Gates Grade5
Gates Grade5
Gates Grade5
William Henry Gates III (Bill) was born on October 28, 1955, in Seattle, Washington. Bill was the second of
three children in an upper-middle class family. He enjoyed playing games with the family and was very
competitive. He also loved to read. Bill became bored in public school, so his family sent him to Lakeside
School, a private school, where he excelled in math and science and did well in drama and English.
Gates became interested in computer programming when he was 13, during the era of giant mainframe
computers. His school held a fund-raiser to purchase a teletype terminal so students could use computer time
that was donated by General Electric. Using this time, Gates wrote a tic-tac-toe program using BASIC, one of
the first computer languages. Later he created a computer version of Risk, a board game he liked in which the
goal is world domination. At Lakeside, Bill met Paul Allen, who shared his interest in computers. Gates and
Allen and two other students hacked into a computer belonging to Computer Center Corporation (CCC) to get
free computer time but were caught. After a period of probation, they were allowed back in the computer lab
when they offered to fix glitches in CCC’s software. At age 17, Gates and Allen were paid $20,000 for a
program called Traf-O-Data that was used to count traffic.
In early 1973, Bill Gates served as a congressional page in the U.S. House of Representatives. He scored 1590
out of 1600 on the SAT and was accepted by Harvard University. Steve Ballmer, who became CEO of
Microsoft after Bill retired, was also a Harvard student. Meanwhile, Paul Allen dropped out of Washington
College to work on computers at Honeywell Corporation and convinced Gates to drop out of Harvard and join
him in starting a new software company in Albuquerque, New Mexico. They called it Micro-Soft. This was
soon changed to Microsoft, and they moved their company to Bellevue, Washington.
In 1980, IBM, one of the largest technology companies of the era, asked Microsoft to write software to run their
new personal computer, the IBM PC. Microsoft kept the licensing rights for the operating system (MS-DOS) so
that they earned money for every computer sold first by IBM, and later by all the other companies that made PC
computers. Microsoft grew quickly from 25 employees in 1978 to over 90,000 today. Over the years, Microsoft
developed many new technologies and some of the world’s most popular software and products such as Word
and PowerPoint. Although some have criticized Gates for using questionable business practices, he built
Microsoft into one of the largest companies in the world. He has been described as brilliant but childlike,
driven, competitive, intense, fun, but lacking in empathy.
Bill Gates is one of the richest men in the world. In 2012, his $61 billion in assets made him the world's second-
richest man according to Forbes Magazine. In 2006, Gates announced that he would cut back his involvement at
Microsoft to spend more time on philanthropy and his foundation. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
supports many causes including the quest to eradicate polio, fighting AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis; providing
vaccinations for children; and even reinventing the toilet, among many other things.
1.) The second to last paragraph describes… 6.) If the entire passage was limited to the last
a.) how Microsoft became a bigger company paragraph, what would an appropriate name
than IBM. for the passage be?
b.) the technical details of MS-DOS. a.) Microsoft and its Billionaires
c.) how Bill Gates became a billionaire. b.) Microsoft and its Software
d.) how Microsoft rose to a major corporation. c.) The Rise of Microsoft
d.) The Business Practices of Microsoft