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June 22, 2008

Bill Gates Begins Last Week at Microsoft

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He is the cofounder of Microsoft, a Harvard drop-out, one of the world's richest men, and arguably the greatest philanthropist in history, but this week William H. Gates III--that's Bill Gates to you and I--will step away from full-time employment and enter a new phase of life. He's not retiring completely--Gates will continue advising Microsoft in a part-time capacity and will dedicate more time than ever to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which seeks to improve healthcare and reduce poverty around the globe.

How important is Bill Gates to Microsoft? Look at it this way: The company has essentially appointed three people to handle the jobs Gates used to fill by himself: Steve Ballmer as CEO, Ray Ozzie as chief software architect, and Craig Mundie as chief research and strategy officer. But none of these otherwise estimable men can really fill Gates' shoes, and its unclear how well Microsoft will perform in the months and years ahead without him.

Gates co-founded "Micro-soft" with Paul Allen in 1975 in order to write BASIC programming software for the first personal computer, the MITS Altair. As with its early BASIC work, Gates and company have gained success over the years largely by improving on and popularizing the ideas of others. Their first OS, XENIX OS, was based on UNIX. Their IBM PC OS, called MS-DOS, was modeled after CP/M--some might less charitably describe it as a direct copy of CP/M--and became the de facto standard on PCs and, later, PC compatibles. The company rode the success of the Mac's GUI with Windows, introduced its own Mac-like computer mouse, aped the application software from other companies with products like Multiplan, Word, and Excel, and copied the office productivity suite concept for Microsoft Office.

By the mid-1990's, Microsoft had begun making inroads in the server market as well, and today the company has a foot in virtually every computer-related market imaginable, including databases, high-performance computing, online services, digital media, smart phones, and tablet computing. Where the company has been unable to compete, it has simply purchased key companies, thanks to its ever-expanding cash hoard.

While Gates and Microsoft haven't really innovated too much, they are at the very least hugely successful. This success can be directly attributed to the business acumen of Bill Gates. Microsoft was not first to market with most of its core products, but it has dominated many markets that were pioneered elsewhere.

Predictably, Microsoft's tough business practices eventually landed it in hot water with antitrust regulators, first in the US and subsequently around the globe. Indeed, the US antitrust action against Microsoft was a low point for Gates, and his sullen appearance in the widely circulated deposition videos from the time shows a recalcitrant and stubborn monopolist unable to cope with his company's sudden downturn. Gates and Microsoft both recovered from this debacle, but by the time Microsoft settled with the US government and several states, its competitors no longer feared the company.

Today, Microsoft is still a dominant industry player, but it no longer looms large over the computing landscape, and several key competitors, such as Apple, Google, Nintendo, and RIM, have successfully cast aside Microsoft's various attempts to duplicate its past successes in new markets. The tables have turned so much, in fact, that even successful Microsoft products, like Windows Vista, which has sold in excess of 150 million licenses, are perceived as unsuccessful thanks to marketing efforts by the competition and anti-Microsoft pundits online. This is a new world for the software giant, and one with which Gates' successors will need to cope.

Ultimately, it was time for Gates to move on and while he struggled temporarily after handing over the CEO reigns to Harvard chum Steve Ballmer in 2000, the two have maintained a tight friendship. More recently, he's begun turning over more responsibility to other executives, such as Mundie and Ozzie, and today Gates is largely a ceremonial figure at the company, though insiders tell me he's still involved in key decision making and strategy.

Gates steps down from his full-time duties at Microsoft this Friday, June 27. After that date, he will remain the chairman of Microsoft's board of directors and the company's largest single shareholder. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is the largest charitable organization in the world with an endowment of almost $35 billion, and Gates will dedicate most of his time going forward to distributing his fortune through philanthropy.

"This whole thing about which operating system somebody uses is a pretty silly thing versus issues involving starvation or death," Gates said this week, putting his previous and upcoming careers in perspective. On that note, I wish the man nothing but the best of luck in his future endeavors. If Gates can have half the impact on world health and education that he had in computing, the world will surely be a better place as a result.

End of Article



Reader Comments
A lot is said negatively about Bill gates. But if you stop and think about how much money/time/effort he invests to the bettering the world through is charity, it has to make you respect him regardless of your current opinion. No one will replace Bill Gates at Microsoft, but the company will move on and still be successful. The world we take for granted was largely inspired by how Microsoft made PC’s part of our daily life, and Bill/Microsoft often doesn’t get credit for that. So I agree with Paul, if he can make half the impact on the world with his charity as he did with computers…the world will defiantly be a better place.

ziggy2692 June 22, 2008 (Article Rating: )


bill gates is the strongest mind blowing person in this world as he introduced various technology in the pc world as billions of people will surely remember him for that !!
hats off to bill gates and microsoft!

niroshan June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Bill Gates..yes a genius..yes I have a lot of respect. When Microsoft Zurich failed to employ me due to a personal issue - I emailed Gates, and lo and behold an investigation was held, and management at Zurich were all removed. Bill does care! However, his company is now in the hands of Steve Ballmer - if that idiot had one brain cell it would die of boredom! I wish Bill Gates every success in his future venture - but fear for Microsoft future with Ballmer now driving.

ashers2008 June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


"I wish Bill Gates every success in his future venture - but fear for Microsoft future with Ballmer now driving."

That's the most puzzling thing about Gates. While he clearly has incredible business instincts (for the most part), advancing MonkeyBoy to the top of the heap at Microsoft will be the undoing of a once-great company. For the sake of his charitable efforts, I hope he sells his Microsoft stock before Ballmer drives it completely into the ground.

http://tinyurl.com/5onl8j
http://tinyurl.com/4bthrk

lotsamystuff June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Bill will work at his foundation wtih the same fervor that he did at Microsoft. He will succeed there as he did with Microsoft.

Enjoy your new career, Bill.

jersey72 June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Bill Gates to you and ME, Paul, not you and I. If you can replace you and me with us, use ME.

Very good article, Paul.
Bill

palavering June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


lotsa - is that you???

jersey72 June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


I think Mr. Gates is extremely intelligent. While he did 'copy' oops, I mean 'improve' on other people's work, he nearly single handily ushered the world into the digital age with his inexpensive OS. I wish him and his wife all the best in his new path. Career is not the correct word as he is now focusing on charity. I am so pleased he is using his immense wealth to better the lives of the less fortunate. He is truly a great man with great ideas and self worth. I am sure his wife is a lovely woman. We rarely hear about her and that in and of itself is a miracle in how media enjoys tearing the rich and famous apart, and spare no wife or child.

Seree June 23, 2008 (Article Rating: )


Being the first to anything doesn't make it the best. Certainly in the case of OSes, the Xerox make the first GUI but it wasn't market ready. Macintosh System 1 OS was nice but way too expensive. Enter's William H. Gates III and makes an affordable GUI based OS called Windows and the rest is history. Just the way Ford wasn't the first to make a internal combustion engine, Gates made the a true mass market OS possible.

Then lets take IBM for example. IBM was all about the hardware. Gates geniusly surmised that software was the key ingredient. Screwing both IBM and Apple, Gates made billions on both. And when Apple was approaching death in 1997, Gates saved them from being a footnote in computer history.

Sometime the genius isn't in the creation, but making the orginal concept or the first rough draft even better. Sometimes more affordable is the key. This is why Gates was a genius. He make it available to the average Joe and got the PC and Internet revolution rolling. Now going into the cloud era, Microsoft will be a player for decades.

Thanks Gates.

subzerohitman721 June 25, 2008 (Article Rating: )


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