Bill Gates in Heaven
Bill Gates died and, much to everyone's
surprise, went to Heaven. When he got there, he had to wait in
the reception area.
Heaven's reception area was the size of Massachusetts. There were
literally millions of people milling about, living in tents with
nothing to do all day. Food and water were being distributed from
the backs of trucks, while staffers with clipboards slowly worked
their way through the crowd. Booze and drugs were being passed
around. Fights were commonplace. Sanitation conditions were
appalling. All in all, the scene looked like Woodstock gone
metastatic.
Bill lived in a tent for three weeks until, finally, one of the
staffers approached him. The staffer was a young man in his late
teens. He was wearing a blue T-shirt with the words TEAM PETER
emblazoned on it in large yellow lettering.
"Hello," said the staffer in a bored voice that could
have been the voice of any clerk in any overgrown bureaucracy.
"My name is Gabriel and I'll be your induction
coordinator." Bill started to ask a question, but Gabriel
interrupted him. "No, I'm not the Archangel Gabriel. I'm
just a guy from Philadelphia named Gabriel who died in a car
wreck at the age of 17. Now give me your name, last name first,
unless you were Chinese in which case it's first name
first."
"Gates, Bill." Gabriel started searching though the
sheaf of papers on his clipboard, looking for Bill's Record of
Earthly Works. "What's going on here?" asked Bill.
"Why are all these people here? Where's Saint Peter? Where
are the Pearly Gates?"
Gabriel ignored the questions until he located Bill's records.
Then Gabriel looked up in surprise. "It says here that you
were the president of a large software company. Is that
right?"
"Yes."
"Well then, do the math chip-head! When this Saint Peter
business started, it was an easy gig. Only a hundred or so people
died every day, and Peter could handle it all by himself, no
problem. But now there are over five billion people on earth.
Come on, when God said to 'go forth and multiply,' he didn't say
'like rabbits!' With that large a population, ten thousand people
die every hour. Over a quarter-million people a day. Do you think
Peter can meet them all personally?"
"I guess not."
"You guess right. So Peter had to franchise the operation.
Now, Peter is the CEO of Team Peter Enterprises, Inc. He just
sits in the corporate headquarters and sets policy. Franchisees
like me handle the actual inductions." Gabriel looked though
his paperwork some more, and then continued. "Your paperwork
seems to be in order. And with a background like yours, you'll be
getting a plum job assignment."
"Job assignment?"
"Of course. Did you expect to spend the rest of eternity
sitting on your ass and drinking ambrosia? Heaven is a big
operation. You have to pull your weight around here!"
Gabriel took out a triplicate form, had Bill sign at the bottom,
and then tore out the middle copy and handed it to Bill.
"Take this down to induction center #23 and meet up with
your occupational orientator. His name is Abraham." Bill
started to ask a question, but Gabriel interrupted him. "No,
he's not *that* Abraham."
* * * * * * * * * * *
Bill walked down a muddy trail for ten miles until he came to
induction center #23. He met with Abraham after a mere six-hour
wait.
"Heaven is centuries behind in building its data processing
infrastructure," explained Abraham. "As you've seen,
we're still doing everything on paper. It takes us a week just to
process new entries."
"I had to wait *three* weeks?" said Bill. Abraham
stared at Bill angrily, and Bill realized that he'd made a
mistake. Even in Heaven, it's best not to contradict a
bureaucrat. "Well," Bill offered, "maybe that
Bosnia thing has you guys backed up."
Abraham's look of anger faded to mere annoyance. "Your job
will be to supervise Heaven's new data processing center. We're
building the largest computing facility in creation. Half a
million computers connected by a multi- segment fiber optic
network, all running into a back-end server network with a
thousand CPUs on a gigabit channel. Fully fault tolerant. Fully
distributed processing. The works."
Bill could barely contain his excitement. "Wow! What a great
job! This is really Heaven!"
"We're just finishing construction, and we'll be starting
operations soon. Would you like to go see the center now?"
"You bet!"
Abraham and Bill caught the shuttle bus and went to Heaven's new
data processing center. It was a truly huge facility, a hundred
times bigger than the Astrodome. Workmen were crawling all over
the place, getting the miles of fiber optic cables properly
installed. But the center was dominated by the computers. Half a
million computers, arranged neatly row- by-row, half a million
....
.... Power PC's ....
.... all running Mac/OS! Not a Intel PC in sight! Not a single
byte of Microsoft code!
The thought of spending the rest of eternity using products that
he had spent his whole life working to destroy was too much for
Bill. "What about PCs???" he exclaimed. "What
about Windows??? What about Excel??? What about Word???"
"You're forgetting something," said Abraham.
"What's that?" asked Bill plaintively.
"This is Heaven," explained Abraham. "We need a
operating system that's heavenly to use. If you want to build a
data processing center based on PCs running Windows, then ....
.... GO TO HELL!"