BILL GATES, HIS STORY
The second of three children born to a lawyer and a teacher, Bill Gates attended private school, where he discovered his interest in software. Bill Gate's introduction to computers occurred during his years at Lakeside, an all-boy private school. There, Gates joined the Lakeside Programmers Group, which included Paul Allen, who would later join Gates as co-founder of Microsoft. There he continued to excel in math and science, and soon developed a pivotal interest in computers. Gates gained access to the ASR-33 Teletype, a slow and noisy computer. He was fascinated by the machine and began spending time with a group of friends that included Paul Allen. The group named itself the Lakeside Programmers Group. During his Lakeside years, Gates set up his first company, Logic Simulation, with his best friend Kent Evans. Gates graduated from Lakeside in 1973 with a perfect 800 math score in his Scholastic Aptitude Test. In September 1973, he entered Harvard. In January 1975, during Gates's second year at Harvard, he and Paul Allen contacted MITS, a computer company t
Gates and Allen offered to produce software that would make this computer work. He returned in September to begin the academic year, but in January he left once more, never to return. By December 1978, Microsoft had had its first million-dollar sales year. The exact figures for the deal Gates made that day are not known. Stricken with Hodgkin's disease, Paul Allen had left the company in 1983, but still maintained his shares and input for some years. If Gary Kildall had been in his office that fateful day when the IBM representatives came calling, or if Microsoft had not purchased the work of Tim Paterson, Bill Gates would probably be running Microsoft out of a shoebox today. The IBM representatives left the Digital Research offices without even divulging the purpose of their visit. In April 1975, Gates and Allen founded Micro-soft (the hyphen was removed later) formulating a partnership of 60/40 in Gates's favor. So it happened that Microsoft was the clear second choice to supply an operating system for IBM's PC project. hat had recently built the popular Altair 8800. A meeting with IBM was set for September 30, 1980. Currently involved in building a new personal computer, IBM needed software. Every IBM computer sold would result in a royalty for Microsoft. MS-DOS became the standard operating system in the computer world.
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