Gates leaves Microsoft to focus on Philanthropy
Posted on Thu, 26 Jun 2008 08:21:27 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
More News Ticker News
By Daisuke Wakabayashi
SEATTLE (Reuters) - Sensing the start of a personal computer revolution, Bill
Gates dropped out of Harvard University in 1975 to start Microsoft Corp and
pursue a vision of a computer on every desk and in every home.
Three decades later, Gates is set to step down on Friday from what is now the
world's largest software company to work full-time at the charitable
organization -- the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation -- built by his vast
fortune.
No longer the world's richest man -- he has been topped by investor Warren
Buffett and Mexico's telecoms tycoon Carlos Slim -- Gates says great wealth
brings with it great responsibility.
The 52-year-old, whose boyish looks seem at odds with his graying hair, will
leave behind a life's work developing software to devote energy to finding new
vaccines or to micro-finance projects in the developing world.
As Microsoft's biggest shareholder, Gates will remain chairman and work on
special technology projects. His 8.7 percent stake in Microsoft is worth about
$23 billion.
Gates first programmed a computer at 13, creating a class scheduling system for
his Seattle high school. As he gained more experience, he realized the potential
that software held to change how humans worked, played and communicated.
"When I was 19, I caught sight of the future and based my career on what I saw.
I turned out to have been right," Gates wrote in his 1995 book "The Road Ahead."
Gates realized at an early stage of the PC revolution that software would be
more important than hardware. Working with boyhood friend Paul Allen, Gates
founded Microsoft, naming the company for its mission of providing microcomputer
software.
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)
© Copyright 2008 Reuters.
Photo:
Screen grab from Bill Gates Spoof Video at CES 2008 keynote.
Posted on Thu, 26 Jun 2008 08:21:27 CDT | by Luigi Lugmayr
I4U Gadget Models
I4U News Product Reviews
All I4U News Categories
Hot Gadgets
- Nikon D90 on Sale
2008-08-27 17:00:00
- Keep an Eye on Your Home with Home Heartbeat
2008-08-26 12:00:00
- Erector Spykee ships this October, just one Year late
2008-08-23 10:20:08
- Femisapien Robot is shipping
2008-08-22 12:56:44
- WowWee Tribot Robot is shipping
2008-08-22 12:48:28
- Beerdolier for the Hard Core Alcoholic
2008-08-15 10:46:04
More Gadgets
100 Days until Thanksgiving Sale 2008 Countdown
August 19th marked the beginning of our 100 days Holiday Gift Guide 2008 countdown until the Thanksgiving Sales 2008 start. I4U News brings you a Holiday gift tip each day for the next 100 days. On Thanksgiving Day we will have 100 tech-gift tips in 10 categories online for you.
Explore the latest Holiday Tech Gift Tips now.
Subscribe to I4U Gadget Flyer
Stay in touch with our weekly round-up of the Top 10 Technology stories with our free newsletter.

More stories