Stories Microsoft
When anyone hears the name Microsoft to think of one person:  Bill 
Gates, the founder of  the company.  It’s said that Bill Gates is one of
 the smartest programmers ever.  After reading an article on the Altair 
8800  from the popular electronics magazine in 1975, Bill Gates called 
the creators  of the Altair 8800, MITS, offering to demonstrate and 
importation of the BASIC  programming language for the system. Gates had
 neither the Altair nor the  interpreter. However, in only eight weeks, 
Bill and Paul Allen had created the  interpreter. The interpreter worked
 without any glitches in the demo and MITS  was located. On the basis of
 that, Microsoft was founded. 
The name came from microcomputer and software coming up with  Microsoft. The Microsoft
 name was registered with the secretary of state of New Mexico on 
November 26, 1976. Microsoft’s  first international office was in Japan 
and found it on November 1,  1978. The name of the international office 
was ASCII, which is now known as  Microsoft Japan.  In January of 1979 
the company packed up and moved its headquarters to Bellevue Washington.
  Steve Ballmer teamed up with Microsoft in June of 1980. The company 
had to  restructure in June of 1981 in order to become an incorporated 
business in its  new home state of Washington.  This is when they 
changed the name to Microsoft Inc. As part of the  restructuring, Bill 
Gates became the President of the Company and the Chairman  of the Board
 and Paul Allen became the Executive VP.
Microsoft released their first operating system in 
1980. It  was a variant of  Unix. AT&T acquired  the system through a
 distribution license, calling it Xenix. They then hired Santa Cruz 
operation to  help to port/adapt the operating system to several 
platforms. This variant  would become home to the first version of 
Microsoft’s word processor. The  company went on to produce several 
other programs after this one. However, the  disk operating system also 
known as DOS was the one to bring them true success.  In August of 1981 
IBM warded a contract to Microsoft to provide a version of  the CP/M. 
clone called 86 -- TOS. This deal went down for less than 50,000. IBM  
then renamed 86-DOS to PC-dos. They changed the name due to the fact of 
 copyright infringement problems. IBM then marketed both CP/M. and 
PC-DOS. CP/M.  was sold for $240 and PC-DOS was sold for $40. PC-DOS 
became the standard  edition because of its lower price.
In 1983 Microsoft created their very first own home
 computer  system. They named it MSX. MSX contained its own version of  
die DOS operation system. This very own  system became very popular in 
South America, Japan, and Europe.  Later on, the market was flooded with
 IBM PC clones after Columbia data products successfully cloned  the IBM
 BIOS. This very deal allowed IBM to have total control of its own QDOS 
 and MS-DOS. Soon powering this. Microsoft rose to one of the major 
software  vendors in the home computer industry. Microsoft released a 
program called  Microsoft Mouse in May of 1983 expanding its product 
line and other markets.  Ever since then Microsoft has been the biggest 
largest player in the industry for  creating top-of-the-line software, 
such as their most famous product Windows.
Stories Of Bill Gates
Bill Gates was born on October 28, 1955 in a family having rich business, political and community service background. His great-grandfather was a state legislator and a mayor, his grandfather was vice president of national bank and his father was a lawyer.
Bill strongly believes in hard work. He believes that if you are intelligent and know how to apply your intelligence, you can achieve anything. From childhood Bill was ambitious, intelligent and competitive. These qualities helped him to attain top position in the profession he chose. In school, he had an excellent record in mathematics and science. Still he was getting very bored in school and his parents knew it, so they always tried to feed him with more information to keep him busy. Bill’s parents came to know their son's intelligence and decided to enroll him in a private school, known for its intense academic environment. It was a very important decision in Bill Gate's life where he was first introduced to a computer. Bill Gates and his friends were very much interested in computer and formed "Programmers Group" in late 1968. Being in this group, they found a new way to apply their computer skill in university of Washington. In the next year, they got their first opportunity in Information Sciences Inc. in which they were selected as programmers. ISI (Information Sciences Inc.) agreed to give them royalties whenever it made money from any of the group’s program. As a result of the business deal signed with Information Sciences Inc., the group also became a legal business.
Bill Gates and his close friend Allen started new company of their own, Traf-O-Data. They developed a small computer to measure traffic flow. From this project they earned around $20,000. The era of Traf-O-Data came to an end when Gates left the college. In 1973, he left home for Harvard University. He didn’t know what to do, so he enrolled his name for pre-law. He took the standard freshman courses with the exception of signing up for one of Harvard's toughest mathematics courses. He did well over there, but he couldn’t find it interesting too. He spent many long nights in front of the school's computer and the next day asleep in class. After leaving school, he almost lost himself from the world of computers. Gates and his friend Paul Allen remained in close contact even though they were away from school. They would often discuss new ideas for future projects and the possibility of starting a business one fine day. At the end of Bill's first year, Allen came close to him so that they could follow some of their ideas. That summer they got job in Honeywell. Allen kept on pushing Bill for opening a new software company.
Within a year, Bill Gates dropped out from Harvard. Then he formed Microsoft. Microsoft's vision is "A computer on every desk and Microsoft software on every computer". Bill is a visionary person and works very hard to achieve his vision. His belief in high intelligence and hard work has put him where he is today. He does not believe in mere luck or God’s grace, but just hard work and competitiveness. Bill’s Microsoft is good competition for other software companies and he will continue to stomp out the competition until he dies. He likes to play the game of Risk and the game of world domination. His beliefs are so powerful, which have helped him increase his wealth and his monopoly in the industry.
Bill Gates is not a greedy person. In fact, he is quite giving person when it comes to computers, internet and any kind of funding. Some years back, he visited Chicago's Einstein Elementary School and announced grants benefiting Chicago's schools and museums where he donated a total of $110,000, a bunch of computers, and provided internet connectivity to number of schools. Secondly, Bill Gates donated 38 million dollars for the building of a computer institute at Stanford University. Gates plans to give away 95% of all his earnings when he is old and gray.
................................................... Like -- Join Us and Help Us
Searching for
 



 
No comments:
Post a Comment