Most people struggle to resist Netflix. Bill Gates took a different approach: he bought a TV, then surgically removed the part that made it entertaining.
Sequoia Capital investor Michael Moritz remembers Gates' discipline during Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)'s founding years as something few entrepreneurs could match. In the epilogue to "Leading: Learning from Life and My Years at Manchester United," Moritz described what he called "the most extreme example of this blistering desire to concentrate on his business that I ever encountered."
The TV That Only Played Educational Content
Gates bought a television to watch educational videotapes. Then he disconnected the tuner so he couldn't watch actual shows or movies. It was all discipline, no pleasure. Moritz said this ability to eliminate distractions paid "enormous dividends" for Gates and Microsoft.
Gates himself has talked about this period, describing it as a complete "blackout" from entertainment. For about five years in his 20s, he stopped watching TV and listening to music entirely. The goal was staying laser-focused on software development.
Even the Commute Was Sacred
The radio-free zone extended to Gates' car. In a 2019 interview at Stanford Graduate School of Business, Moritz recalled Gates driving him to the airport in the early 1980s. The car had no radio. Gates explained he'd removed it because he didn't want music or news interrupting his seven-minute, 32-second commute—time he used to think through Microsoft's challenges.
This wasn't casual focus. This was someone who'd calculated his commute down to the second and treated those minutes like a strategic asset.
That discipline lined up perfectly with Microsoft's launch timeline. Gates and Paul Allen registered the company in New Mexico in November 1976, when Gates was just 21. They soon relocated to the Seattle area, and the rest became tech history.
From Extreme Focus to Extreme Giving
Gates has said his intense focus came from curiosity and a drive for constant learning—habits he eventually redirected toward philanthropy. The numbers tell quite a story about that shift.
Forbes estimates Gates could be worth about $1.2 trillion today if he'd kept his original Microsoft shares. Instead, he's sold and donated most of them. He now owns roughly 0.9% of Microsoft, valued at around $28 billion. Gates and ex-wife Melinda French Gates have donated approximately $60.2 billion to their foundation since 2000.
Gates plans to give away virtually all his remaining wealth by 2045 under the Giving Pledge he signed with Warren Buffett. The same person who once removed a radio from his car to optimize a seven-minute drive is now optimizing how quickly he can deploy his fortune for charitable causes.