Both Jobs and Gates are slated to jointly discuss the digital revolution's history and future at The Wall Street Journal's D: All Things Digital conference . The annual gathering, which will be held May 29-31 in Carlsbad, Calif., brings together executives from the technology and media industries to discuss the trends of the day.
This isn't the first time either Jobs or Gates have spoken at the D conference--during an appearance two years ago, Jobs revealed to attendees that iTunes would add podcasting support in a forthcoming update to the music player. But event organizers were quick to point out that the "unrehearsed, unscripted, onstage conversation" involving Jobs and Gates would mark their first joint session at this event.
Both men will have plenty to discuss. The concept of a digital hub has long been the centerpiece of Apple's strategy, and the company has enjoyed tremendous success with its iPod music player and iTunes online store; later this month, Apple will ship Apple TV , a set-top box that delivers multimedia content from a computer to a big-screen TV. Microsoft has been busy on the digital front as well, launching its Zune music player last fall and talking up multimedia and computing during last month's release of the Vista operating system.
In addition to his joint appearance with Gates, Jobs is scheduled to have a session of his own at the D: All Things Digital conference to talk about the latest developments at Apple. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has a session of his own at the conference.
Other speakers include Google CEO Eric Schmidt, CBS President Les Moonves, Cisco CEO John Chambers, Time CEO Ann Moore, Palm founder Jeff Hawkins, News Corp. President Peter Chernin, director George Lucas, one-time AOL CEO Steve Case, and YouTube founders Steve Chen and Chad Hurley.
The most memorable joint appearance by Jobs and Gates happened nearly a decade ago at the 1997 Macworld Expo in Boston . Gates appeared via satellite during Jobs' keynote to announce a partnership between Microsoft and Apple.
By Philip Michaels
Macworld.com