Quantcast
Channel: Paul Allen
Viewing all 135 articles
Browse latest View live

Check Out The Absolutely Amazing Pile Of Super Expensive Toys Microsoft Cofounder Paul Allen Collected (MSFT)

$
0
0

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen showed CBS's Lesley Stahl some of the amazing things you can buy with billions of dollars.

The segment didn't make the television broadcast of "60 Minutes" last night, where Stahl interviewed Allen about his early days working with Bill Gates, but CBS put the video online.

As we reported last fall, Allen uses some of his fortune to keep a group of full-time musicians on call for impromptu jam sessions anywhere in the world. The video also shows him jamming in Kenya with his friend Dan Aykroyd, showing off Jimi Hendrix's original Stratocaster, and touring the indoor pool in his mansion. Plus: the first ever public footage of his private submarine.

See also: The Amazing Life Of Microsoft Cofounder Paul Allen.

 

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »


10 Crazy Stories About Bill Gates From Paul Allen's New Book (MSFT)

$
0
0

Bill Gates in 1994

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen has a memoir called "Idea Man" coming out today. In it, he reveals some amazing stories about his friend Bill Gates.

Early excerpts from the book portrayed Gates as a tough negotiator who talked Allen into receiving a smaller share of the company they founded together.

But the memoir also contains some lighter anecdotes about Gates in his childhood and the early days of Microsoft. If you're only familiar with Gates in his elder-statesman charity role, you may not recognize the hard-charging thrill seeker who built the most profitable tech company in history.

In high school, he went dumpster diving to try and get source code.

In high school, Gates and Allen honed their programming skills on a DEC minicomputer owned by a local company, C-Cubed. But as students, they didn't have access to as much information as the company's employees, which frustrated them. So at night, Allen would boost the smaller Gates up to the top of the company's dumpsters, where he'd look for interesting stuff. Once, they found a printout of the TOPS-10 source code, and it unlocked a lot of secrets.



He and Paul Allen hacked a company's accounting file to try and get free computing time.

As the charges mounted up for their borrowed computer time in high school, Gates and Allen began looking for a way to access one of the free accounts at C-Cubed. They somehow got access to an administrator password, and used it to steal the company's internal accounting file. (Allen doesn't go into detail about how they got the password.) They were hoping to decrypt the file to get one of the free accounts, but they got caught and the company booted them.



He wrote his high school's scheduling program to book him into an English class with all girls.

One summer, Gates contracted to write a class scheduling program for his high school. He made sure to "preload" himself into an English class with a dozen girls and no other boys.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Steve Jobs Was A Snarling Brute Who Humiliated People Just To Do It, Says Paul Allen (AAPL)

$
0
0

steve jobs

Bill Gates isn't the only tech star given harsh treatment in Paul Allen's new memoir.

Allen also had numerous run-ins with Steve Jobs in the early days of Microsoft, when the company started making software for the Macintosh.

According to Allen, Jobs was a jerk, and he didn't care if people realized it.

When Allen and Gates visited California for the first demo of the Mac, Jobs sat down with Andy Hertzfeld and turned the machine on. It locked up after a minute, and Jobs was furious. As Allen tells it:

"What the fuck is going on?" [Jobs] snarled at Hertzfeld, who'd probably been up all night getting things ready and was now trying to shrink under the table. "These guys came all the way down here to see this thing and this is the best we can do? This is the best we can do? We get thirty seconds and a frozen screen? What the fuck is wrong with you?"

Years later, when Allen saw the 1999 TV movie "The Pirates of Silicon Valley," he was reminded of the incident -- the movie portrays Jobs as a "mean-spirited jerk," he writes.

The next time Allen ran into Jobs, he asked if he liked the movie.

"I thought the guy who played me did a fantastic job," said Jobs.

As Allen writes, Jobs just didn't care what people thought of him.

See also: The Lucky Breaks That Made Microsoft A Powerhouse.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Tour Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen's Knockout Real Estate

$
0
0

imageBy Rob Bear

Paul Allen, the one-time partner of Bill Gates in the founding of Microsoft, has always, it seems, been a flamboyant spender. In 1988, just two years after the Microsoft IPO, he paid $70M for the NBA's Portland Trail Blazers.

An avid musician, Allen owns the white Fender Stratocaster wielded by Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock. When he decided to take to the high seas, he did so in supreme style, commissioning the 414-foot Octopus, the world's largest private yacht at the time of its 2003 construction.

Click here to see the homes >

So it should come as no surprise that Allen—who appeared this week on 60 Minutes as part of the media blitz surrounding a tell-all he penned about the rise of Microsoft—has one smashing real estate portfolio. Last year, he bought this 5,800-square-foot Malibu, Calif. beach house right on famed Carbon Beach, for $25M. Let's just call that pocket change for the man of many toys and many billions.

When Brangelina needed a place to stay with their brood for the Cannes film festival, they borrowed Allen's French escape, Villa Maryland, a hilltop stucco spread with a staff of 12 located in the exclusive enclave of St. Jean Cap-Ferrat.

Here, where estates like this trade for upwards of $30M, Allen counts Bono and Andrew Lloyd Webber among his sun seeking neighbors.

Allen is partial to his childhood home of Seattle, and saves his most extravagant purchases for upscale Mercer Island. The 10,000-square-foot waterfront home features a floating heli-pad for ease of access, a dock that's not nearly large enough to accommodate Octopus, and a small front lawn.

So what makes this estate so special? How about five adjacent mansions Allen owns, just up the hillside from the main house? The billionaire bachelor's mother lives in one, while the enormous tree-shrouded building houses a full-sized basketball court, fitness center, and swimming pool with water slide. For some mind-boggling interior views, be sure to check out the 60 Minutes segment.

Click here to see the homes >

This post originally appeared at Curbed.com.

Allen's $25 million Malibu retreat is directly situated on California's famed Carbon Beach



You can see the ocean from the pool



...and from the living room



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Google, Apple, Facebook, And More: Judge In Paul Allen Suit Deals With Crowd Of Tech Giants

$
0
0

With more than a dozen lawyers looking on — representing Google, Apple, eBay, Yahoo, Facebook and other Internet titans — a federal judge in Seattle heard arguments Monday afternoon in the lawsuit brought on behalf of Paul Allen’s former Interval Research lab.

But the question on the docket wasn’t whether the Internet giants violated the defunct lab’s patents. No, the first order of business for U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman was simply figuring out how to manage a suit that involves no fewer than eleven defendants, complicated behind-the-scenes technologies and thorny intellectual property issues dating back to the dawn of the web.

“What I know about computers is really minimal. If you want me to understand these patents then you’ve got to start educating me,” the judge told the lawyers from the bench, advising them to treat her as if she were an intelligent, teachable eighth grader.

That prompted Gerald Ivey, a lawyer representing AOL in the case, to point out that the average eighth grader is about as tech-savvy as they come these days. Pechman promptly revised her advice — telling the lawyers to treat her as if she was their mother.

The hearing highlighted the increasing complexity, size and pervasiveness of patent lawsuits among giant technology companies.

Read the full report at GeekWire.com.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

The Woz Slams Paul Allen As A Patent Troll (AAPL, MSFT)

$
0
0

stevewozniak dwts tbi

Apple and Microsoft have battled it out on many fronts over the years, but now there's a new one: the battle of the lesser-known cofounders.

In his keynote at the Embedded Systems Conference this morning, Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak kicked off with a shot at Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen's recent patent infringement suit against Apple and a bunch of other companies.

As The Register reports, Woz had tickets to see Allen speak at the Computer History Museum last Monday, but he blew it off and went to dinner with some friends instead because he "remembered he's suing all these companies like Apple and Google – but he's not suing Microsoft – because he bought all these patents." He also said that a lot of patents aren't worth much and "any fifth-grade could come up with the same approach."

Wozniak later said that Allen should be "investing in companies that are doing something, making products, actually making a new future for the world," rather than "get in bed with the lawyers to make my money."

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

A Microsoft Co-Founder's $40 Billion Mistake* (MSFT, AOL)

$
0
0

paul allen

Microsoft's co-founder Paul Allen owned a huge portion of AOL stock back before AOL got huge.

But then he sold it all in the 1990s.

What did that stake ended up being worth?

$40 billion.

Whoops.

This nugget comes from a Times review of Allen's autobiography:

There’s a refreshing candor to the prose, too. Allen spends the better part of one chapter demonstrating how a meddlesome owner can foul up a basketball franchise; in another, he shows that being too smart by half can mess up a professional football team. He confesses to losing $8 billion investing in cable companies in the 2000s. And then there was his decision to sell the large stake he had amassed in AOL in the early 1990s. He kicks himself for letting Gates convince him that a pipsqueak like AOL stood no chance against Microsoft, but he also shares the colossal size of his blunder: selling, it turned out, was a $40 billion mistake.

Don't feel too bad. Allen has billions of billions of dollars.

Correction: An earlier version of this post reported that Bill Gates convinced Paul Allen never to buy AOL stock, and that this was the $40 billion mistake. The $40 billion mistake was actually Allen's decision to sell AOL stock too soon.

Don't Miss: 10 Crazy Stories About Bill Gates From Paul Allen's Book →

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Paul Allen Throws A Wild Brazilian Party (MSFT)

$
0
0

Brazil Cheerleader

Last month, it looked like Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen was getting kind of serious.

He released his memoir, "Idea Man," and took some public digs at Bill Gates on "60 Minutes." He also did a speaking tour for the book where he talked about the early days of Microsoft and why he's suing a bunch of companies for patent infringement.

But now he's back to his billionaire lifestyle: according to a report in the NY Post, he threw a Brazilian themed bash on his 483-foot yacht, the Octopus, to celebrate the kickoff of the Cannes Film Festival.

Guests included a bunch of big Hollywood stars like Jodie Foster and Jane Fonda, as well as Israeli model Bar Refaeli. Like usual, Allen held a rock and roll jam.

Now check out: The Pile Of Absolutely Amazing Toys Paul Allen Has Collected.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »


BILL GATES: He Got The Big Stuff Right And Never Let Go

$
0
0

Bill Gates

William H. Gates III isn't always the first to see the future.

But when he finally zeroes in on what's important, his combination of vision, conviction, and stubborn tenacity make him unstoppable. It's what makes him a visionary.

As his former partner Paul Allen explains in his recent memoir, they weren't the first people to recognize the potential of microprocessors to bring hardcore computing power to the masses. People like Intel founder Gordon Moore had been thinking along those lines since the 1960s.

But when Allen showed Gates an advertisement for the Intel 8080 in a magazine in 1974, Gates knew immediately that it was time to strike: this was the first microprocessor powerful enough to run a full computer programming language like BASIC.

It was the 19-year-old Gates who made the phone call to tell Ed Roberts in Albuquerque that they had a version of BASIC ready to go for the Altair, the first 8080-powered computer.

He was bluffing.

But he dropped out of Harvard and worked around the clock with Allen and another programmer, Monte Davidoff, to get it done.

A couple years later, as the fledgling microcomputing industry began to take off, Gates took what was then an unpopular stance: software has value and the people who create it should be paid.

As he wrote in "An Open Letter To Hobbyists" in February 1976:

As the majority of hobbyists must be aware, most of you steal your software. Hardware must be paid for, but software is something to share. Who cares if the people who worked on it get paid?

Is this fair?.... One thing you do do is prevent good software from being written. Who can afford to do professional work for nothing? What hobbyist can put 3 man years into programming, finding all bugs, documenting his product and distribute for free? ... Most directly, the thing you do is theft.

This seems like common sense now that computer software is a $300 billion industry, but at the time few others saw that software -- not hardware -- would drive computers forward. In fact, it wasn't until 1981 that the Supreme Court clearly ruled that software could be patented. (The other side argued that software is a collection of mathematical algorithms and therefore can't be owned.)

Almost two decades later, after Microsoft had become a global powerhouse, Gates came under a lot of criticism for being late to understand the importance of the Internet.

His book "The Road Ahead," which was written in 1994 but not published until November 1995, mentions the Internet and World Wide Web a few times, but mostly as subsets of a more generic "Information Superhighway."

But Gates was quick to correct -- a month after the book was published, he wrote an internal memo to Microsoft employees called "The Internet Tidal Wave."(PDF here.)

Reading it 16 years later, it's amazing how accurate it was -- even if Microsoft didn't capitalize on all the opportunities he laid out. By December 1995, Bill Gates was sure that:

  • The Internet would dominate computing: "The Internet is the most important single development to come along since the IBM PC was introduced in 1981. It is even more important than the graphical user interface."
  • The open Web would kill services like AOL and MSN: "The On-line services business and the Internet business have merged....every On-line service has to simply be a place on the Internet with extra value added."
  • Free ad-funded content would win, but would be a hard business: "Although there is room to use brand names and quality to differentiate from free content, this will not be easy and puts a lot of pressure to figure out how to get advertiser funding....The challenge of becoming a leader in any subject area in terms of quality, depth, and price will be far more brutal than today's CD[-ROM] market. For each category we will have to decide if we can be #1 or #2 in that category or get out."
  • A cheap portable Web browsing device would threaten Windows/Intel: "One scary possibility being discussed by Internet fans is whether they should get together and create something far less expensive than a PC which is powerful enough for Web browsing....Gordon Bell and others approached Intel on this and decided Intel didn't care about a low cost device so they started suggesting General Magic or another operating system with a non-Intel chip is the best solution."
  • Microsoft needed to do way better in search. " Of particular interest are sites such as YAHOO! which provide subject catalogs and searching....Amazingly, it is easier to find information on the Web than on the Microsoft corporate network....[Our products] do not support text indexing as part of their queries today which is a major hole. Only when we have an integrated strategy will we be able to determine if our in-house efforts are adequate or to what degree we need to work with outside companies like Verity."
  • Peer-to-peer communication would be important: "Eventually you will be able to find the name of someone or a service you want to connect to on the Internet and rerouting your call to temporarily be a point-to-point connection will happen automatically." 

Imagine if Microsoft had executed on all of these ideas back in 1995. Instead of throwing money into ad-supported content on MSN, Microsoft could have invented Google. And smartphones. And Skype. The ideas were all in there.

There were some wrong assumptions as well. Quality-of-service guarantees and online virtual reality still haven't happened, for instance.

Microsoft did execute on a lot of the other parts of the memo, including -- fatefully -- integrating the Internet Explorer Web browser into Windows.

Bill and Melinda Gates portrait Smithsonian

That eventually led to the Department of Justice antitrust trial, which burned Gates out and soured him on the business world. He never understood how the U.S. government would want to crack down on a company that had contributed so much to the economy and society at large. He handed the reins over to Steve Ballmer in 2000.

But instead of retiring, Gates put his mind to work on an even bigger challenge: saving the world's population from preventable diseases. He pursues his work at the Gates Foundation with the same vision and tenacity that he built and guided Microsoft for 25 years.

Now, don't miss: 10 Crazy Stories About Bill Gates From Paul Allen's New Book.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

The 15 Most Expensive Yachts In The World

$
0
0

yachts boats luxury expensive

There is arguably no greater symbol of wealth than an enormous, gleaming, luxurious yacht.

Yachts are the ultimate toys for those who have out-earned the modes of common recreation. They offer privacy, extravagance, and comfort tailored to the exact specifications of the owner.

In the last decade, the uber-rich have entered into a worldwide arms race to build the largest, sleekest, fastest, most over-the-top floating toys a person could imagine.

The latest entrant, the gold-plated History Supreme, cost an eye-popping $4.8 billion.

The result is a veritable armada of money-soaked super yachts docked in ports across the world.

Le Grand Bleu - around $90 million

Owner: Eugene Schvidler; it was gifted to him by friend and business partner Roman Abramovich

Length: 370 ft

Coolest feature: The vessel, which launched in 2000, is powered by two 3,600 hp Wärtsilä engines. It has an onboard 74-foot sailboat and 67-foot speedboat.

Source: The New York Daily News



Tatoosh - $100 million

Owner: Paul Allen, co-founder of Microsoft

Length: 416 ft

Coolest Feature: You can buy it! Tatoosh was put up for sale in 2010 but has yet to be sold. So if you have a couple million dollars burning a hole in your pocket, contact Fraser Yachts.



Maltese Falcon - $120 million

Owner: Elena Ambrosiadou, co-founder of the London-based hedge fund IKOS Asset Management

Length: 289 ft

Coolest Feature: This is the largest sailing yacht in the world, making it wholly different from the other motor yachts on this list. It lacks the square footage of some of its counterparts, but it still houses five state rooms, a saloon, and a submarine.

Source: boatinternational.com



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Please follow The Life on Twitter and Facebook.

Microsoft Cofounder Paul Allen Is Selling His Private Island For $13.5 Million

$
0
0

paul allen private island

Microsoft cofounder and billionaire tech investor Paul Allen is selling his 292-acre private island off the coast of Washington (via the Bornrich).

The property, Allan Island, is named after a Navy hero and not its owner, according to the Examiner.

Listed at $13.5 million, the island is accessible by private plane or boat. While it has a log caretaker's cabin, it has no main house—though there are plenty of scenic spots on which to build one.

Allen reportedly tried to sell the island back in 2005 for $25 million, but took it off the market after failing to find a buyer.

A bird's eye view of Allan Island



It sits off the coast of the city of Anacortes, WA



The log caretaker's cabin



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Please follow The Life on Twitter and Facebook.

WHERE ARE THEY NOW? What Happened To The People In Microsoft's Iconic 1978 Company Photo (MSFT)

$
0
0

1978 microsoft picture

It's one of the most iconic photos in American business.

A ragtag group of bearded weirdos assembled for a family portrait in Albuquerque.

Usually, there's a question above the photo: "Would you have invested?"

It's a trick question. You're supposed to answer no – because well, look at those people – but then you learn it's a company portrait of Microsoft from 1978.

It was taken just before the then-startup left Albuquerque for Seattle. (Microsoft couldn't find anyone willing to move to New Mexico.)

Early employee Bob Greenberg, pictured in the middle, won the free portrait after calling in a radio show and guessing the name of an assassinated president. The gang reluctantly gathered together in some of their finest attire, and American business legend was made.

We all know what happened with the two guys in the bottom left and bottom right corners -- Bill Gates, and Paul Allen. But what about the rest? We saw the question pop up on Hacker News recently, and decided to find out.

Bill Gates is now giving away the billions he made from Microsoft

We all know what happened with this guy. Bill Gates founded and built Microsoft from nothing into the most valuable technology company in the world. Along the way he amassed a fortune, which he's now giving away to all sorts of good causes.



Andrea Lewis became a fiction writer and freelance journalist

Andrea Lewis was the only person at the company that was from Albuquerque. She was a technical writer for Microsoft, which meant she wrote documents explaining Microsoft's software. She left Microsoft in 1983, eventually becoming a  freelance journalist and fiction writer. Thanks in part to her Microsoft options, her net worth was estimated at $2 million by the AP.



Maria Wood sued Microsoft just 2 years later

Maria Wood was a bookkeeper for Microsoft, and married to another one of the early Microsofties in the picture. She left the company just two years later, suing it for sexual discrimination. Microsoft settled the case. After that, it doesn't look like she did much else. She raised her children and became a volunteer.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Mick Jagger Has Been Recording New Tracks On Paul Allen's Megayacht

$
0
0

mick jagger yacht

The recording session for the first album from Mick Jagger’s new supergroup SuperHeavy had to be top secret to foil music pirates and such, and apparently no recording studio on Earth was secure enough.

So the wrinkly Rolling Stone and friends took to the high seas, and laid down some tracks aboard Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen’s megayacht Octopus.

One of the rooms on the enormous 414 ft. vessel, the world’s 12th largest, is already a music studio and so served as a haven for Jagger and bandmates ex-Eurythmic Dave Stewart, singer Joss Stone, Bob Marley’s son Damian and award-winning Indian composer AR Rahman, the London Daily Mirror reports.

Designed by the famed Espen Oeino and built by Germany’s Lürssen in 2003, Octopus features two helicopters, two submarines, seven tenders, a swimming pool and a basketball court.

Jagger, who is worth an estimated $280 million, could not afford such a floating palace but super-nerdy Allen is a music buff who insisted on joining The Band’s Robbie Robertson on stage when the latter was presented with an award at the billionaire’s oddball Experience Music Project / Science Fiction Hall of Fame in Seattle. Who knows, maybe he made joining Superheavy on a set a condition of the loaner….

 James Spotting is the official blog of JamesList.com, the world's smartest luxury marketplace with headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden, offices in Marbella, Spain and representation in London, Frankfurt, Singapore and Miami. JamesList features more than 65,000 private jets, yachts, luxury cars, properties and exclusive watches for sale and rent from a trusted network of dealers around the world. James Spotting tracks the latest and coolest luxury news and trends from around the globe.

DON'T MISS: The 15 Most Unique And Awesome Billionaire Toys >

Please follow The Life on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Microsoft Cofounder Paul Allen Buys A $25 Million Penthouse Apartment In New York

$
0
0

paul allen apartment

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen has just picked up the penthouse apartment of a luxury building on Manhattan's Upper East Side, the Observer reports.

Allen reportedly paid $25 million for the pad, which has a huge terrace and was unlisted (so sadly, no photos).

It's not the first apartment Allen has bought in the building on East 66th St. He purchased the 11th floor apartment in 1996 for a reported $13.5 million, and the Observer speculates that "he will be expanding like a mid-90′s Microsoft."

Allen bought the penthouse apartment from Australian businessman Wade F.B. Thompson.

Allen, a billionaire tech investor, is currently selling a private island off the coast of Washington.

Now take a tour of Allen's knockout real estate collection >

Please follow The Life on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Steve Ballmer Staged An Emotional Event With Bill Gates To Keep Employees Happy, Says Book (MSFT, GOOG)

$
0
0

ballmer gates

Former Microsoft executive Kai-Fu Lee has a new tell-all autobiography out, and he has some juicy tales about his former employers.

According to CNET's Jay Greene, who pulled some of the best excerpts from the book, there was a tense executive retreat in which senior Microsoft executive Orlando Ayala lit into the company and Steve Ballmer for some of its business tactics related to licensing agreements.

Ballmer deferred the criticisms and said he'd talk to Bill Gates, who was still in a full-time role at the company, although he'd stepped down as CEO.

The next day, Gates showed up and explained why he still worked for Microsoft -- he wanted to defend the company from "those who call us a selfish monopoly that takes advantage of users!"

Lee claims that Gates then broke down and cried.

No doubt that Gates was emotional about the DoJ case -- that matches other stories that have come out over the years from Paul Allen and others.

But Lee thinks that Ballmer was "shrewd" for bringing him in to deflect legitimate criticisms that the exec had leveled.

Lee left Microsoft in 2005 for Google, and Microsoft tried to stop him by suing him under a non-compete agreement. (Microsoft lost.) Lee has since left Google to work on Chinese startups.

The book, "Making A World Of Difference," was translated from Chinese and is available now only as an e-book via Amazon's Kindle Store. The book came out two years ago in China has sold more than 1 million copies there, Lee told us in an email.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »


Paul Allen Wants To Build The Biggest Airplane Ever To Launch Satellites Into Space (MSFT)

$
0
0

Paul Allen guitar

Microsoft's co-founder, Paul Allen, is preparing to invest a ton of cash into a new spacecraft designed to launch satellites into space, WSJ reports. The cash will come from Allen's investment company, Vulcan.

The project, dubbed "Stratolaunch," will use parts from traditional jets with rocket boosters to create the largest airplane ever. The rockets will be built by a company owned by Tesla's Elon Musk.

If Stratolaunch is successful, it'll be the first private company to find a cheap way to launch satellites into orbit. Part of the savings will come from the recycled airplane parts the team's engineers plan to use. The Stratolaunch will be able to take off like a normal airplane, and even relocate itself thousands of miles if launch conditions in one area aren't good enough.

Read more about the Stratolaunch project on WSJ >

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Here Are The 10 Richest People In High Tech

$
0
0

Bill Gates BBC

Bloomberg has started ranking the richest people in the tech industry, and it's going to adjust the rankings daily based on the movement of stock prices and other assets.

Not surprisingly, Bill Gates is still number 1 by a large margin, with more than $61 billion. He lost about $800 million today, presumably because Microsoft shares dropped about 0.7%.

Two other Microsofties made the list: CEO Steve Ballmer and cofounder Paul Allen.

Here's the full list:

  1. Bill Gates, Microsoft chairman, worth $61.3 billion
  2.  Larry Ellison, Oracle CEO, $37.9 billion, - $385.7 million today
  3. Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook CEO, $21 billion, no change
  4. Larry Page, Google CEO, $18.7 billion, down $269.4 million today
  5. Sergey Brin, Google cofounder, $18.7 billion, down $291.2 million today
  6. Azim Premji, Wipro cofounder, $18.5 billion, down $217.8 million today
  7. Jeff Bezos, Amazon CEO, $17.2 billion, up $73 million today
  8. Steve Ballmer, Microsoft CEO, $15.3 billion, down 156.6 million today
  9. Michael Dell, Dell CEO, $14.9 billion, down 193 million today
  10. Paul Allen, Microsoft cofounder, $14.8 billion, down 47.2 million.

You can check back with Bloomberg every day at market close for the updated list.

 

     
       
       
       
       
       
       
Steve Ballmer $ 15.3 billion - $ 156.6 M 16.6
Michael Dell $ 14.9 billion - $ 193 M 1.3
Paul Allen $ 14.8 billion - $ 47.2 M 4.7

 

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Paul Allen Spends $500 Million To Find Out How The Brain Works

$
0
0

paul allen

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen wants to know how the human brain works and he's spending big bucks to find out.

Allen announced a $300 million donation to his research facility, the Allen Institute for Brain Science, bringing the total he's got invested to $500 million.

The institute is on a quest to figure out exactly how the brain works and how to fix it when it doesn't. The additional millions will fund 10 years of research that will answer such questions as ...

  • How does the brain store, encode and process information?
  • What are the cellular building blocks that underlie all brain function, and are often targets of disease?
  • How do those cells develop, and then create the circuits that drive behavior, thought and brain dysfunction?

Allen has personal reasons for the institute. His mother suffered from Alzheimer's, Forbes reports. He also believes that studying the brain will one day reveal "the essence of what makes us human," he told Forbes.

If we can understand that, then maybe one day we can replicate it and build human-like artificial intelligence.

Want to help humanity find our mind? The institute plans to hire 350 people over the next four years.

See also: The Amazing Life Of Microsoft Cofounder Paul Allen

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

AWOL Soldier Arrested For Trying To Defraud Paul Allen

$
0
0

paul allen

A soldier on the Army's Absent Without Leave was arrested for attempting to use billionaire Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's bank account to make over $15,000 in purchases, as reported by the Associated Press.

Federal investigators allege that Brandon Lee Price changed the address of Allen's account and then had a debit card sent to his Pittsburgh home so he could use it for payments on a delinquent Armed Forces Bank account and personal expenses.

From AP:

Price called Citibank in January and changed the address on an account held by Allen from Seattle to Pittsburgh, then called back three days later to say he had lost his debit card and asked for a new one to be sent to him, an FBI investigator wrote in a criminal complaint filed in February.

The card was used to attempt a $15,000 Western Union transaction and make a $658.81 payment on the Armed Forces Bank loan account the day it was activated, according to the complaint. Surveillance footage also captured him attempting purchases at a video game store and a dollar store, authorities alleged.

Citibank alerted police after detecting the identity theft. The only transaction that apparently made it through was the loan payment, according to a spokesman for Allen.

Price was arrested arrested March 2 and ordered detained until April 2 unless the Army takes him into custody (because he is wanted as a deserter).

The complaint doesn't specify how Price allegedly changed the address on the account.

Please follow Military & Defense on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Paul Allen Invests In A Massive Project To Make Wikipedia Better

$
0
0

paul allen

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen is backing the Wikidata project, which is part of the German chapter of the Wikimedia movement.

Wikidata is a new project with a big goal. It wants to be a collaboratively edited database of all of the world's knowledge. It will be used to make Wikipedia entries more accurate by sourcing better data. It will also make it easier to manage the 90,000 volunteers.

“Wikidata is ground-breaking. It is the largest technical project ever undertaken by one of the 40 international Wikimedia chapters,” Pavel Richter, CEO of Wikimedia Deutschland, said in a statement.

The technology should also make it easier to group edit lists and charts based on that data, so there's interest from the government, science, and other sectors to use it to publish data under a free Creative Commons license.

Wikidata has landed 1.3 million Euros to fund its development, half of which comes from the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence. So Allen's share adds up to about $860,000. The project is also being funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation Program and Google.

The team will start to work on the initial development for Wikidata in April. They will work on it for a year, and then give the project to the Wikimedia Foundation by March 2012.

Please follow SAI on Twitter and Facebook.

Join the conversation about this story »

Viewing all 135 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>