Image: Greg Rubenstein
Bill Gates under the microscope

Good morning! This Monday, Bill Gates is under scrutiny, how the remote-work revolution became a gold mine for anyone wanting an office, the WarnerMedia-Discovery merger that could change the streaming game and what happened to the Colonial Pipeline hackers.
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The richest person alive has done a surprisingly good job over the years of keeping his personal life private. But as Bill Gates goes through a divorce from his wife Melinda French Gates, some of his past (and not-so-past) actions are coming to light for the first time. Much of what's in these reports is now all too familiar-sounding for powerful CEOs:
Though both Bill and Melinda were hugely well-known — even more so as a result of their vaccine work during the pandemic — their day-to-day lives have been largely left private. As divorce proceedings continue, I suspect we're about to learn a lot more about the last 27 years of their lives.
WarnerMedia and Discovery are merging, creating a new public media giant. It puts together two companies that have largely tried to avoid head-on competition with Netflix — HBO Max with blockbuster movies and ultra high-quality programming, Discovery with the food, house and reality shows that are underrepresented in most of streaming — into a single company meant very much to compete with Netflix.
In a sense, the whole thing is an admission of failure from AT&T, which spent massive sums of money trying to become a media company, only to then turn around and decide it was happy enough being a dumb pipe. (And yes, that's exactly what Verizon just did with Verizon Media Group.)
But as a streaming move, it makes some sense. We're nearing subscription saturation for a lot of people, many of whom were likely to pay for either HBO Max or Discovery+, but not both. And maybe neither, in a world where Disney+ and Netflix exist. The Warner/Discover combo (Discoverer?) has both the breadth and depth to vie for the place as users' second subscription. And as the world goes streaming, that's a strong place to be.
Here's a scenario companies all over the tech industry, especially in Silicon Valley, are facing right now: You've spent the last year working from home, and discovered your team functions pretty well remotely! Plus, people like the flexibility. So you want to lean into the new hybrid future of work.
OK! But you just spent millions, tens of millions, even billions of dollars on office space, and in a market where subletting was once impossibly easy, it's now a lot harder to offload your space.
Here's where things get tricky. Because of all these newly remote companies, this is a historically buyer-friendly moment for tech real estate. Instead of having to use the closet in your VC's office or sublet from a sublet from a sublet from a failed SaaS play, startups and big companies alike will have their pick of the litter for the next few months. And if SF rebounds like many think it will, that real estate could quickly become a huge asset.
This question is tied up in so many others, too. If you're going to be a virtual-first company, does it make sense to pay for an office when nobody might show up? If you do bring people back to the office, do they have to be vaccinated? Do they have to wear masks? And are you ready to sign a 10-year lease knowing exactly how quickly things can change?
By all indications, the recovery is starting. (A space internet startup is reportedly taking over Uber's amazing Pier 70 office, for instance.) Restrictions are easing faster than most people thought, and companies all over the country are thinking about accelerating their return to the office. The opportunity to get your dream HQ at a cut-rate price may only last a few months. If you build an amazing office, will they come?
A recent study from the University of California-Berkeley and Brandeis University found that when Amazon raised their starting wage to $15/hr, the average hourly wage in the surrounding area rose by 4.7% as other employers followed their lead.
Reddit is learning monetization lessons from Roblox, Steve Huffman said:
I … think Elon Musk is serious about Dogecoin being the future?
Too many companies treat Africa as a single, homogeneous place, AppsTech's Rebecca Enonchong said:
Antonio García Martínez fired back after being let go by Apple:
On Protocol: When he went from Google to government, Rick Klau said he immediately discovered one big shift:
The Gojek-Tokopedia merger is official. GoTo becomes the largest tech company in Indonesia, and will be led by Gojek's Andre Soelistyo.
It's Epic v. Apple week three! We're getting out of expert testimony and back into executives. A lot has been discussed, and a lot of big questions remain.
Google I/O starts tomorrow, where we'll hear about everything from Android to Search to whatever wacky robot stuff the Google Assistant can do now.
You know how they say "work expands to fill the time allotted?" Turns out that's one of the stories of the pandemic: University of Chicago researchers found that at one company, employees were putting in about 30% more hours with almost no uptick in the amount of work actually getting done. Which is … not great.
But the study also found that while having more Teams meetings and doing lots of late-night work didn't really improve productivity, carving out more time for focused work made a huge difference. So that's your task for the week: Make sure you and your team all get more uninterrupted, no-meeting-no-Slack-no-nothing time to actually do work. And then quit at 5. Because according to science, nothing good happens after that.
"Before working at Amazon, it was hard for me to pay my bills on time and save money." Going from $11 an hour at her last job to making more than $15/hr at Amazon meant Kimberly could afford a bigger place.
Today's Source Code was written by David Pierce, with help from Anna Kramer and Shakeel Hashim. Thoughts, questions, tips? Send them to david@protocol.com, or our tips line, tips@protocol.com. Enjoy your day; see you tomorrow.
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