William
Howard Gates III, better known as Bill Gates, was born on 28 October
1955 in Seattle, Washington. He is best known as co-founder of
software giant Microsoft™ Corporation, a company he and Paul Allen
bootstrapped in 1979. The enormous success of Microsoft has amassed the
entrepreneur an astounding fortune, earning him the title of “richest
man in the world” from 1995 - 2007, according to Forbes Magazine. As
of 2007, Bill Gates’ worth is estimated at $59 billion US Dollars
(USD).
Bill Gates was born to a
well-to-do family, his father a successful lawyer, his mother a board
member for First Interstate Bank. Gates has two siblings, Kristianne
and Libby. Throughout grammar school Gates excelled in math and
science, and enrolled in Lakeside, an exclusive preparatory school.
At Lakeside the young Bill
Gates was exposed to his first computers in the form of Teletype
terminals networked to a remote server. Use of the Teletype required
purchasing time blocks from the server. Gates and his Lakeside friends
were banned from one system after administrators learned the kids were
exploiting bugs (flaws) in the system to acquire free time.
Gates quickly developed a
passionate interest in computer operating systems, source code and
computer languages, including BASIC, FORTRAN, LISP and COBOL. He and
Allen were soon getting work searching for vulnerabilities in existing
systems and writing proprietary programs. By age 14 Gates founded a
short-lived venture with Allen that earned Gates $20,000 USD in the
first year.
Interested in law, Bill Gates
enrolled in Harvard College in 1973, but the world would have
different plans for the future software mogul. Just two years into
Harvard Gates took a leave of absence to work with Allen writing an
operating system (OS) for what is now considered to be the prerunner
to personal computers, the Altair 8800. The two young men formed a
partnership they initially called “Micro-soft,” later shortening to
“Microsoft” to be trademarked in November 1976.
Perhaps foreshadowing things to
come, the Altair operating system that Bill Gates and Paul Allen wrote
was widely copied and shared among computer enthusiasts, prompting
Gates to write an open letter in February 1976. In his letter Gates
conveyed his distress at having people use the OS without making
payment, stressing the time and work that goes into programming and the
inability to provide quality software without fair compensation.
Four years later in 1980, IBM
approached Gates to provide an operating system for an upcoming
personal computer line. Gates suggested 86-DOS, an operating system
written by Tim Patterson of Seattle Computer Products (SCP). Gates
subsequently negotiated with SCP to make Microsoft the sole licensing
agent of 86-DOS and eventually full owner, never mentioning the
potential mega-contract with IBM. Microsoft adapted the OS, renamed it
“PC-DOS” and asked IBM for a one-time fee, retaining copyright. When
IBM clones hit the market as Bill Gates predicted they would, every
computer required a copy of Microsoft’s operating system, licensed
directly from Microsoft.
If MS-DOS opened the door to Bill
Gates’ legendary status in the computer world, the Windows™ operating
system kicked it wide open. While MS-DOS was a text-based command-line
OS, Windows revolutionized the personal computer world, providing an
easy, graphical, point-and-click interface that made computers
accessible to everyone. The market exploded from a relatively small
community of computer geeks to the general public, and businesses large
and small.
The Windows OS created a de facto
monopoly for Bill Gates in the IBM PC market. Microsoft frequently
bought out small up-and-coming companies that were developing popular
software packages, absorbing the products into the Microsoft line. In
many cases Bill Gates was criticized for his aggressiveness in forcing
out competition. This came to a head in the mid 90’s when Microsoft
packaged Internet Explorer with Windows 95, essentially “pushing” its
browser upon new computer users, usurping Netscape™’s market share. In
1998 the U.S. Department of Justice brought charges against Microsoft
in an antitrust case, eventually ending with a ruling against the
software giant.
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