The History Of Microsoft
Microsoft was formed by a Harvard College Dropout called
Bill Gates. Bill Gates was born William Henry Gates III on October 28, 1955. He
was born to a family that was successful in business, living a comfortable
upper middle class life in Seattle, Washington.
Early in his elementary school days, Bill Gates quickly shot
to the head of the class, consistently outscoring his peers in most subjects,
but especially math and science. His parents soon enrolled him in Lakeside Prep
School, where the atmosphere was intellectual enough to stimulate the young
Gates. This move to Lakeside would prove historic, for it was here, in the
spring of 1968, that he was introduced to computers.
At that time, computers were still too large and expensive
for the school to purchase one of its own. Over the next ten months or so, the
school struck agreements with various corporations who allowed the students to
use their computers. Bill Gates, his buddy Paul Allen and a handful of others
quickly took to computing. In fact, they began to skip classes, opting instead
to stay in the computer room and write programs, read computer books and find
out exactly how these machines worked. They soon learned to hack the system,
and altered and crashed valuable files until they were banned from the
computer. Soon, however, Bill and his friends were actually hired by the
computer company to find bugs and explore weaknesses in the system, which kept
causing the computers to crash. Instead of paying the boys for their time, they
were granted something even better--unlimited computer time.
Gates has been quoted as saying that that was the time when
he got into computers fulltime. "I mean, then I became hardcore. It was
day and night," he said. The boys used their time eating, drinking and
breathing computers. They studied manuals, explored the system, and hounded the
employees with questions until they had formed a base of knowledge that would
eventually lead to the formation of Microsoft.
The computer company that was hiring the group went out of
business in 1970, and the boys had to find alternate sources for computer time.
They were soon hired by Information Sciences Inc. to write a program for
payroll. This time they actually earned money as well as enjoying the unlimited
computer time. It was during this time that the group gained notoriety for
their skill in computer programming. They were hired or contracted by various
organizations to find bugs and fix them. Each job helped Gates and his friends
learn their skill and delve ever deeper into the world of programming.
In the fall of 1973, Gates left for Harvard University. He
enrolled as a prelaw student, but spent most of his time in the campus computer
center, programming away. He stayed in touch with Paul Allen and they continued
to talk about future projects and the possibility of one day having their very
own business. Allen even moved to Boston to be closer to Gates, so they could
continue working on projects. Allen continually urged Gates to quit school and
work with him full-time, and Gates was unsure of what he wanted to do. This was
soon to change.
One year later, Paul Allen saw the first microcomputer on
the cover of a magazine. He bought the magazine and went immediately to show it
to Gates. They realized the time was right. The home PC business was about to
explode and someone would need to provide software for the machines. By
stretching the truth somewhat, Gates arranged for a meeting with the Altair
manufacturers. He had called them to let them know he had a program written for
them. After the appointment was made, Gates and Allen stayed up for nights,
feverishly writing the program he had promised. It worked perfectly at the
meeting, and everyone was impressed. They sold the program, and saw that this
was something they could do for real. Within a year, Gates had dropped out of
Harvard and Microsoft was formed.
The company went through some rough first years, but
eventually were able to license MS-DOS to IBM. The IBM PC took the public by
storm, and its success signaled the success of Microsoft. Microsoft continued
writing software, for businesses as well as the consumer market. In 1986, the
company went public, and Gates became a 31-year old billionaire. The next year,
the first version of Windows was introduced, and by 1993 a million copies per
month were being sold.
In 1995, Gates knew that the Internet was the next area of
focus, and the course of Microsoft shifted dramatically. The popular Internet
Explorer browser soon became a bestseller. Today, Microsoft software is
everywhere.
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