Gates Leaves Microsoft to Focus on Philanthropy - PRIVILEGED UPBRINGING (
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PRIVILEGED UPBRINGING
Gates was born October 28, 1955, the second of three children in a
prominent Seattle family. His father, William Henry Gates Jr., was a
partner at one of the city's most powerful law firms, while his late
mother, Mary, was an active charity fund-raiser and University of
Washington regent.
He was introduced to computers at the exclusive Lakeside Preparatory
School, where the teen prodigy began programming in BASIC computer
language on a primitive ASR-33 Teletype unit.
It was at Lakeside that Gates met Allen, a student two years his senior who shared his fascination with computers.
"Of course, in those days we were just goofing around, or so we thought," Gates recalled in "The Road Ahead."
During his two years at Harvard, Gates devoted much of his time to
programming marathons and all-night poker sessions before dropping out
to work on software for the Altair, a clunky desktop computer that cost
$400 in kit form.
Also at Harvard, Gates became friends with an ebullient Detroit
native who shared his love of math and cynical humor. Gates eventually
talked that classmate, current CEO Steve Ballmer, into leaving business
school to join Microsoft.
Gates dropped out of Harvard and relocated with Allen to Albuquerque, New Mexico, where they established Microsoft.
Their big break came in 1980 when Gates and his carelessly dressed
young colleagues signed an agreement to build the operating system that
became known as MS-DOS for International Business Machines Corp's new
personal computer.
In a critical blunder by IBM, Microsoft was allowed to license the
operating system to others, spawning an industry of "IBM-compatible"
machines dependent on Microsoft software.
"His legacy has to be as one of the shrewdest businessmen and
technologist of the 20th century," said Michael Cusumano, a professor
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Sloan School of
Management.
Microsoft went public in 1986 in one of the most celebrated
offerings of its time. By the next year, the soaring stock made Gates,
at age 31, the youngest self-made billionaire.
Overseeing Microsoft's steady growth, he became known as a
bare-knuckles businessman and manager, sometimes dismissing a
suggestion as "the stupidest thing I have ever heard."
Microsoft grew to dominate its industry and became the target of a
landmark antitrust case, which it fought every step of the way before
eventually settling with U.S. prosecutors.
Rob Helm, director of research at independent research firm
Directions of Microsoft, said Gates will go down as one of the great
businessmen in history like John D. Rockefeller -- for better or for
worse.
"He's never going to be necessarily a widely admired figure, but
someone who created an activity that came to represent a chunk of the
American economy."
(Editing by Braden Reddall and Maureen Bavdek)
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