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AT A GLANCE
INVESTING STYLE
Bill Gates
Gates invests through Cascade Investment LLC in established, cash-generative businesses — railroads, waste management, agricultural equipment, farmland. His biggest single Cascade holding for years was Canadian National Railway.
He has sold most of his Microsoft stock over time. His investment philosophy outside Microsoft mirrors Buffett's: durable businesses with pricing power, bought at reasonable prices.
Sam Altman
Altman is a prolific early-stage investor who backs deep tech and moonshot ideas. His portfolio through YC and personal investments includes hundreds of companies.
His personal bets tend toward civilizational-scale technology — nuclear fusion, longevity research, AI safety. He has said he thinks the most important investments of the next decade will be in energy and AI.
He also holds significant OpenAI equity (though the exact structure is complex given it was a nonprofit converted to capped-profit).
FINANCIAL PHILOSOPHY
Bill Gates
His core framework: read obsessively, think long-term, and separate emotion from analysis. He takes annual Think Weeks — solo retreats to a lake cottage in the Pacific Northwest where he reads papers and books for two weeks with no interruptions.
He publishes a reading list twice a year at gatesnotes.com. He has said that the best investment he ever made was paying $100,000 to take Warren Buffett to dinner every year.
Sam Altman
Altman believes we are approaching AGI — artificial general intelligence — and that it will be the most transformative and potentially dangerous technology humans have ever built. He thinks the right response is to build it carefully rather than cede the frontier to those who might not.
He argues that the returns from AI will be so large they will need to be distributed broadly to prevent catastrophic inequality. He has floated ideas around universal basic income funded by AI productivity.
RISK TOLERANCE
Bill Gates
Gates's risk tolerance is intellectual and deliberate rather than impulsive. He takes genuinely large bets — TerraPower on nuclear fission, billions into climate technology, the Gates Foundation's campaigns to eradicate diseases that kill millions — but only after intense research.
His Think Weeks exist to force slow, rigorous thinking on big decisions. At Microsoft, he kept enough cash on hand to run the company for a full year with zero revenue because he never wanted short-term survival pressure to force a bad long-term decision.
That discipline carries into his personal finances.
Sam Altman
Altman has said that playing it safe at this moment in history is the most dangerous thing he could do. His belief: AGI is coming whether OpenAI builds it or not — the only question is who builds it and with what values.
That conviction makes conventional risk aversion feel irresponsible to him. He holds large personal positions in nuclear fusion companies and longevity biotech — bets that could return 1000x or go to zero.
He has said that any genuinely interesting bet carries existential downside risk. That is what makes it interesting, not a reason to avoid it.
THE PLAYBOOK
Bill Gates
He wakes up early, exercises on a treadmill while watching documentaries, and reportedly does the dishes every night. He has said dishes are meditative.
For a man worth $130 billion, the emphasis on routine is either deeply grounded or very good PR. He drove himself to work at Microsoft for years and lived in a normal house long after he could afford otherwise.
Sam Altman
He has written about sleeping 8 hours, exercise, not scheduling meetings before 11am, eating the same lunch every day, and blocking large chunks of uninterrupted time for thinking. He is a known prepper — he has said he owns land, gold, guns, and antibiotics in case civilization collapses, which is a mildly alarming admission from the CEO of the company building AGI.
BIGGEST WIN
Bill Gates
Microsoft Windows. The decision to license MS-DOS to IBM for the PC while retaining the right to sell it to other manufacturers was arguably the most lucrative business decision in tech history.
Every PC manufacturer then licensed Windows. Gates captured the entire PC market without building the hardware.
By 1999, Microsoft's market cap hit $616 billion.
Sam Altman
OpenAI and ChatGPT. The launch of ChatGPT in November 2022 was the most consequential product launch in tech in at least a decade.
It brought AI from a niche technical field into mainstream awareness overnight and made OpenAI the fastest-growing AI company in history. Altman navigated the transition from nonprofit to commercial entity, secured $13 billion from Microsoft, and built a company valued at $157 billion within five years.
BIGGEST MISTAKE
Bill Gates
Missing the internet. Microsoft was late and initially dismissive of the internet as a platform.
Gates eventually course-corrected and wrote the Internet Tidal Wave memo in 1995, redirecting the entire company toward internet strategy. But the delay allowed Netscape to establish footholds, and Microsoft's browser monopoly tactics led to the landmark antitrust case United States v.
Microsoft in 2000, which threatened to break up the company.
Sam Altman
Being fired by his own board in November 2023 — and the board's subsequent reversal. Whatever actually happened in those five days is still murky.
What is clear is that the board lost control of the situation the moment it became obvious that without Altman, most of the company would leave. The board members who voted to fire him are gone.
Altman is back with more power. The episode revealed real governance problems at one of the most consequential companies in history.
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS
Bill Gates
Bill Gates was born in Seattle in 1955. He taught himself to program on a PDP-10 at age 13.
He enrolled at Harvard in 1973, dropped out in 1975, and moved to Albuquerque with Paul Allen to found Microsoft. Their break came when they licensed an operating system to IBM for the original PC — and crucially, retained the rights to sell it to anyone else.
That decision made Microsoft. Windows became the standard operating system for the world.
Gates became the world's richest person in 1995 and held that title for much of the next 15 years. He transitioned out of Microsoft's day-to-day around 2000 and fully moved into philanthropy via the Gates Foundation.
Sam Altman
Sam Altman dropped out of Stanford in 2005 to co-found Loopt, a location-sharing startup. Loopt was acquired in 2012 for $43 million — not a huge exit but enough to establish him as a serious founder.
He then became president of Y Combinator in 2014, succeeding Paul Graham. Under Altman, YC expanded from a small cohort model to a much larger operation with global reach, including backing Airbnb, Dropbox, Stripe, and hundreds of others in its portfolio.
In 2019, he stepped down from YC to become CEO of OpenAI. The company launched ChatGPT in November 2022, which became the fastest-growing consumer application in history — 100 million users in two months.
In November 2023, the board fired him. The entire company revolted.
Microsoft — OpenAI's biggest investor — nearly hired him to run a new AI division. Five days later, he was reinstated with a restructured board.
OpenAI's valuation hit $157 billion by 2024.
COMPANIES & ROLES
Bill Gates
Microsoft (co-founder, former CEO and chairman). Cascade Investment LLC (his personal investment vehicle).
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (co-chair). Major holdings through Cascade include Canadian National Railway, Deere & Company, and significant farmland.
Early Microsoft equity remains a massive portion of his net worth.
Sam Altman
OpenAI (CEO). Y Combinator (former president).
Loopt (co-founder, acquired 2012). Personal investments via Sam Altman Fund and early-stage bets.
Notable: invested early in Stripe (now worth $70B+), Helion Energy (nuclear fusion), Retro Biosciences (longevity). Also holds equity in Anthropic indirectly.
EDUCATION
Bill Gates
Harvard University — studied mathematics and computer science. Dropped out in 1975 after his sophomore year to found Microsoft.
Sam Altman
Stanford University — studied computer science. Dropped out in 2005 after his sophomore year to found Loopt.
BOOKS & RESOURCES
Bill Gates
The Road Ahead (his own book)
Business at the Speed of Thought (his own book)
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Sam Altman
He has cited Paul Graham's essays extensively as formative
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