Bill Gates
William H. Gates III and His Giant Bill Gates, cofounder of the
Microsoft corporation, holds 30.7 percent of its stock making him one of
the richest people in the United States. He was the marketing and sales
strategist behind many of Microsoft's software deals. Their software
became the industry standard in the early 1980s and has just increased
in distribution as the company has grown, so much that the Federal
government is suggesting that Microsoft has violated Sherman and Clayton
antitrust acts.
Bill Gates' first interest in computers began at Lakeside, a private
school in Seattle that Gates attended. There he wrote his "first
software program when I was thirteen years old. It was for playing tic-tac-toe"(Gates
1). It was at Lakeside that Gates met Paul Allen, who later became
cofounder with Gates of Microsoft. There they became friends and "began
to mess around with the computer"(Gates 2). Back in the sixties and
early seventies computer time was expensive. "This is what drove me to
the commercial side of the software business"(Gates 12). Gates, Allen
and a few others from Lakeside got entry-level software programming
jobs. One of Gates early programs that he likes to brag about was
written at this time. It was a program that scheduled classes for
students. "I surreptitiously added a few instructions and found myself
nearly the only guy in a class full of girls"(Gates 12).
In 1972 Intel released their first microprocessor chip: the 8008. Gates
attempted to write a version of BASIC (Beginner's All-purpose Symbolic
Instruction Code) for the new Intel chip, but the chip did not contain
enough transistors to handle it. Gates and Allen found a way to use the
8008 and "started Traf-O-Data, a computer traffic analysis
company"(Clayton 452) It worked well however, marketing their new
machine proved to be impossible. "No one actually wanted to buy the
machine, at least not from a couple teenagers"(Gates 14). Gates and
Allen had more less successful endeavors in starting a software company.
In 1974 Intel announced their new chip: the 8080. The two college
students sent off letters "to all the big computer companies, offering
to write them a version of BASIC for the new Intel chip. We got no
takers"(Gates 15).
While at Harvard, the cool thing to do was to slack off on classes for
most of the semester and try and see how well the student could do at
the end. Steve Ballmer and Gates "took a tough graduate- level economics
course together- Economics 2010. The professor allowed you to bet your
whole grade on the final if you choose"(Gates 40). They did that, did
not do anything for the class all semester, and studied and got A's.
During one of these slack off periods, Gates and Allen found a very
small computer: the Altair 8800 "('Altair' was a destination in a Star
Trek episode)"(Gates 16). It had a few switches and lights on the front
that you could get to blink, but that was about all. This new chip had
great potential, but there was no way to program it. After five weeks of
not going to classes, not eating or sleeping regularly, their version of
"BASIC was written- and the world's first microcomputer software company
was born. In time we named it 'Microsoft'"(Gates 17).
Gates left Harvard on leave in 1975. Microsoft's big economic break came
in 1980 when "IBM- the computer industry leader- asked Gates to develop
an operating system for its new personal computer"(Clayton 452). IBM
usually did not use external help in software design or hardware
manufacture, but they wanted to release the first personal computer in
less than a year. "IBM had elected to build its PC mainly from
off-the-shelf components available to anyone. This made a platform that
was fundamentally open, which made it easy to copy"(Gates 47). IBM
bought the microprocessors from Intel and licensed the operating system
from Microsoft. Microsoft bought some work from another company in
Seattle and hired its top engineer, Tim Paterson. The system became
known as the Microsoft Disk Operating System, or MS-DOS.
Now because of the licensing agreement between IBM and Microsoft, IBM
had no control over Microsoft's distribution of its MS-DOS to other
companies who wanted to clone the IBM machine. This decision by IBM is
still under great debate. Many industry analysts argue that IBM should
have waited for their own software developers to develop an operating
system or that IBM should have purchased MS-DOS from Microsoft. However,
from a more broad economic picture of IBM's decision, it may have just
turned out for the good of Microsoft, IBM and the average computer user.
Microsoft's "goal was not to make money directly from IBM, but to profit
from licensing MS- DOS to computer companies that wanted to offer
machines more or less compatible with the IBM PC"(Gates 49). By allowing
Microsoft to sell MS-DOS to other companies, this made IBM's PC the
industry "de facto" standard. With other companies scrambling to compete
with IBM, Microsoft licensed MS-DOS to these companies and fulfilled one
of Microsoft's goals: "to create the standard for the industry"(Jobs
50). Compaq Computer of Houston "launched [the first] clone in 1982 and
attained FORTUNE 500 status a scant four years later"(Schlender 42).
Hundreds of companies followed.
MS-DOS dominated the market much like VHS beat out Betamax and how early
TV sales boomed. The more people bought the product, the more companies
produced it and with the television, the more sets were sold, the more
programming was available. This was a main reason why Apple's Macintosh
only controlled 9% of the market(Schlender 40). "The PC story would be
far different if Apple had licensed its operating system software to
other computer makers early on"(Cook 64). In effect, they had a monopoly
on their own system and software. Their lack of competition kept prices
up and software selection down. Apple has just recently licensed some
Macintosh operating systems to other companies.
Microsoft has thrived on the ability to foresee and understand the
computer needs of the average user. After Microsoft made their name with
MS-DOS, they started work on a graphical based operating system much
like Apple's Macintosh computer. They called it Windows. Windows "swept
the market"(Clayton 452). By 1993 it was selling over 1 million copies a
month "and Microsoft operating systems ran nearly 90 percent of the
world's PC s"(Clayton). Microsoft had well achieved their goal of
creating the standard for the industry(Jobs 50). However, because
Microsoft enjoys a near monopoly, beginning in June of 1990, the
"Federal Trade Commission, which shares antitrust jurisdiction with the
Department of Justice, took the first crack, quietly opening an inquiry
"(Cook 64). Many other software companies have "cheered"(Pain) the
government and offered a deluge of help. One of the big complaints of
computer manufacturers is that they "must agree to pay software
royalties...for every computer they ship, regardless of whether the
computer is sold with any Microsoft software." It is "an all or nothing
deal"(Rohm 92). Steve Jobs, cofounder of Apple and founder of Next,
calls Microsoft the "'small orifice' through which every other company
must squeeze if it wants to participate in the PC market"(Schlender 41).
After two years of investigation, "commissioners were deadlocked on
whether to file an antitrust complaint"(Cook). However, antitrust chief
Anne Bingaman continued the process with a high-profile investigation.
After collecting information, conducting interviews, and talking to
Gates, Microsoft signed an agreement that would require Microsoft to
make "minor changes in the way it licenses DOS and Windows to computer
manufacturers"(Cook). Federal District Court Judge Stanley Sporkin
rejected the proposed statement. Bingaman continued the case. She hired
Sam Miller, a trial lawyer from San Francisco law firm of Morrison &
Foerster. Miller was to head up litigation against Microsoft.
What will come of the lawsuit? If Microsoft agrees to the next
settlement, it will "level the playing field"(Rohm 94) or they could end
up the next AT&T. It is up to those in Washington and at Microsoft. If
Microsoft looses, "instead of just DOS with its huge share of the
market, if you've got three or four operating systems each having 25 or
30 percent of the market, you're going to provide a lot more incentive
for those people to predisclose or disclose interface operations to
everybody"(Rohm 94) said a lawyer for the case. The operating system
that works with all applications and other operating systems wins. That
is IBM and Apple's Taligent and OS/2's strategy.
Right now Bill Gates is building a multi million dollar water front home
outside of Seattle, equipped with all the technological luxuries that a
few years ago only science fiction writers could dream up, for he and
his wife, Melinda French. He has a 2.5 million dollar book deal that is
selling now(Lyall 20). What is in Gates future? He loves his work at
Microsoft and continues to stay involved with running the company. He
has gotten with Craig McCaw and announced plans to launch a 9 billion
dollar satellite-communications by 2001. He is also working with Sega,
Time Warner and TCI just to name a few. As for his monopolistic image in
computer circles, only time will tell.
Bibliography
Cook, William J. U.S. News & World Report. "A Pain for Windows." Feb.
27,1995 p64-66
Clayton, Gary E. Ph.D. Economics Principles and Practices. New York:
Glencoe/McGraw-Hill 1995
Economist, The:The World This Week. March 26, 1994 p7
Economist, The: Business. January 22, 1994 p73
Fortune. June 28 1993
Gates, Bill. The Road Ahead. New York:Penguin Group 1995
Lyall, Sarah. Technos: "Are These Books, or What? CD-ROM and the
Literary Industry." Winter 1994 p20-23
Quittner, Joshua. The Seattle Times. Seattle, "Electronic Peek into the
Future."September 5, 1993 D1+
Rohm, Wendy Goldman. Wired:"Oh No, Mr. Bill!" April 1994. p90+
Schlender, Brenton R. Fortune. "Jobs and Gates Together." Aug. 26, 1991
p50+
Schlender, Brenton R. Fortune:"The Future of the PC." Aug 26, 1991, p40+
BACK TO DIRECTORY |
BACK TO SUB DIRECTORY:
BIOGRAPHIES

Did
found term papers you were looking for:
If
you find some thing useful in return contribute some of your own term
papers. All these Term papers are plagiarized as it is on free for all
basis. These term papers are never sold by Ghost Papers.
All
Term papers in the directory above are submitted by students.


Didn't
found term papers you were looking for:
With a team of experienced writers and excellent researchers to
back them up, we guarantee to match your needs, for all subjects
and topics. Expert Term paper Service beyond expectations is our
distinguishing factor.
BACK
TO MAIN