Newsgroups: rec.humor.funny From: brad@clari.net Subject: Bill Gates Wealth Index Keywords: chuckle, computers, topical, original Approved: funny-request@clari.net Path: alphapro.demon.co.uk!news.demon.co.uk!dispatch.news.demon.net!demon!baron.netcom.net.uk!netcom.net.uk!cpk-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!su-news-hub1.bbnplanet.com!zdc!super.zippo.com!enews.sgi.com!su-news-feed4.bbnplanet.com!news.bbnplanet.com!fugue.clari.net!funny-request Message-ID: Date: Tue, 29 Jul 97 3:20:03 EDT Lines: 123 Xref: alphapro.demon.co.uk rec.humor.funny:196 NOTE: This joke has an associated chart and various HTML links. If you are reading this with a browser or have one conveniently available, I recommend you read this joke by instead going to the URL: http://comedy.clari.net/brad/billg.html Bill Gates Wealth Index Most people will have read the recent reports of how Microsoft Chairman (http://www.microsoft.com/billgates/default.asp) Bill Gates has had his personal net worth soar over 40 billion dollars. He certainly knows how to make money. Consider that he made this money in the 22 years or so since Microsoft was founded in 1975. If you presume that he has worked 14 hours a day on every business day of the year since then, that means he's been making money at a staggering half-million dollars per hour, *around $150 per second.* Which means that if, on his way into the office, should he see or drop a $500 bill on the ground, it's just not worth his time to bend over and pick it up. He would make more just heading off to work. We're assuming about 4 seconds to bend down and pocket the bill. Of course he can afford to hire people to follow him and pick up any $500 bills he may drop. Not that he would, fortunately he doesn't quite think of his wealth or time this way. When I first calculated this, it was only a $20 bill, and then for some time it was a $100 bill. I remember speaking to him at a conference some years ago thinking, "$31 per second, $31 per second" as we talked. I didn't mention this. It's perhaps more disturbing to look at the slope of his appreciation this year. From January to July he's gained some $16 Billion, meaning that at the rate he's going, if he sees a $10,000 bill, he's just as well to pass it by. (They do exist, but he won't see one until he buys the U.S. treasury -- they are not circulated. Salmon Chase, former secretary of the treasury and chief justice, is on it.) If it's a pile of cash he has to count, it's even worse. At $2,500 per second so far this year, they would have to be thousand-dollar Bills -- and he would need to have a quick hand -- to avoid him losing the money in wasted time while he's counting them. Counting $500 bills would be very unprofitable. The "Too-small-a-bill-for-Bill" index has gone up quite a bit over the years. When Microsoft went public in 1986, the new multimillionaire only had to leave behind $5 bills. In the HTML version, you will find a chart of the amount of currency it's not been worth Mr. Gates' time to pick up off the ground over the years, based on his current 281 million shares of Microsoft (he hasn't sold many) and the split-adjusted stock price courtesy of Microsoft's own web site. The spreadsheet (Excel of course) is there too. Bill Gates Dollars Another way to examine this sort of wealth is to compare it to yours. Consider the average American of reasonable but modest wealth. Perhaps she has a net worth of $100,000. Mr. Gates' worth is 400,000 times larger. Which means that if something costs $100,000 to her, to Bill it's as though it costs 25 cents. You can work out the right multiplier for your own net worth. So for example, you might think a new Lambourghini Diablo would cost $250,000, but in Bill Gates dollars that's *63 cents*. That fully loaded, multimedia active matrix 233 MHZ laptop with the 1024x768 screen you've been drooling after? *A penny*. A nice home in a rich town like Palo Alto, California? *Two dollars*. You might spend $100 on tickets, food and parking to take your family to see an NHL hockey game. Bill, on the other hand could buy _the team_ for *100 Bill-bills*. You might buy a plane ticket on a Boeing 747 for $1200 at full-fare coach. In Bill-bills, Mr. Gates could buy *three 747s*. One for him, one for Melinda and one for young Jennifer Katherine. Other Pages Some other web pages have had something to say about this staggering amount of money. You can try: 1. http://www.quuxuum.org/evan-bin/sock.pl The Bill Gates Net Worth Page 2. http://www.webho.com/WealthClockRealTime Bill Gates Personal Wealth Clock 3. http://comedy.clari.net/brad/billsearch.html Search the rec.humor.funny joke archives for jokes about Bill Gates 4. http://mp.cs.niu.edu/~z920480/msjokes.html Yet Another Unofficial Microsoft Jokes page. By Brad Templeton, who still stops to pick up nickels (but has given up on pennies.) The funny thing is, Bill Gates probably still does, too. -- Selected by Jim Griffith. MAIL your joke to funny@clari.net. Attribute the joke's source if at all possible. A Daemon will auto-reply. Send comments meant for the moderator to funny-request@clari.net. Jokes sent to this address will be ignored. For the full submission guidelines, see http://comedy.clari.net/rhf/