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Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision
Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision

The Age

time05-07-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision

Jeff Bezos lives by a simple precept: limit the number of things you would wish you had done differently when you are 80. He calls it, with habitual nerdiness, the ' regret-minimisation framework '. In 1994, it led him to forsake cushy work at a hedge fund to start Amazon. It is behind the big bets, from the Prime subscription service to AWS cloud computing, that have made the company into a technology titan valued at $US2.3 trillion ($3.5 trillion) and himself into one of the world's richest people. It also explains why, six years ago, Mr Bezos left his first wife of 25 years for a former TV presenter, Lauren Sánchez. And why he blew, on some estimates, $US50 million ($76 million) to rent out Venice for three days for their opulent nuptials starting on June 26 – the predictable antiplutocrat pushback be damned. The 61-year-old Mr Bezos presumably has an even better idea today of what his octogenarian self might regret than he did at 31, 41 or 51, when his 80th birthday was far off. To get an inkling of his current calculus, look at how he spends, first, his time and, second, his $US240 billion ($365 billion) fortune. Once the billionaire is back from his honeymoon, details of which are as hush-hush as the wedding was loud, he will return to his other love – Blue Origin. Mr Bezos has been a card-carrying space cadet since watching the Apollo 11 moon landings in 1969, when he was five. In 2000, he founded the rocketry firm – credo: ' gradatim ferociter ' (step by step, ferociously) – to make space travel cheaper with reusable craft. The ultimate goal is to enable humanity to keep growing in resource-rich and unpollutable space while letting Earth thrive as a planet-sized nature reserve. Until he retired as boss of Amazon in 2021, he blocked out the same half-day every work week (plus Saturday mornings) to turn this science-fiction into business fact. One of the reasons for quitting Amazon was, Mr Bezos has confessed, that Blue Origin was going about its mission too gradatim and not ferociter enough. SpaceX, a rival two years its junior, was sending dozens of payloads a year into orbit. Blue Origin had yet to launch any. Loading So in the past four years he has, by his own admission, been devoting 90 per cent of his time to Blue Origin. He wholly owns the company but does not run it day to day. That is the job of David Limp, whom Mr Bezos pinched from Amazon in 2023, where he oversaw various device-related projects, including the Alexa digital assistant, the Kindle book-reader and Project Kuiper, a satellite-broadband initiative to challenge SpaceX's Starlink system. According to people in the know, though, Mr Bezos is a de facto co-CEO, as well as troubleshooter-in-chief. He is constantly on the lookout for ways to make Blue Origin's four factories and seven field offices around America run more efficiently. It is hard, for instance, not to see his ruthless hand in the firm's decision in February to lay off a tenth of its 14,000-strong workforce. No regrets there, at least not for Mr Bezos. There have been fewer of them elsewhere in the business lately, too. Two years ago, Blue Origin was awarded the contract to develop a lander for NASA's planned crewed return to the moon. In January, it pulled off the long-delayed virgin voyage of its New Glenn rocket. It reached orbit on the first try (though the reusable first stage was not recovered in the manner that SpaceX now routinely deploys). A second launch is planned for August.

Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision
Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision

Sydney Morning Herald

time05-07-2025

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Jeff Bezos 2.0: New wife, newish job, old vision

Jeff Bezos lives by a simple precept: limit the number of things you would wish you had done differently when you are 80. He calls it, with habitual nerdiness, the ' regret-minimisation framework '. In 1994, it led him to forsake cushy work at a hedge fund to start Amazon. It is behind the big bets, from the Prime subscription service to AWS cloud computing, that have made the company into a technology titan valued at $US2.3 trillion ($3.5 trillion) and himself into one of the world's richest people. It also explains why, six years ago, Mr Bezos left his first wife of 25 years for a former TV presenter, Lauren Sánchez. And why he blew, on some estimates, $US50 million ($76 million) to rent out Venice for three days for their opulent nuptials starting on June 26 – the predictable antiplutocrat pushback be damned. The 61-year-old Mr Bezos presumably has an even better idea today of what his octogenarian self might regret than he did at 31, 41 or 51, when his 80th birthday was far off. To get an inkling of his current calculus, look at how he spends, first, his time and, second, his $US240 billion ($365 billion) fortune. Once the billionaire is back from his honeymoon, details of which are as hush-hush as the wedding was loud, he will return to his other love – Blue Origin. Mr Bezos has been a card-carrying space cadet since watching the Apollo 11 moon landings in 1969, when he was five. In 2000, he founded the rocketry firm – credo: ' gradatim ferociter ' (step by step, ferociously) – to make space travel cheaper with reusable craft. The ultimate goal is to enable humanity to keep growing in resource-rich and unpollutable space while letting Earth thrive as a planet-sized nature reserve. Until he retired as boss of Amazon in 2021, he blocked out the same half-day every work week (plus Saturday mornings) to turn this science-fiction into business fact. One of the reasons for quitting Amazon was, Mr Bezos has confessed, that Blue Origin was going about its mission too gradatim and not ferociter enough. SpaceX, a rival two years its junior, was sending dozens of payloads a year into orbit. Blue Origin had yet to launch any. Loading So in the past four years he has, by his own admission, been devoting 90 per cent of his time to Blue Origin. He wholly owns the company but does not run it day to day. That is the job of David Limp, whom Mr Bezos pinched from Amazon in 2023, where he oversaw various device-related projects, including the Alexa digital assistant, the Kindle book-reader and Project Kuiper, a satellite-broadband initiative to challenge SpaceX's Starlink system. According to people in the know, though, Mr Bezos is a de facto co-CEO, as well as troubleshooter-in-chief. He is constantly on the lookout for ways to make Blue Origin's four factories and seven field offices around America run more efficiently. It is hard, for instance, not to see his ruthless hand in the firm's decision in February to lay off a tenth of its 14,000-strong workforce. No regrets there, at least not for Mr Bezos. There have been fewer of them elsewhere in the business lately, too. Two years ago, Blue Origin was awarded the contract to develop a lander for NASA's planned crewed return to the moon. In January, it pulled off the long-delayed virgin voyage of its New Glenn rocket. It reached orbit on the first try (though the reusable first stage was not recovered in the manner that SpaceX now routinely deploys). A second launch is planned for August.

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain
PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

The Advertiser

time31-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Advertiser

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

Billions of dollars have been spent. Some of the world's greatest players have come and gone. Yet the Champions League trophy has remained agonisingly out of reach for Paris Saint-Germain. That could be about to change. The Qatari-owned team are one game away from European club soccer's most prestigious prize, with Inter Milan standing in the way in Saturday's final in Munich. "The motivation for me is to win the Champions League title for the first time for PSG," coach Luis Enrique, a winner with Barcelona in 2015 and who has won 12 major trophies in spells with the Catalan club and PSG, said on Friday. "That is the gift I want to give the people, the club, the city." PSG are the favourites, with a thrilling young team that has produced stunning performances to get past Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal. But Inter are wily opponents that are in their second final in three seasons and cut down a rampant Barcelona in an epic semi-final — winning 7-6 on aggregate. "Our opponent, we hold the utmost respect for," Inter captain Lautaro Martinez said. "But with the weapons we've got, we want to hit them where it hurts." Owned by Qatar Sports Investments since 2011, PSG signed some of the biggest names in soccer including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi without ever getting their hands on the trophy they crave most of all. "It's about being a team, not a group of individuals," PSG captain Marquinhos said. "I'm in love with this team. It's a delight to be part of the squad." PSG's transformation has still come at some cost. Players like Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia were signed for an estimated $US240 million ($A373 million) combined in a squad assembled at spectacular expense. Meanwhile, Inter have been savvy in the market — signing older players and picking up free agents to put together a team that have reached two Champions League finals in three years — losing to Manchester City in 2023 — and won one Italian title in that time. PSG's only previous final was in 2020, a 1-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Inter last won it in 2010 under Jose Mourinho. Dembele has been one of the outstanding players in Europe this season with 30 goals in all competitions for PSG. World Cup winner Lautaro Martinez is Inter's standout player and became the club's all-time leading scorer in the Champions League this season. "I've won big trophies but I'm missing the Champions League," the Argentine said. "I'm happy to be in another final. We want to have the perfect game and bring the trophy back to Milan." Billions of dollars have been spent. Some of the world's greatest players have come and gone. Yet the Champions League trophy has remained agonisingly out of reach for Paris Saint-Germain. That could be about to change. The Qatari-owned team are one game away from European club soccer's most prestigious prize, with Inter Milan standing in the way in Saturday's final in Munich. "The motivation for me is to win the Champions League title for the first time for PSG," coach Luis Enrique, a winner with Barcelona in 2015 and who has won 12 major trophies in spells with the Catalan club and PSG, said on Friday. "That is the gift I want to give the people, the club, the city." PSG are the favourites, with a thrilling young team that has produced stunning performances to get past Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal. But Inter are wily opponents that are in their second final in three seasons and cut down a rampant Barcelona in an epic semi-final — winning 7-6 on aggregate. "Our opponent, we hold the utmost respect for," Inter captain Lautaro Martinez said. "But with the weapons we've got, we want to hit them where it hurts." Owned by Qatar Sports Investments since 2011, PSG signed some of the biggest names in soccer including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi without ever getting their hands on the trophy they crave most of all. "It's about being a team, not a group of individuals," PSG captain Marquinhos said. "I'm in love with this team. It's a delight to be part of the squad." PSG's transformation has still come at some cost. Players like Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia were signed for an estimated $US240 million ($A373 million) combined in a squad assembled at spectacular expense. Meanwhile, Inter have been savvy in the market — signing older players and picking up free agents to put together a team that have reached two Champions League finals in three years — losing to Manchester City in 2023 — and won one Italian title in that time. PSG's only previous final was in 2020, a 1-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Inter last won it in 2010 under Jose Mourinho. Dembele has been one of the outstanding players in Europe this season with 30 goals in all competitions for PSG. World Cup winner Lautaro Martinez is Inter's standout player and became the club's all-time leading scorer in the Champions League this season. "I've won big trophies but I'm missing the Champions League," the Argentine said. "I'm happy to be in another final. We want to have the perfect game and bring the trophy back to Milan." Billions of dollars have been spent. Some of the world's greatest players have come and gone. Yet the Champions League trophy has remained agonisingly out of reach for Paris Saint-Germain. That could be about to change. The Qatari-owned team are one game away from European club soccer's most prestigious prize, with Inter Milan standing in the way in Saturday's final in Munich. "The motivation for me is to win the Champions League title for the first time for PSG," coach Luis Enrique, a winner with Barcelona in 2015 and who has won 12 major trophies in spells with the Catalan club and PSG, said on Friday. "That is the gift I want to give the people, the club, the city." PSG are the favourites, with a thrilling young team that has produced stunning performances to get past Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal. But Inter are wily opponents that are in their second final in three seasons and cut down a rampant Barcelona in an epic semi-final — winning 7-6 on aggregate. "Our opponent, we hold the utmost respect for," Inter captain Lautaro Martinez said. "But with the weapons we've got, we want to hit them where it hurts." Owned by Qatar Sports Investments since 2011, PSG signed some of the biggest names in soccer including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi without ever getting their hands on the trophy they crave most of all. "It's about being a team, not a group of individuals," PSG captain Marquinhos said. "I'm in love with this team. It's a delight to be part of the squad." PSG's transformation has still come at some cost. Players like Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia were signed for an estimated $US240 million ($A373 million) combined in a squad assembled at spectacular expense. Meanwhile, Inter have been savvy in the market — signing older players and picking up free agents to put together a team that have reached two Champions League finals in three years — losing to Manchester City in 2023 — and won one Italian title in that time. PSG's only previous final was in 2020, a 1-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Inter last won it in 2010 under Jose Mourinho. Dembele has been one of the outstanding players in Europe this season with 30 goals in all competitions for PSG. World Cup winner Lautaro Martinez is Inter's standout player and became the club's all-time leading scorer in the Champions League this season. "I've won big trophies but I'm missing the Champions League," the Argentine said. "I'm happy to be in another final. We want to have the perfect game and bring the trophy back to Milan."

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain
PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

West Australian

time30-05-2025

  • Sport
  • West Australian

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

Billions of dollars have been spent. Some of the world's greatest players have come and gone. Yet the Champions League trophy has remained agonisingly out of reach for Paris Saint-Germain. That could be about to change. The Qatari-owned team are one game away from European club soccer's most prestigious prize, with Inter Milan standing in the way in Saturday's final in Munich. "The motivation for me is to win the Champions League title for the first time for PSG," coach Luis Enrique, a winner with Barcelona in 2015 and who has won 12 major trophies in spells with the Catalan club and PSG, said on Friday. "That is the gift I want to give the people, the club, the city." PSG are the favourites, with a thrilling young team that has produced stunning performances to get past Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal. But Inter are wily opponents that are in their second final in three seasons and cut down a rampant Barcelona in an epic semi-final — winning 7-6 on aggregate. "Our opponent, we hold the utmost respect for," Inter captain Lautaro Martinez said. "But with the weapons we've got, we want to hit them where it hurts." Owned by Qatar Sports Investments since 2011, PSG signed some of the biggest names in soccer including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi without ever getting their hands on the trophy they crave most of all. "It's about being a team, not a group of individuals," PSG captain Marquinhos said. "I'm in love with this team. It's a delight to be part of the squad." PSG's transformation has still come at some cost. Players like Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia were signed for an estimated $US240 million ($A373 million) combined in a squad assembled at spectacular expense. Meanwhile, Inter have been savvy in the market — signing older players and picking up free agents to put together a team that have reached two Champions League finals in three years — losing to Manchester City in 2023 — and won one Italian title in that time. PSG's only previous final was in 2020, a 1-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Inter last won it in 2010 under Jose Mourinho. Dembele has been one of the outstanding players in Europe this season with 30 goals in all competitions for PSG. World Cup winner Lautaro Martinez is Inter's standout player and became the club's all-time leading scorer in the Champions League this season. "I've won big trophies but I'm missing the Champions League," the Argentine said. "I'm happy to be in another final. We want to have the perfect game and bring the trophy back to Milan."

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain
PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

Perth Now

time30-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

PSG on verge of ending Champions League pain

Billions of dollars have been spent. Some of the world's greatest players have come and gone. Yet the Champions League trophy has remained agonisingly out of reach for Paris Saint-Germain. That could be about to change. The Qatari-owned team are one game away from European club soccer's most prestigious prize, with Inter Milan standing in the way in Saturday's final in Munich. "The motivation for me is to win the Champions League title for the first time for PSG," coach Luis Enrique, a winner with Barcelona in 2015 and who has won 12 major trophies in spells with the Catalan club and PSG, said on Friday. "That is the gift I want to give the people, the club, the city." PSG are the favourites, with a thrilling young team that has produced stunning performances to get past Manchester City, Liverpool and Arsenal. But Inter are wily opponents that are in their second final in three seasons and cut down a rampant Barcelona in an epic semi-final — winning 7-6 on aggregate. "Our opponent, we hold the utmost respect for," Inter captain Lautaro Martinez said. "But with the weapons we've got, we want to hit them where it hurts." Owned by Qatar Sports Investments since 2011, PSG signed some of the biggest names in soccer including Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Kylian Mbappe, Neymar and Lionel Messi without ever getting their hands on the trophy they crave most of all. "It's about being a team, not a group of individuals," PSG captain Marquinhos said. "I'm in love with this team. It's a delight to be part of the squad." PSG's transformation has still come at some cost. Players like Ousmane Dembele, Desire Doue and Khvicha Kvaratskhelia were signed for an estimated $US240 million ($A373 million) combined in a squad assembled at spectacular expense. Meanwhile, Inter have been savvy in the market — signing older players and picking up free agents to put together a team that have reached two Champions League finals in three years — losing to Manchester City in 2023 — and won one Italian title in that time. PSG's only previous final was in 2020, a 1-0 loss to Bayern Munich and Inter last won it in 2010 under Jose Mourinho. Dembele has been one of the outstanding players in Europe this season with 30 goals in all competitions for PSG. World Cup winner Lautaro Martinez is Inter's standout player and became the club's all-time leading scorer in the Champions League this season. "I've won big trophies but I'm missing the Champions League," the Argentine said. "I'm happy to be in another final. We want to have the perfect game and bring the trophy back to Milan."

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