Nowadays Paul Allen is essentially known for his ridiculously oversized yacht, his lawsuits , and his quest for commercial space flight , but after all it was co-founding Microsoft with Bill Gates that gave him the billions essential to do all that fun stuff within the first place. Now he’s in retrospect, writing a book called The assumption Man that, in response to him, sets the record straight in regards to the past — starting with the title. Between the covers he alternately praises Bill Gates, saying he’s “everything you’d want from a pal, caring and anxious,” and lambasts him for his “mercenary opportunism” and for looking to dilute his share within the company, saying Gates was “out to seize as much of the pie as possible and hold directly to it.” Appears like Mr. Allen can have just burned a couple of bridges, but if you’re worth about $13 billion that’s this sort of thing you may get away with.
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