,
including governments caring about poor countries,
we can cut that in half again to two and a half million.
Sorry, is there, have you found a way
to make it an attractive idea for countries to come on
and partner with you that goes beyond just the obvious ethical and moral pole of it?
Is there a GDP component that you can dangle in front of some of these more capitalistic
minded countries that get them to the table a little bit better?
Yeah, that's a super good point is, you know, we,
of course the moral argument of the golden rules,
you know, helping people everywhere
is our strongest argument,
but that alone isn't gonna get us there.
You know, we had some of the generals in the US Army
saying, hey, if you don't help these countries out,
then we'll have to go to war
and you'll have to increase our budget.
So that the foreign aid budget, by creating stability,
it avoids the awful war.
And also, if you lift people up economically,
like Asia today, buys a lot of American stuff,
movies, drugs, jets, software, you name it.
So our mutual success has been amazing.
The two countries we defeat in World War II
were generous enough to them
that they become the second and third biggest economy
and we engage in mutually beneficial trade.
Japan shows us how to make quality products
and now we want to extend that and get,
Asia's doing well, India's getting rich
and eventually they don't need aid if you help them out
and so you only have mostly countries in Africa
that still really deserve this kind of support.
Are you finding that you're having the same kind of
messaging, language success as you try to encourage them
to come along with environmental adjustments as well,
that it's mutually beneficial
from a business standpoint, et cetera?
Yeah, so environmentally,
a lot of these poor countries are very beautiful
and we all have to deal with climate change.
Sadly, it's these African countries
that didn't contribute to that problem at all
because they're outdoor farmers near the equator.
They're the ones that are suffering the most.
The countries we need to really change their emissions
are these middle income countries.
So China, Brazil, now India.
And they expect us to help them
by inventing really inexpensive ways to go green.
And so the biggest hope for the environmental stuff
is innovation.
If the green stuff is really expensive,
even the rich countries are kind of saying,
hey, don't make me buy an electric car
if it costs more, don't make me buy an electric heat pump.
And so, you know, it's gonna have to be all of us
saying we're in this together, it's one planet,
but also a lot of innovation,
because nobody can agree if it's expensive,
who should pay for it.
Right, a friend of mine who's sort of,
a friend of ours, friend of the show, Willie, our buddy,
he mentioned that there, with this big round of deregulation
that supposedly is on its way,
that there may be a good spin to it
in that the amount of innovation that is needed
to really make a big move in an environment,
a part of that, it's necessary for private
to be spending money there as well as just federal money.
And so by deregulating, you give those companies more money
to spend in R&D
for these environmental things.
Is that just spin for the business sector?
And I'll let you guess what business he's in.
But he's a great guy.
What do we think about that?
Is that spin or is there some validity to that?
No, there's definitely some validity.
For example, if you want to build
an electricity transmission line,
you often have to go through almost a decade of approvals.
And of course, that line, if anybody blocks it, then it doesn't work at all.
And so we need to have more collective action as we try and change,
you know, move away from coal, electricity,
to other things, which is sun and wind and nuclear
and a variety of things.
We don't want to get rid of all the regulations
because part of the reason the US is so beautiful,
we preserve lands, we've cleaned up our waters
better than any other country.
But it is absolutely fair to say that many of these
environmental reviews
are delaying projects that we need
in order to solve climate change.
Gotcha, so government could get out of the way a little bit
because we got to work fast, right, but not completely?
Yes, so we're going to have to strike that balance.
Well, it's so hard not to be cynical
when you have things like,
and you were just touching on the idea, Jason,
it was part of the big thing, your question, which is this,
that, yeah, of course there is, you know,
the what you call the ethical or moral pull,
but it always comes down to economics, right?
It's always, sadly, it's the driver of everything.
It's like when the government went to war
on the cigarette companies,
it wasn't because they wanted us to stop smoking,
it's because they didn't want to pay
for people who were sick, unfortunately. It's gotta be a win-win. Ultimately, otherwise they wouldn't, they wanted us to stop smoking, it's because they didn't want to pay for people who were sick. Unfortunately.
It's got to be a win-win.
Ultimately.
Otherwise, they wouldn't, they couldn't care less.
And I think that there is a societal issue in America.
Mr. Gates, I haven't revealed this to you yet.
I'm Canadian by birth.
Oh, God.
So, and I'm sorry to drop it on you like that.
We had a reveal party.
But, you know, I think that there is a societal,
there are some societal issues,
and I am American as well,
and I've lived here for a number of years,
and I love this country.
I truly, truly do, and my children are all American.
It's an incredible experience.
But I do think that there are some issues,
societally, in this country that come up,
that have to do with that that unfortunately I know that
look, I'm not naive, but unfortunately, a lot of things in this country are driven by
people wanting to what's theirs.
And there isn't this idea that we're only as strong as our weakest link.
It just and if any and if anything, it keeps getting reinforced in different ways in elections,
etc. in the way that you look at,
California should have buried power lines.
There's no question about it,
but nobody wants to pay for that kind of thing.
And so there are all sorts of things like that,
and people just won't do it.
And I don't know how we can change minds in this country,
but it is strange.
And people will vote against their self-interest
in this country in
ways that are staggering and and I I'm giving you all these big picture things
because I imagine mr. Gates these are the kinds of things that you think about
because you're dealing in macro am I right with that no absolutely the you
know I when I think about the health system or climate,
we've gotta solve these problems.
We saw that when we weren't ready for the pandemic,
millions of people died who shouldn't have died.
Go ahead, Sean.
I was just saying, I love all the,
talking about medicine,
I love all the medical things you're doing.
Do I call you Bill?
Do I call you Mr. Gates?
Sure, Bill's fantastic.
Okay, William.
It's a great name, Bill.
I do think you should keep it.
It is a great name.
I've been thinking about it.
It is a great name.
Trey, we can call you Trey?
Trey.
That was my nickname.
Yeah?
My family still calls me that because my dad was Bill.
Right.
Wait, where'd you get Trey?
The third.
The third.
Because he's the third.
Trey is the third.
Oh, hey Trey.
You didn't know that? So hey Trey, I love all the medical things
you're involved with.
And so what's your favorite one you're working on
and how has all being around all the innovation
of this medical world that you're involved with
changed the way you live your life,
whether that's food, diet, or whatever it is
that we don't know about.
We're learning a lot.
We've learned that sleep is very important.
On nutrition, we're still kind of confused about
other than eating too many calories, what counts.
The work of our foundation is very focused on the diseases
that are still huge in poor countries.
So HIV, malaria, you know, we literally still have polio
out there, even though we got rid of it in the US
and kids aren't dying and being paralyzed.
But we're down to just a few countries.
And so the only disease we've ever gotten rid of
is smallpox, and now polio is very close to being the second
on that list, so I put a lot of effort into that.
With HIV, you've got a million Americans living with it,
40 million worldwide.
We'd like to make it so we can actually cure it
rather than you having to take medicine
the rest of your life.
And so we're making good progress on that.
Is there any truth to the fact that,
because I hear like they actually, you know,
you hear these conspiracies that there actually is a cure
for HIV or there is a cure for all these things,
but they suppress it because there's too much money
in pharmaceuticals.
No, I wish that was true, because then I would take the cure
and, you know.
Right, exactly.
Do you know about this?
Gosh, now it just occurred to me, now that you're here,
I'm going to call you Bill as well, if that's okay.
Good.
Bill, I know, because I've been reading online,
and a lot of people from their basement
say that you're putting chips in our brain,
which is amazing.
I love when people, when I hear that,
my answer to that is always, to what end?
Yeah, I know.
Like, why do you?
Why does he want to decide my head?
Yeah, exactly.
When I hear somebody say the government,
I'm like, all right, we're done.
But do you hear any of that?
Does it make its way to you?
Do you laugh about it sometimes?
Does it alarm you when you hear these people saying,
Bill Gates is trying to put a chip into everybody's brain?
Yeah, well, I've had people come up to me on the street
and yell at me that, you know, why am I tracking them?
And I look at them like,
But why are you?
What am I gonna do with that information?
Right.
You know, so you do have to laugh about it,
but it's also at the same time tragic
that millions who would have been saved
by the COVID vaccine stayed away from it
because of all the online misinformation
that they were faced with.
And whenever you get a pandemic saying,
oh, there must be some evil genius behind this,
that's not very adaptive.
And we're not really ready for the next pandemic,
which will come, hard to say when it's gonna come,
but I thought that would make vaccines more popular.
And so there's some work to be done here.
So Bill, with all the AI stuff that's being talked about,
and I'm sure if you're like me,
you'll kind of tune out a bit
because there's so much of it.
Well, I'm sure there's many parts.
What's the most promising use of AI
What's the most promising use of AI
that you can see coming soon? I'm sure it's gonna fix a lot of things,
but is there something that might be on the doorstep
that you can talk about?
Well, I'd say the most promising work
is health and education.
Even today, if you get like a set of blood tests back
or an MRI test back, you know, if you get like a set of blood tests back
or an MRI test back, you know, you get a confusing medical bill,
you really should stick it in the AI
and say, explain this to me like a sixth grader
because it is so good at doing that.
Okay.
And so-
God, I'd use it all the time.
Helping people with medical things,
and then in education, having a personal tutor
that gets what you're confused about the level that you're at
and knows how to encourage you,
whether it's in math or writing papers.
It's early days and it's being rolled out.
And this will not only be profound for the United States,
but in Africa, where we have fewer teachers and doctors
than anywhere in the world.
And so a chance for us to give them access
to the kind of health that we take for granted,
AI in those two domains, we should push forward,
get the accuracy up, and really surprise people
by improving the health system a lot.
And this question's coming from a person
who has no idea how research and development happens
in the medical science, but I think that you get an idea,
then you gotta run it through a modeling thing,
and you gotta test it all out.
Am I right in assuming that AI can make this
much, much faster such that we can track down
maybe what the right equation is to fix cancer
or any other of these incredibly damaging things,
that maybe the process of elimination
can happen much faster where we can reasonably expect
to have some cures for some of these uncurable things
perhaps in our lifetime?
Absolutely, and medicine has made a lot of progress.
I mean, heart disease is way down.
Cancer, we have a lot of things in the pipeline,
but AI is going to accelerate all of that.
Great, amazing.
You know, I work in Alzheimer's
and there's some great tools coming along
because nobody should want to have that.
And even with HIV, this idea of the cure,
the fact we can get it out maybe in four years
instead of eight, we'll use AI to help accelerate that.
That's amazing. Wow. We'll be right back.
And back to the show.
Your mom was really influential with you
for sort of planting this early seed of philanthropy
and giving back and using what you're given
in the right way, is that correct? of philanthropy and giving back and using what you're given
in the right way, is that correct?
Do you wanna speak about that at all?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, when you see your parents behave,
that's more influential than what your parents say.
And so they volunteered in the community,
they gave what they could.
And then as my mom saw- She was big in the community, they gave what they could, and then as my mom saw.
She was big in the United Way, yes?
Exactly, she put a lot of her time into that,
both in our city, but also at the federal level.
And so she was always telling me,
okay, you've gotta run a United Way campaign and get back.
Sadly, she died pretty young about 30 years ago.
It was my dad who actually,
when I was still full-time at Microsoft,
ran the foundation and got it going for the first 10 years,
and set the culture in a very positive way.
So he did get to see and participate in, you know,
all those dictates that go back to my childhood.
Are your kids being as observational as you were
and benefiting from it like you did?
Yeah, no, well, my kids, you know, are both lucky,
although being a child of somebody well known, I'm sure your kids experience
some of it, it's got a lot of pluses,
but some minuses as well.
But are they following your great example,
I guess is my question.
Well, I'm giving them as a percentage of the wealth,
a pretty small percentage.
I mean, in absolute, it's a lot,
and I do believe that they'll have their own careers
and they'll be very generous with what they're doing,
but I didn't decide that we would take that wealth
and pass it down.
95% goes out through the foundation,
and yet, I'm super happy with how hard they work
and their values.
My wife, Melinda, did a great job raising the kids
and it's worked out well.
Yeah, amazing.
What about, I want to know about that gut probe in a pill,
like you just eat a pill.
Describe that to me,
because I just read headlines about it,
I didn't really know anything about it. What is that technology and what is it used for? Probe eat a pill, like describe that to me, because I just read headlines about it, I didn't really know anything about it.
What is that technology and what is it used for?
Probe and a pill.
Yeah, like you eat a pill and it probes your gut.
Oh boy.
Yeah, so digestion is super complicated
and that's why these nutritional fads come along
and the New Yorker cartoon said,
"'You better adopt this new nutritional fad quickly
"'before they prove it doesn't work.'"
And what happens is that in your gut,
there's a lot of bacteria they call the microbiome.
And we're just now, as you swallow this capsule
and it absorbs all of those bacteria,
we see what's going on.
We finally understand what's going on.
And so our foundation works on malnutrition.
These big pharmaceutical companies like Eli Lilly
work on overnutrition.
And it turns out that we work together on the research
because the same complex circuitry
that allows poor kids to be malnourished.
In the US, we have horrible levels of childhood obesity.
And so as we're learning that, new drugs
like these GLP-1 obesity drugs that as they get cheaper
are gonna have a profound effect,
that's the type of innovation coming out.
And yet, we didn't understand that until very recently.
It's fascinating.
And Sean's still mourning the new ban on red dye number three
because it's such a staple in his diet
as you can probably tell.
That's my Swedish friend.
He can't identify the cherry
and the strawberry flavored stuff.
His brain is basically liquefied.
But I will say, you talk about that,
about obesity and childhood obesity,
what is it?
What is the difference in this country?
Again, it sounds like I've been attacking this.
I'm really not.
I'm curious about things like,
about childhood obesity compared to other countries
and the nutrition and things that are allowed.
Like, you've seen those things where they compare a product
that is the same, but that's sold here
and then sold in the UK and the list of ingredients
is like double in this country with additives
and preservatives, et cetera, et cetera.
I mean, is that a massive problem or no?
Almost certainly not.
Oh, really? Yeah, I mean mean our kids sit in front of the TV
more than any other kids.
So lack of activity alone explains most of this.
Wow.
And sadly when your parents are obese,
the likelihood that you'll be obese
goes up pretty dramatically.
And so the US in many respects, drug addiction, obesity,
you could say as the world's richest country,
all the problems of being rich are worse than the US
than they are anywhere else.
We're also the most innovative though.
And that's why I'm not a pessimist at all.
I do think.
Wait, so it's just apathy?
Is that what it is?
No, your TV shows are too entertaining.
Oh, okay.
Exactly.
It's all your fault.
Not mine.
Not mine.
What are you excited for the next five years?
Sorry, Sean.
No, that's okay.
I just had one question about another issue,
but yeah, sorry, well, right before that,
but I do want to get to that.
I'm really passionate about this
because of the fires that just happened,
because of the constant droughts in California.
And we talked to Kamala Harris about this
like three, four years ago,
when she was the Senator in California,
is like most of the earth is water.
And so when there's a shortage of water,
I'm like, how can we not figure out how to desalinate water?
And people say it's too expensive.
Well, it's more expensive to not figure it out.
And so what are your thoughts about that?
And do you have any kind of desire to be in that world?
Yeah, so I'm very involved in that because,
we have to both do climate mitigation
and climate adaptation and adaptation is a part of that's dealing with water shortages
and more difficult weather.
It takes a certain amount of energy to desalinate water.
And so only by bringing the cost of energy down with things like solar or perhaps nuclear fission or fusion,
then you get more water availability.
80% of water is used for agriculture.
So you can afford to desalinate water for human consumption.
You can't really afford to do it for agriculture,
so you have to end up moving your farms
to the places where there's enough water.
You don't wanna pay to desalinate just to grow.
Unless you do, unless we figure out a way to do it.
Unless you do, and people like, sadly, Jason Mayman,
who obviously with his almond consumption
has been destroying the planet,
it's unbelievable the amount of water that goes
to every one of your precious almonds
that you just carelessly stuff in your mouth.
But Bill, what is the, I was gonna ask you
about what you're excited about the next five years.
What are we gonna do about energy sources going forward?
What can we do?
Is there, have we reached peak oil?
What are we gonna do with fossil fuels? Is there, have we reached peak oil? What are we going to do with
fossil fuels? Can we keep it going in this direction? What do you think about that?
Well, I'm very hopeful that between expanding wind and solar and getting both types of nuclear,
nuclear fission and fusion, to get safer and cheaper, that even with all this demand for energy,
like electric cars or electric heat pumps,
AI data centers,
that we'll be able to get ahead of that
and still have cheap electricity,
even though we'll get rid of all of the
terrible CO2 emissions.
So we are gonna have to transition away from
coal and natural gas in the decades ahead.
I mean, and that's gonna be a painful transition,
I imagine.
Not if we innovate the cost of these other things down.
Electric cars are getting cheaper.
Eventually you do get to the point
where the substitute is as cheap as the dirty thing was.
And in the long run, that's what we need to do
so that we get global adoption of green approaches.
Well, but educate me if you would,
to the extent that you know,
if you get an electric car and you get all these people
who get them and they're great,
and then some people like to virtue signal with them
and shame other people.
But the components, there's so many of the components
that go into the car are petroleum based,
whether it's the actual components themselves
or traveling those cars to their destinations
or across oceans and stuff, right?
You know about all this.
Is there any way that we can mitigate
all of those other things as well
so that we're not relying on petroleum for everything?
You know, absolutely, and we measure that.
Anybody who buys an electric car,
as you say, it's not zero emissions,
but it is dramatically less than a gasoline car.
Right.
And we're learning to make the batteries
using less energy and less environmental things,
like new ways of finding lithium.
So the accounting on, okay,
how do we have the most environmentally clean car?
We're doing a very good job tracking that.
And consumers who help create demand for electric vehicles,
they deserve a little bit a sense of virtue
because the more we buy, the more the price goes down
and the more we.
I agree, I was playing obviously, but I do agree.
I do agree.
Bill, what's the rest of your day look like?
What are your, is your average day.
Inspiring the person who told him to do this.
Is your average day split 50-50 between
sort of personal pleasure, silly stuff,
and also saving the world at the other half?
Or I'll bet the ratio's not 50-50.
But do you get a little time to be stupid doing something?
If so, what is it?
I do.
In my 20s, I was monomaniacal in my work.
But now, although I work 50 hours a week and travel a lot,
I play a fair bit of tennis, I play a lot of pickleball.
I love reading, I love, you know, TV shows
that you guys have made, that's super fun.
Little bit of golf?
No, I'm not doing much golf.
I like tennis and pickleball,
because slightly better exercise.
Sure, sure, gotcha.
What is the one thing that you know how to do
that everyone would be kind of surprised about?
Do you have like a little hobby,
like are you a great like drawer?
Do you cook?
Yeah, like are you a knitter?
Is there anything that's sort of a sneaky little talent
that people might be surprised about?
Like are you a great whistler, you know?
That's pretty good.
That qualifies.
On cue, not bad.
I'm good at sleeping on planes.
Oh, that's a great talent.
That is a great talent.
Now, are you a savory or sweet person?
Do you have a sweet tooth?
Yeah, no, I try and not have too much peanut brittle around
because I would eat anything that's around.
Wow.
Sugar's a bad deal for me.
Very dangerous.
Well, it's good that you're not too distracted
with silly things because we need you there on the stick
doing whatever you are doing
and what you will continue to do, we hope.
So thank you so much for what you've done,
what you're gonna do,
and thank you for spending an hour with us, truly.
Yeah, that was fun, thank you guys.
Honor to meet you.
What an absolute thrill.
Thank you so much for your time.
So cool, thanks Bill.
Thank you Bill.
All right.
Thank you, enjoy the rest of your day.
All right.
Thank you, sir.
See you buddy. All right. You enjoy the rest of your day. All right, sir. Yeah, buddy Bye bye pal
I
Felt like I was a real blowhard today. I'm sorry. I don't have a lot of opinions and they're good opinions
No, I felt very I felt very blowhardy. I'm so sorry
I know well
You know what you get somebody like that on the show and you you you want to like you want to talk about all the stuff
That is complicated and big stuff, I want him to answer big questions.
I know, I get that.
Like big macro questions.
I get that.
How can we save it?
Is there any way that we can change opinion in the world?
Yeah, yeah, right, right, right.
It's almost like everybody's looking,
to your point Will, it's like everybody's looking
for that guy who has all the answers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I mean, I wanted to ask him,
people like that, do you have perspective
about being one of the people that changed the fucking world? No, I wanted to ask him, people like that, do you have perspective about being one of the people
that changed the fucking world?
No, I know.
There's like 10 or 20 people like Einstein and him
and like Steve Jobs and-
He and I are on a short list of people who-
Wait, wait, wait, wait, back up, back up, back up.
I agree.
I know, I'm saying what you're saying, dude.
I'm agreeing with you.
The number of smiles that Will has created
as opposed to computers.
No, what I'm saying is he and I, yeah, dude,
I'm making your point for you.
That's when I have changed.
He's got to like, talk about like, you know,
when you get to the end of your life,
and like we've talked about it before, you know,
did I use my years right?
Like this guy, I mean, I'm sure some people
have issues with him, like with everybody,
but my goodness, the amount of effect he has set
over this world.
And he's still doing it.
I know, I know he.
The other thing that I'm excited about,
you know, is his book.
He's got this new book coming out that's, you know,
about like how this all started for him,
how his brain started going and how he got excited.
Was it the biography?
Yeah, yes, I believe so.
Yeah, it's called Source Code.
It comes out February, but yeah, hopefully there's
an audio portion of it that I can listen to.
Oh no, Jamie, no.
Yeah, I still don't get it.
It's left to right, top to bottom, right?
You don't know what you're missing.
I just had such a good read.
Oh God, you don't know what you guys,
it would give you so many more references.
You'd be so much more interesting.
No wonder you're so bland.
You have nothing in there.
There's a reference.
Did we stop recording or are we still rolling?
No, we're still going.
Source code.
Source code is the book.
Go out and read it.
Because all the prophets are going to go to,
me?
Not his pocket, something really good.
I should know this, but it's all for charity.
So. That's great, as most everything he does.
Exactly.
That's so cool.
Source code.
I also love the work that I wanted to get more into the...
Oh, here we go, Jesus Christ.
You couldn't even fucking get...
I wanted to get into the biotechnology.
The biotechnology.
Why, why, Sean?
Into the biotechnology.
Biotechnology.
Is exciting. technology into the biotech-nology! Bio!
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