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This article is about the co-founder of Microsoft. For other people of the same name, see Bill Gates (disambiguation).

Bill Gates

Head and shoulders photo of Bill Gates

Gates in 2017

Born

William Henry Gates III

October 28, 1955 (age 67)

Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Education Harvard University
(dropped out)
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • investor
  • philanthropist
Years active 1972–present
Known for Co-founder of Microsoft and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Title

Partial list of founded and chaired companies

  • Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Chairman and founder of Branded Entertainment Network
  • Chairman and founder of Cascade Investment
  • Chairman and co-founder of TerraPower
  • Founder of Breakthrough Energy
  • Founder of Gates Ventures
  • Technology advisor of Microsoft[1]
Board member of
  • Berkshire Hathaway
  • Microsoft
  • (former, both)
Spouse

Melinda French

(m. 1994; div. 2021)​

Children 3
Parents
  • Bill Gates Sr. (father)
  • Mary Maxwell (mother)
Awards
  • Order of the British Empire (Civil) Ribbon.svg Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (2005)
  • Padma Bhushan Ribbon.svg Padma Bhushan (2015)
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016)
  • Hilal-e-Pakistan Breast Star.png Hilal-e-Pakistan (2022)
Website www.gatesnotes.com
Signature
William H. Gates III

William Henry Gates III (born October 28, 1955) is an American business magnate, investor, philanthropist, and writer. He is a co-founder of Microsoft, along with his late childhood friend Paul Allen.[2][3] During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of chairman, chief executive officer (CEO), president and chief software architect, while also being the largest individual shareholder until May 2014.[4] He was a major entrepreneur of the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s and 1980s.

Gates was born and raised in Seattle. In 1975, he and Allen founded Microsoft in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It became the world’s largest personal computer software company.[5][a] Gates led the company as chairman and CEO until stepping down as CEO in January 2000, succeeded by Steve Ballmer, but he remained chairman of the board of directors and became chief software architect.[8] During the late 1990s, he was criticized for his business tactics, which have been considered anti-competitive. This opinion has been upheld by numerous court rulings.[9] In June 2008, Gates transitioned to a part-time role at Microsoft and full-time work at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the private charitable foundation he and his then-wife Melinda established in 2000.[10] He stepped down as chairman of the board of Microsoft in February 2014 and assumed a new post as technology adviser to support the newly appointed CEO Satya Nadella.[11] In March 2020, Gates left his board positions at Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway to focus on his philanthropic efforts on climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes list of the world’s wealthiest people.[13][14] From 1995 to 2017, he held the Forbes title of the richest person in the world every year except from 2010 to 2013.[15] In October 2017, he was surpassed by Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, who had an estimated net worth of US$90.6 billion compared to Gates’s net worth of US$89.9 billion at the time.[16] As of February 2023, Gates has an estimated net worth of US$113 billion, making him the fourth-richest person in the world.[17]

Later in his career and since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft in 2008, Gates has pursued many business and philanthropic endeavors. He is the founder and chairman of several companies, including BEN, Cascade Investment, TerraPower, bgC3, and Breakthrough Energy. He has given sizable amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, reported to be the world’s largest private charity.[18] Through the foundation, he led an early 21st century vaccination campaign that significantly contributed to the eradication of the wild poliovirus in Africa.[19][20] In 2010, Gates and Warren Buffett founded The Giving Pledge, whereby they and other billionaires pledge to give at least half of their wealth to philanthropy.[21]

Early life

Bill Gates was born in Seattle, Washington on October 28, 1955.[3] He is the son of William H. Gates Sr.[b] (1925–2020) and Mary Maxwell Gates (1929–1994).[22] His ancestry includes English, German, and Irish/Scots-Irish.[23] His father was a prominent lawyer, and his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way of America. Gates’s maternal grandfather was J. W. Maxwell, a national bank president. Gates has an older sister Kristi (Kristianne) and a younger sister Libby. He is the fourth of his name in his family but is known as William Gates III or «Trey» (i.e., three) because his father had the «II» suffix.[24][25] The family lived in the Sand Point area of Seattle in a home that was damaged by a rare tornado when Gates was seven years old.[26]

Early in his life, Gates observed that his parents wanted him to pursue a law career.[27] When he was young, his family regularly attended a church of the Congregational Christian Churches, a Protestant Reformed denomination.[28][29][30] Gates was small for his age and was bullied as a child.[25] The family encouraged competition; one visitor reported that «it didn’t matter whether it was hearts or pickleball or swimming to the dock; there was always a reward for winning and there was always a penalty for losing».[31]

At 13, he enrolled in the private Lakeside prep school,[32][33] where he wrote his first software program.[34] When he was in the eighth grade, the Mothers’ Club at the school used proceeds from Lakeside School’s rummage sale to buy a Teletype Model 33 ASR terminal and a block of computer time on a General Electric (GE) computer for the students.[35] Gates took an interest in programming the GE system in BASIC, and he was excused from math classes to pursue his interest. He wrote his first computer program on this machine, an implementation of tic-tac-toe that allowed users to play games against the computer. Gates was fascinated by the machine and how it would always execute software code perfectly.[36] After the Mothers Club donation was exhausted, Gates and other students sought time on systems including DEC PDP minicomputers. One of these systems was a PDP-10 belonging to Computer Center Corporation (CCC) which banned Gates, Paul Allen, Ric Weiland, and Gates’s best friend and first business partner Kent Evans, for the summer after it caught them exploiting bugs in the operating system to obtain free computer time.[37][25]

The four students formed the Lakeside Programmers Club to make money.[25] At the end of the ban, they offered to find bugs in CCC’s software in exchange for extra computer time. Rather than using the system remotely via Teletype, Gates went to CCC’s offices and studied source code for various programs that ran on the system, including Fortran, Lisp, and machine language. The arrangement with CCC continued until 1970 when the company went out of business.

The following year, a Lakeside teacher enlisted Gates and Evans to automate the school’s class-scheduling system, providing them computer time and royalties in return. The duo worked diligently in order to have the program ready for their senior year. Towards the end of their junior year, Evans was killed in a mountain climbing accident, which Gates has described as one of the saddest days of his life. Gates then turned to Allen who helped him finish the system for Lakeside.[25]

At 17, Gates formed a venture with Allen called Traf-O-Data to make traffic counters based on the Intel 8008 processor.[38] In 1972, he served as a congressional page in the House of Representatives.[39][40] He was a National Merit Scholar when he graduated from Lakeside School in 1973.[41] He scored 1590 out of 1600 on the Scholastic Aptitude Tests (SAT) and enrolled at Harvard College in the autumn of 1973.[42][43] He chose a pre-law major but took mathematics (including Math 55) and graduate level computer science courses.[44] While at Harvard, he met fellow student Steve Ballmer. Gates left Harvard after two years while Ballmer stayed and graduated magna cum laude. Years later, Ballmer succeeded Gates as Microsoft’s CEO and maintained that position from 2000 until his resignation in 2014.[45][46]

Gates devised an algorithm for pancake sorting as a solution to one of a series of unsolved problems[47] presented in a combinatorics class by professor Harry Lewis. His solution held the record as the fastest version for over 30 years, and its successor is faster by only 2%.[47][48] His solution was formalized and published in collaboration with Harvard computer scientist Christos Papadimitriou.[49]

Gates remained in contact with Paul Allen and joined him at Honeywell during the summer of 1974.[50] In 1975, the MITS Altair 8800 was released based on the Intel 8080 CPU, and Gates and Allen saw the opportunity to start their own computer software company.[51] Gates dropped out of Harvard that same year. His parents were supportive of him after seeing how much he wanted to start his own company.[52] He explained his decision to leave Harvard: «if things hadn’t worked out, I could always go back to school. I was officially on leave.»[53]

Microsoft

BASIC

MITS Altair 8800 Computer with 8-inch (200 mm) floppy disk system whose first programming language was Microsoft’s founding product, Altair BASIC

Gates read the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics which demonstrated the Altair 8800, and he contacted Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) to inform them that he and others were working on a BASIC interpreter for the platform.[54] In reality, Gates and Allen did not have an Altair and had not written code for it; they merely wanted to gauge MITS’s interest. MITS president Ed Roberts agreed to meet them for a demonstration, and over the course of a few weeks they developed an Altair emulator that ran on a minicomputer, and then the BASIC interpreter. The demonstration was held at MITS’s offices in Albuquerque, New Mexico; it was a success and resulted in a deal with MITS to distribute the interpreter as Altair BASIC. MITS hired Allen,[55] and Gates took a leave of absence from Harvard to work with him at MITS in November 1975. Allen named their partnership «Micro-Soft», a combination of «microcomputer» and «software», and their first office was in Albuquerque. The first employee Gates and Allen hired was their high school collaborator Ric Weiland.[55] They dropped the hyphen within a year and officially registered the trade name «Microsoft» with the Secretary of the State of New Mexico on November 26, 1976.[55] Gates never returned to Harvard to complete his studies.

Microsoft’s Altair BASIC was popular with computer hobbyists, but Gates discovered that a pre-market copy had leaked out and was being widely copied and distributed. In February 1976, he wrote an Open Letter to Hobbyists in the MITS newsletter in which he asserted that more than 90% of the users of Microsoft Altair BASIC had not paid Microsoft for it and the Altair «hobby market» was in danger of eliminating the incentive for any professional developers to produce, distribute, and maintain high-quality software.[56] This letter was unpopular with many computer hobbyists, but Gates persisted in his belief that software developers should be able to demand payment. Microsoft became independent of MITS in late 1976, and it continued to develop programming language software for various systems.[55] The company moved from Albuquerque to Bellevue, Washington on January 1, 1979.[54]

Gates said he personally reviewed and often rewrote every line of code that the company produced in its first five years. As the company grew, he transitioned into a manager role, then an executive.[57]

DONKEY.BAS, is a computer game written in 1981 and included with early versions of the PC DOS operating system distributed with the original IBM PC. It is a driving game in which the player must avoid hitting donkeys. The game was written by Gates and Neil Konzen.[58][59]

IBM partnership

IBM, the leading supplier of computer equipment to commercial enterprises at the time, approached Microsoft in July 1980 concerning software for its upcoming personal computer, the IBM PC,[60] after Bill Gates’s mother, Mary Maxwell Gates, mentioned Microsoft to John Opel, IBM’s CEO.[61] IBM first proposed that Microsoft write the BASIC interpreter. IBM’s representatives also mentioned that they needed an operating system, and Gates referred them to Digital Research (DRI), makers of the widely used CP/M operating system.[62] IBM’s discussions with Digital Research went poorly, however, and they did not reach a licensing agreement. IBM representative Jack Sams mentioned the licensing difficulties during a subsequent meeting with Gates and asked if Microsoft could provide an operating system. A few weeks later, Gates and Allen proposed using 86-DOS, an operating system similar to CP/M, that Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products (SCP) had made for hardware similar to the PC.[63] Microsoft made a deal with SCP to be the exclusive licensing agent of 86-DOS, and later the full owner. Microsoft employed Paterson to adapt the operating system for the PC[64] and delivered it to IBM as PC DOS for a one-time fee of $50,000.[65]

The contract itself only earned Microsoft a relatively small fee. It was the prestige brought to Microsoft by IBM’s adoption of their operating system that would be the origin of Microsoft’s transformation from a small business to the leading software company in the world. Gates had not offered to transfer the copyright on the operating system to IBM because he believed that other personal computer makers would clone IBM’s PC hardware.[65] They did, making the IBM-compatible PC, running DOS, a de facto standard. The sales of MS-DOS (the version of DOS sold to customers other than IBM) made Microsoft a major player in the industry.[66] The press quickly identified Microsoft as being very influential on the IBM PC. PC Magazine asked if Gates was «the man behind the machine?».[60]

Gates oversaw Microsoft’s company restructuring on June 25, 1981, which re-incorporated the company in Washington state and made Gates the president and chairman of the board, with Paul Allen as vice president and vice chairman. In early 1983, Allen left the company after receiving a Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis, effectively ending the formal business partnership between Gates and Allen, which had been strained months prior due to a contentious dispute over Microsoft equity.[54][67] Later in the decade, Gates repaired his relationship with Allen and together the two donated millions to their childhood school Lakeside.[25] They remained friends until Allen’s death in October 2018.[68]

Windows

Microsoft and Gates launched their first retail version of Microsoft Windows on November 20, 1985, in an attempt to fend off competition from Apple’s Macintosh GUI, which had captivated consumers with its simplicity and ease of use.[69] In August of the following year, the company struck a deal with IBM to develop a separate operating system called OS/2. Although the two companies successfully developed the first version of the new system, the partnership deteriorated due to mounting creative differences.[70] The operating system grew out of DOS in an organic fashion over a decade until Windows 95, which hid the DOS prompt by default. Windows XP, released one year after Gates stepped down as Microsoft CEO, was the first to not be based on DOS.[71] Windows 8.1 was the last version of the OS released before Gates left the chair of the firm to John W. Thompson on February 5, 2014.[72]

Management style

During Microsoft’s early years, Gates was an active software developer, particularly in the company’s programming language products, but his primary role in most of the company’s history was as a manager and executive. He has not officially been on a development team since working on the TRS-80 Model 100,[73] but he wrote code that shipped with the company’s products as late as 1989.[74] Jerry Pournelle wrote in 1985 when Gates announced Microsoft Excel: «Bill Gates likes the program, not because it’s going to make him a lot of money (although I’m sure it will do that), but because it’s a neat hack.»[75]

On June 15, 2006, Gates announced that he would transition out of his role at Microsoft to dedicate more time to philanthropy. He gradually divided his responsibilities between two successors when he placed Ray Ozzie in charge of management and Craig Mundie in charge of long-term product strategy.[76] The process took two years to fully transfer his duties to Ozzie and Mundie, and was completed on June 27, 2008.[77]

Post-Microsoft

Since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft, Gates has continued his philanthropy and works on other projects.

According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Gates was the world’s highest-earning billionaire in 2013, as his net worth increased by US$15.8 billion to US$78.5 billion. As of January 2014, most of Gates’s assets are held in Cascade Investment LLC, an entity through which he owns stakes in numerous businesses, including Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, and Corbis Corp.[78] On February 4, 2014, Gates stepped down as chairman of Microsoft to become «technology advisor» at the firm, alongside CEO Satya Nadella.[11][79]

Gates provided his perspective on a range of issues in a substantial interview that was published in the March 27, 2014, issue of Rolling Stone magazine. In the interview, Gates provided his perspective on climate change, his charitable activities, various tech companies and people involved in them, and the state of America. In response to a question about his greatest fear when he looks 50 years into the future, Gates stated: «there’ll be some really bad things that’ll happen in the next 50 or 100 years, but hopefully none of them on the scale of, say, a million people that you didn’t expect to die from a pandemic, or nuclear or bioterrorism.» Gates also identified innovation as the «real driver of progress» and pronounced that «America’s way better today than it’s ever been.»[80]

Gates has expressed concern about the potential harms of superintelligence; in a Reddit «ask me anything», he stated that:

First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well. A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don’t understand why some people are not concerned.[81][82][83][84]

In an interview that was held at the TED conference in March 2015, with Baidu’s CEO, Robin Li, Gates said he would «highly recommend» Nick Bostrom’s recent work, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies.[85] During the conference, Gates warned that the world was not prepared for the next pandemic, a situation that would come to pass in late 2019 when the COVID-19 pandemic began.[86] In March 2018, Gates met at his home in Seattle with Mohammed bin Salman, the reformist crown prince and de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia to discuss investment opportunities for Saudi Vision 2030.[87][88] In June 2019, Gates admitted that losing the mobile operating system race to Android was his biggest mistake. He stated that it was within their skill set of being the dominant player, but partially blames the antitrust litigation during the time.[89] That same year, Gates became an advisory board member of the Bloomberg New Economy Forum.[90]

On March 13, 2020, Microsoft announced Gates would be leaving his board positions at Berkshire Hathaway and Microsoft to dedicate his efforts in philanthropic endeavors such as climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates has widely been looked at by media outlets as an expert on the issue, despite him not being a public official or having any prior medical training.[91] His foundation did, however, establish the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator in 2020 to hasten the development and evaluation of new and repurposed drugs and biologics to treat patients for COVID-19,[92] and, as of February 2021, Gates expressed that he and Anthony Fauci frequently talk and collaborate on matters including vaccines and other medical innovations to fight the pandemic.[93]

Business ventures and investments (partial list)

Gates has a multi-billion dollar investment portfolio with stake in various sectors[94] and has participated in several entrepreneurial ventures beyond Microsoft, including:

  • AutoNation, automotive retailer that Gates has a 16% stake in trading on the NYSE.[95]
  • bgC3 LLC, a think-tank and research company founded by Gates.[96]
  • Canadian National Railway (CN), a Canadian Class I freight railway. As of 2019, Gates is the largest single shareholder of CN stock.[97]
  • Cascade Investment LLC, a private investment and holding company incorporated in the United States, founded and controlled by Gates and headquartered in Kirkland, Washington.[98]
    • Gates is the top private owner of farmland in the United States with landholdings owned via Cascade Investment totalling 242,000 acres across 19 states.[99][100] He is the 49th largest private owner of land in the US.[101]
  • Carbon Engineering, a for-profit venture founded by David Keith, which Gates helped fund.[102][103][104] It is also supported by Chevron Corporation and Occidental Petroleum.[105]
    • SCoPEx, Keith’s academic venture in «sun-dimming» geoengineering, which Gates provided most of the $12 million for.[106]
  • Corbis (originally named Interactive Home Systems and now known as Branded Entertainment Network), a digital image licensing and rights services company founded and chaired by Gates.[107]
  • EarthNow, Seattle-based startup company aiming to blanket the Earth with live satellite video coverage. Gates is a large financial backer.[108]
  • Eclipse Aviation, a defunct manufacturer of very light jets. Gates was a major stake-holder early on in the project.[109]
  • Impossible Foods, a company that develops plant-based substitutes for meat products. Some of the $396 million Patrick O. Brown collected for his business came from Gates around 2014 to 2017.[110][111][112]
  • Ecolab, global provider of water, hygiene and energy technologies and services to the food, energy, healthcare, industrial and hospitality markets. Combined with the shares owned by the Foundation, Gates owns 11.6% of the company. A shareholder agreement in 2012 allowed him to own up to 25% of the company, but this agreement was removed.[113]
  • ResearchGate, a social networking site for scientists. Gates participated in a $35 million round of financing along with other investors.[114]
  • TerraPower, a nuclear reactor design company co-founded and chaired by Gates, which is developing next generation traveling-wave reactor nuclear power plants in an effort to tackle climate change.[115][116][117][118][119]
  • Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a closed fund for wealthy individuals who seek ROI on a 20-year horizon (see next section), which «is funding green start-ups and a host of other low-carbon entrepreneurial projects, including everything from advanced nuclear technology to synthetic breast milk.» It was founded by Gates in 2015.[120]
  • Ginkgo Bioworks, a biotech startup that received $350 million in venture funding in 2019, in part from Gates’s investment firm Cascade Investment.[121]
  • Luminous Computing, a company that develops neuromorphic photonic integrated circuits for AI acceleration.
  • Mologic, British diagnostic technology company that Gates purchased, along with the Soros Economic Development Fund, «which has developed 10-minute Covid lateral flow tests that it aims to make for as little as $1.»[122]

Climate change and energy

Gates considers climate change and global access to energy to be critical, interrelated issues. He has urged governments and the private sector to invest in research and development to make clean, reliable energy cheaper. Gates envisions that a breakthrough innovation in sustainable energy technology could drive down both greenhouse gas emissions and poverty, and bring economic benefits by stabilizing energy prices.[123] In 2011, he said: «If you gave me the choice between picking the next 10 presidents or ensuring that energy is environmentally friendly and a quarter as costly, I’d pick the energy thing.»[124]

In 2015, he wrote about the challenge of transitioning the world’s energy system from one based primarily on fossil fuels to one based on sustainable energy sources. Global energy transitions have historically taken decades. He wrote, «I believe we can make this transition faster, both because the pace of innovation is accelerating, and because we have never had such an urgent reason to move from one source of energy to another.»[125] This rapid transition, according to Gates, would depend on increased government funding for basic research and financially risky private-sector investment, to enable innovation in diverse areas such as nuclear energy, grid energy storage to facilitate greater use of solar and wind energy, and solar fuels.[126]

Gates spearheaded two initiatives that he announced at the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris. One was Mission Innovation, in which 20 national governments pledged to double their spending on research and development for carbon-free energy in over five years’ time.[123] Another initiative was Breakthrough Energy, a group of investors who agreed to fund high-risk startups in clean energy technologies. Gates, who had already invested $1 billion of his own money in innovative energy startups, committed a further $1 billion to Breakthrough Energy.[126] In December 2020, he called for the U.S. federal government to create institutes for clean energy research, analogous to the National Institutes of Health.[127] Gates has also urged rich nations to shift to 100% synthetic beef industries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production.[128]

Gates has been criticised for holding a large stake in Signature Aviation, a company that services emissions-intensive private jets.[129] In 2019, he began to divest from fossil fuels. He does not expect divestment itself to have much practical impact, but says that if his efforts to provide alternatives were to fail, he would not want to personally benefit from an increase in fossil fuel stock prices.[130] After he published his book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, parts of the climate activist community criticized Gate’s approach as technological solutionism.[131]

In June 2021, Gates’s company TerraPower and Warren Buffett’s PacifiCorp announced the first sodium nuclear reactor in Wyoming. Wyoming Governor Mike Gordon hailed the project as a step toward carbon-negative nuclear power. Wyoming Senator John Barrasso also said that it could boost the state’s once-active uranium mining industry.[132]

Gates spent many efforts to make pass the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 because of his importance to climate. He tried to convince Joe Manchin to support a climate bill from the year 2019 and especially in the months before the adoption of the bill. The bill should cut the global greenhouse gas emissions in a level similar to «eliminating the annual planet-warming pollution of France and Germany combined» and may help to limit the warming of the planet to 1.5 degrees — the target of the Paris Agreement.[133] He thanked both Joe Manchin and Chuck Schumer for their efforts in a guest essay in The New York Times, where he said «Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 may be the single most important piece of climate legislation in American history» given its potential to spur development of new technologies.[134]

Political positions

Regulation of the software industry

In 1998, Gates rejected the need for regulation of the software industry in testimony before the United States Senate.[135] During the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) investigation of Microsoft in the 1990s, Gates was reportedly upset at Commissioner Dennis Yao for «float[ing] a line of hypothetical questions suggesting possible curbs on Microsoft’s growing monopoly power». According to one source:

Gates was vexed. «He started by calling Yao’s ideas socialistic,» recalls a source familiar with the July 15 meeting, «and as he got angrier and angrier and louder and louder, he got into calling them Communistic.[136]

Donald Trump Facebook ban

On February 18, 2021, after Facebook and Twitter had banned Donald Trump from their platforms as a result of the 2020 United States presidential election which led to the January 6 United States Capitol attack, Gates said a permanent ban of Trump «would be a shame» and would be an «extreme measure». He warned that it would cause «polarization» if users with different political views divide up among various social networks, and said: «I don’t think banning somebody who actually did get a fair number of votes (in the presidential election) – well less than a majority – but I don’t think having him off forever would be that good.»[135]

Patents for COVID-19 vaccines

In April 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates was criticized for suggesting that pharmaceutical companies should hold onto patents for COVID-19 vaccines. The criticism came due to the possibility of this preventing poorer nations from obtaining adequate vaccines. Tara Van Ho of the University of Essex stated, «Gates speaks as if all the lives being lost in India are inevitable but eventually the West will help when in reality the US & UK are holding their feet on the neck of developing states by refusing to break [intellectual property rights] protections. It’s disgusting.»[137]

Gates is opposed to the TRIPS waiver.[138][139][140] Bloomberg News reported him as saying he argued that Oxford University should not give away the rights to its COVID-19 information, as it had announced, but instead sell it to a single industry partner, as it did.[141] His views on the value of legal monopolies in medicine have been linked to his views on legal monopolies in software.[139][140]

Cryptocurrencies

Gates is critical of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to Gates, cryptocurrencies provide no «valuable output», contribute nothing to society, and pose a danger especially for smaller investors who couldn’t survive the potentially high losses. Gates also doesn’t own any cryptocurrencies himself.[142]

Philanthropy

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Gates studied the work of Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, and donated some of his Microsoft stock in 1994 to create the «William H. Gates Foundation». In 2000, Gates and his wife combined three family foundations and Gates donated stock valued at $5 billion to create the charitable Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which was identified by the Funds for NGOs company in 2013, as the world’s wealthiest charitable foundation, with assets reportedly valued at more than $34.6 billion.[143][144] The foundation allows benefactors to access information that shows how its money is being spent, unlike other major charitable organizations such as the Wellcome Trust.[145][146] Gates, through his foundation, also donated $20 million to Carnegie Mellon University for a new building to be named Gates Center for Computer Science which opened in 2009.[147][148]

Gates has credited the generosity and extensive philanthropy of David Rockefeller as a major influence. Gates and his father met with Rockefeller several times, and their charity work is partly modeled on the Rockefeller family’s philanthropic focus, whereby they are interested in tackling the global problems that are ignored by governments and other organizations.[149] As of 2007, Bill and Melinda Gates were the second-most generous philanthropists in America, having given over $28 billion to charity;[150] the couple plan to eventually donate 95% of their wealth to charity.[151]

The foundation is organized into five program areas: Global Development Division, Global Health Division, United States Division, and Global Policy & Advocacy Division. Among others, it supports a wide range of public health projects, granting aid to fight transmissible diseases such AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, as well as widespread vaccine programs to eradicate polio. It grants funds to learning institutes and libraries and supports scholarships at universities. The foundation established a water, sanitation and hygiene program to provide sustainable sanitation services in poor countries.[152] Its agriculture division supports the International Rice Research Institute in developing Golden Rice, a genetically modified rice variant used to combat vitamin A deficiency.[153] The goal of the foundation is to provide 120 million women and girls, in the poorest countries, with high-quality contraceptive information and services, with the longer-term goal of universal access to voluntary family planning.[154] In 2007, the Los Angeles Times criticized the foundation for investing its assets in companies that have been accused of worsening poverty, pollution and pharmaceutical firms that do not sell to developing countries.[155] Although the foundation announced a review of its investments to assess social responsibility,[156] it was subsequently canceled and upheld its policy of investing for maximum return, while using voting rights to influence company practices.[157]

Gates delivered his thoughts in a fireside chat moderated by journalist and news anchor Shereen Bhan virtually at the Singapore FinTech Festival on December 8, 2020, on the topic, «Building Infrastructure for Resilience: What the COVID-19 Response Can Teach Us About How to Scale Financial Inclusion».[158]

Governments are there to think ahead to bad things that might happen. In the case of (the Covid-19) pandemic, not enough was done. We can’t forget that another pandemic will come and we’ll need to invest in being ready in that, … while not forgetting that we were not prepared and we’re going to have to invest – just like having a fire department – some money in an intelligent way and actually simulate what might happen and make sure that we’re ready for it.[158]

Gates favours the normalization of COVID-19 masks. In a November 2020 interview, he said: «What are these, like, nudists? I mean, you know, we ask you to wear pants, and no American says, or very few Americans say, that that’s, like, some terrible thing.»[159]

Personal donations

Melinda Gates suggested that people should emulate the philanthropic efforts of the Salwen family, who sold their home and gave away half of its value, as detailed in their book, The Power of Half.[160] Gates and his wife invited Joan Salwen to Seattle to speak about what the family had done, and on December 9, 2010, Bill and Melinda Gates and investor Warren Buffett each signed a commitment they called the «Giving Pledge», which is a commitment by all three to donate at least half of their wealth, over the course of time, to charity.[161][162][163]

Gates has also provided personal donations to educational institutions. In 1999, Gates donated $20 million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the construction of a computer laboratory named the «William H. Gates Building» that was designed by architect Frank Gehry. While Microsoft had previously given financial support to the institution, this was the first personal donation received from Gates.[164]

The Maxwell Dworkin Laboratory of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences is named after the mothers of both Gates and Microsoft President Steven A. Ballmer, both of whom were students (Ballmer was a member of the school’s graduating class of 1977, while Gates left his studies for Microsoft), and donated funds for the laboratory’s construction.[165] Gates also donated $6 million to the construction of the Gates Computer Science Building, completed in January 1996, on the campus of Stanford University. The building contains the Computer Science Department and the Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL) of Stanford’s Engineering department.[166]

Since 2005, Gates and his foundation have taken an interest in solving global sanitation problems. For example, they announced the «Reinvent the Toilet Challenge», which has received considerable media interest.[167] To raise awareness for the topic of sanitation and possible solutions, Gates drank water that was «produced from human feces» in 2014 – it was produced from a sewage sludge treatment process called the Omni Processor.[168][169] In early 2015, he also appeared with Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show and challenged him to see if he could taste the difference between this reclaimed water or bottled water.[170]

In November 2017, Gates said he would give $50 million to the Dementia Discovery Fund, a venture capital fund that seeks treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. He also pledged an additional $50 million to start-up ventures working in Alzheimer’s research.[171] Bill and Melinda Gates have said that they intend to leave their three children $10 million each as their inheritance. With only $30 million kept in the family, they are expected to give away about 99.96% of their wealth.[172] On August 25, 2018, Gates distributed $600,000 through his foundation via UNICEF which is helping flood affected victims in Kerala, India.[173]

In June 2018, Bill Gates offered free ebooks, to all new graduates of U.S. colleges and universities,[174] and in 2021, offered free ebooks, to all college and university students around the world.[175][176] The Bill And Melinda Gates Foundation partially funds OpenStax, which creates and provides free digital textbooks.[177]

Charity sports events

On April 29, 2017, Gates partnered with Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer in playing in the Match for Africa 4, a noncompetitive tennis match at a sold-out Key Arena in Seattle. The event was in support of the Roger Federer Foundation’s charity efforts in Africa.[178] Federer and Gates played against John Isner, the top-ranked American player for much of this decade, and Mike McCready, the lead guitarist for Pearl Jam. The pair won the match 6 games to 4. Overall, they raised $2 million for children in Africa.[179] The following year, Gates and Federer returned to play in the Match for Africa 5 on March 5, 2018, at San Jose’s SAP Center. Their opponents were Jack Sock, one of the top American players and a grand slam winner in doubles, and Savannah Guthrie, a co-anchor for NBC’s Today show. Gates and Federer recorded their second match victory together by a score of 6–3 and the event raised over $2.5 million.[180]

Books

Gates has written four books:

  • The Road Ahead, written with Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold and journalist Peter Rinearson, was published in November 1995. It summarized the implications of the personal computing revolution and described a future profoundly changed by the arrival of a global information superhighway.
  • Business @ the Speed of Thought was published in 1999, and discusses how business and technology are integrated, and shows how digital infrastructures and information networks can help to get an edge on the competition.
  • How to Avoid a Climate Disaster (February 2021) presents what Gates learned in over a decade of studying climate change and investing in innovations to address climate problems.[181]
  • How to Prevent the Next Pandemic (April 2022) details the COVID-19 pandemic and proposes a «Global Epidemic Response and Mobilization» (GERM) team with annual funding of $1 billion,[182] under the auspices of the WHO.[183]

Personal life

Gates is an avid reader,[184] and the ceiling of his large home library is engraved with a quotation from The Great Gatsby.[185] He also enjoys bridge, tennis and golf.[186][187] His days are planned for him on a minute-by-minute basis, similarly to the U.S. president’s schedule.[188] Despite his wealth and extensive business travel, Gates flew coach (economy class) in commercial aircraft until 1997, when he bought a private jet.[189]

Gates purchased the Codex Leicester, a collection of scientific writings by Leonardo da Vinci, for US$30.8 million at an auction in 1994.[190] In 1998, he reportedly paid $30 million for the original 1885 maritime painting Lost on the Grand Banks, at the time a record price for an American painting.[191]

In 2016, he revealed that he was color-blind.[192]

On May 10, 2022, Gates said that he tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing mild symptoms.[193] Gates has received three doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.[193]

Marriage and divorce

Gates married Melinda French on the Hawaiian Island of Lanai on January 1, 1994.[194] They met in 1987 after Melinda began working at Microsoft.[195] At the time of their marriage, Gates was given permission by Melinda to spend limited time with his ex-girlfriend, businesswoman Ann Winblad.[196] Bill and Melinda have three children: Jennifer, Rory and Phoebe.[197] The family’s residence is an earth-sheltered mansion in the side of a hill overlooking Lake Washington in Medina, Washington. In 2009, property taxes on the mansion were reported to be US$1.063 million, on a total assessed value of US$147.5 million.[198] The 66,000-square-foot (6,100 m2) estate has a 60-foot (18 m) swimming pool with an underwater music system, as well as a 2,500-square-foot (230 m2) gym and a 1,000-square-foot (93 m2) dining room.[199] On May 3, 2021, the Gateses announced they had decided to divorce after 27 years of marriage and 34 years as a couple.[200] They said they would keep working together on charitable efforts.[200][201] The Wall Street Journal reported that Melinda had been meeting with divorce attorneys since 2019, citing interviews that suggested Bill’s ties with Jeffrey Epstein was at least one of her concerns.[202] The divorce was finalized on August 2, 2021.[203]

Public image

Gates meets with U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, February 2017

Gates’s public image has changed over the years. At first he was perceived as a brilliant but ruthless «robber baron», a «nerd-turned-tycoon».[204] Starting in 2000 with the foundation of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and particularly after he stepped down as head of Microsoft, he turned his attention to philanthropy, spending more than $50 billion on causes like health, poverty, and education. His image morphed from «tyrannical technocrat to saintly savior» to a «huggable billionaire techno-philanthropist», celebrated on magazine covers and sought after for his opinions on major issues like global health and climate change.[204] Still another shift in public opinion came in 2021 with the announcement that he and Melinda were divorcing. Coverage of that proceeding brought out information about romantic pursuits of women who worked for him, a long-term extra-marital affair, and a friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.[205] This information and his response to the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in some deterioration of his public image, going from «a lovable nerd who was out to save the world» to «a tech supervillain who wants to protect profits over public health.»[206]

Investigative journalist Tim Schwab has accused Gates of using his contributions to the media to shape their coverage of him in order to protect his public image.[91][207] In September 2022, Politico published an expose’ critical of NGO leadership at the helm of the world-wide COVID-19 pandemic response, written in cooperation with the German newspaper Welt. Criticisms included the interconnectivity of the non-profits with Gates, as well as his personal lack of formal credentials in medicine.[208]

Gates and the projects of his foundation have been the subject of many conspiracy theories that proliferate on Facebook and elsewhere. He has been implausibly accused of attempting to depopulate the world, distributing harmful or unethical vaccines, and implanting people with privacy-violating microchips. These largely unfounded theories reached a new level of influence during the COVID-19 pandemic when, according to New York Times journalist Rory Smith, the uncertainties of pandemic life drove people to seek explanations from the internet.[209][210] When asked about the theories, Gates has remarked that some people are tempted by the «simple explanation» that an evil person rather than biological factors are to blame, and that he does not know for what purpose anyone believes he would want to track them with microchips.[211][212]

Religion

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Gates said in regard to his faith: «The moral systems of religion, I think, are super important. We’ve raised our kids in a religious way; they’ve gone to the Catholic church that Melinda goes to and I participate in. I’ve been very lucky, and therefore I owe it to try and reduce the inequity in the world. And that’s kind of a religious belief. I mean, it’s at least a moral belief.»[213] In the same 2014 interview he also said: «I agree with people like Richard Dawkins that mankind felt the need for creation myths. Before we really began to understand disease and the weather and things like that, we sought false explanations for them. Now science has filled in some of the realm – not all – that religion used to fill. But the mystery and the beauty of the world is overwhelmingly amazing, and there’s no scientific explanation of how it came about. To say that it was generated by random numbers, that does seem, you know, sort of an uncharitable view [laughs]. I think it makes sense to believe in God, but exactly what decision in your life you make differently because of it, I don’t know.»[213]

Wealth tallies

In 1999, his wealth briefly surpassed US$101 billion.[214][189] Since 2000, the nominal value of his Microsoft holdings has declined due to a fall in Microsoft’s stock price after the dot-com bubble burst and the multi-billion dollar donations he has made to his charitable foundations. In May 2006, Gates remarked that he wished that he were not the richest man in the world because he disliked the attention it brought.[215] In March 2010, Gates was the second wealthiest person after Carlos Slim, but regained the top position in 2013, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires List.[216][217] Slim retook the position again in June 2014[218][219] (but then lost the top position back to Gates). Between 2009 and 2014, his wealth doubled from US$40 billion to more than US$82 billion.[220] In October 2017, Gates was surpassed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as the richest person in the world.[16] On November 15, 2019, he once again became the richest person in the world after a 48% increase in Microsoft shares, surpassing Bezos.[221] Gates told the BBC, «I’ve paid more tax than any individual ever, and gladly so … I’ve paid over $6 billion in taxes.»[222] He is a proponent of higher taxes, particularly for the rich.[223]

By 2017, Gates had held the top spot on the list of The World’s Billionaires for 18 out of the previous 23 years.[224] Gates has several investments outside Microsoft, which in 2006 paid him a salary of US$616,667 and US$350,000 bonus totalling US$966,667.[225] In 1989, he founded Corbis, a digital imaging company. In 2004, he became a director of Berkshire Hathaway, the investment company headed by long-time friend Warren Buffett.[226]

In 1987, Gates was listed as a billionaire in Forbes magazine’s 400 Richest People in America issue, worth $1.25 billion at the time, and was the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.[14] Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes The World’s Billionaires list and was the wealthiest person from 1995 to 1996,[227] 1998 to 2007, 2009, and held the spot until 2018 before being overtaken by Jeff Bezos.[15] Gates was number one on the Forbes 400 list from 1993 through to 2007, 2009, and 2014 through 2017.[228][229]

Controversies

Antitrust litigation

Gates giving his deposition at Microsoft on August 27, 1998

Gates approved of many decisions that led to antitrust litigation over Microsoft’s business practices. In the 1998 United States v. Microsoft case, Gates gave deposition testimony that several journalists characterized as evasive. He argued with examiner David Boies over the contextual meaning of words such as «compete», «concerned», and «we». Later in the year, when portions of the videotaped deposition were played back in court, the judge was seen laughing and shaking his head.[230] BusinessWeek reported:

Early rounds of his deposition show him offering obfuscatory answers and saying «I don’t recall» so many times that even the presiding judge had to chuckle. Worse, many of the technology chief’s denials and pleas of ignorance were directly refuted by prosecutors with snippets of e-mail that Gates both sent and received.[231]

Gates later said that he had simply resisted attempts by Boies to mischaracterize his words and actions. «Did I fence with Boies? … I plead guilty … rudeness to Boies in the first degree.»[232] Despite Gates’s denials, the judge ruled that Microsoft had committed monopolization, tying and blocking competition, each in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.[232]

Treatment of colleagues and employees

Gates had primary responsibility for Microsoft’s product strategy from the company’s founding from 1975 until 2006. He gained a reputation for being distant from others; an industry executive complained in 1981 that «Gates is notorious for not being reachable by phone and for not returning phone calls.»[233] An Atari executive recalled that he showed Gates a game and defeated him 35 of 37 times. When they met again a month later, Gates «won or tied every game. He had studied the game until he solved it. That is a competitor».[234]

In the early 1980s, while business partner Paul Allen was undergoing treatments for cancer, Gates — according to Allen — conspired to reduce Allen’s share in Microsoft by issuing himself stock options.[235][236][237] In his autobiography, Allen would later recall that Gates was «scheming to rip me off. It was mercenary opportunism plain and simple».[235] Gates says he remembers the episode differently.[236] Allen would also recall that Gates was prone to shouting episodes.[237]

Gates met regularly with Microsoft’s senior managers and program managers, and the managers described him as being verbally combative. He also berated them for perceived holes in their business strategies or proposals that placed the company’s long-term interests at risk.[238][239] Gates saw competition in personal terms; when Borland’s Turbo Pascal performed better than Microsoft’s own tools, he yelled at programming director Greg Whitten «for half an hour» because, Gates believed, Borland’s Philippe Kahn had surpassed Gates.[240] Gates interrupted presentations with such comments as «that’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard»[241] and «why don’t you just give up your options and join the Peace Corps?»[242] The target of his outburst would then have to defend the proposal in detail until Gates was fully convinced.[241] Not all harsh language was criticism; a manager recalled that «You’re full of shit. That’s the stupidest fucking thing I’ve ever heard» meant that Gates was amazed. «In the lore of Microsoft, if Bill says that to you, you’re made».[243] When subordinates appeared to be procrastinating, he was known to remark sarcastically, «I’ll do it over the weekend».[244][74][245] Gates has been accused of bullying Microsoft employees.[246]

Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein

A 2019 New York Times article reported that Gates’s relationship with financier Jeffrey Epstein started in 2011, just a few years after Epstein’s conviction for procuring a child for prostitution, and continued for some years, including a visit to Epstein’s house with Melinda in the fall of 2013, despite her declared discomfort.[247] Gates said in 2011 about Epstein: «His lifestyle is very different and kind of intriguing although it would not work for me».[205]

The depth of the friendship between Gates and Epstein is unclear. Gates generally commented about his relationship with Epstein that «I met him. I didn’t have any business relationship or friendship with him».[248] However, Gates visited Epstein «many times, despite [Epstein’s] past».[247]

It was reported that Epstein and Gates «discussed the Gates Foundation and philanthropy».[247] However, in an interview in 2019 Gates completely denied any connection between Epstein and the Gates Foundation or his philanthropy generally.[248] In August 2021, Gates said the reason he had meetings with Epstein was because Gates hoped Epstein could provide money for philanthropic work, though nothing came of the idea. Gates added, «It was a huge mistake to spend time with him, to give him the credibility of being there.»[246]

It has also been reported that Epstein and Gates met with Nobel Committee chair Thorbjørn Jagland at his residence in Strasbourg, France in March 2013 to discuss the Nobel Prize.[249] Also in attendance were representatives of the International Peace Institute which has received millions in grants from the Gates Foundation, including a $2.5 million «community engagement» grant in October 2013.[250]

Recognition

Bill and Melinda Gates being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2016

  • Time magazine named Gates one of the 100 people who most influenced the 20th century, as well as one of the 100 most influential people of 2004, 2005, and 2006.[251]
  • Time also collectively named Gates, his wife Melinda and U2’s lead singer Bono as the 2005 Persons of the Year for their humanitarian efforts.[252] In 2006, he was voted eighth in the list of «Heroes of our time».[253]
  • Gates was listed in the London Sunday Times power list in 1999, named CEO of the year by Chief Executive Officers magazine in 1994, ranked number one in the «Top 50 Cyber Elite» by Time in 1998, ranked number two in the Upside Elite 100 in 1999, and was included in The Guardian as one of the «Top 100 influential people in media» in 2001.[254]
  • Gates was elected Member of the US National Academy of Engineering in 1996 «for contributions to the founding and development of personal computing».[255]
  • He was named Honorary Member of the American Library Association in 1998.[256]
  • He was elected a foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering in 2017.[257]
  • According to Forbes, Gates was ranked as the fourth most powerful person in the world in 2012,[258] up from fifth in 2011.[259]
  • In 1994, he was honored as the 20th Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society (DFBCS). In 1999, Gates received New York Institute of Technology’s President’s Medal.[260]
  • Gates has received honorary doctorates from Nyenrode Business Universiteit (1996),[261] KTH Royal Institute of Technology (2002),[262] Waseda University (2005),[263] Tsinghua University (2007),[264] Harvard University (2007),[265] the Karolinska Institute (2007),[266] and Cambridge University (2009).[267]
  • He was also made an honorary trustee of Peking University in 2007.[268]
  • Gates was made an Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005.[269]
  • In January 2006, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Henry by the President of Portugal Jorge Sampaio
  • In November 2006, he was awarded the Placard of the Order of the Aztec Eagle, together with his wife Melinda who was awarded the Insignia of the same order, both for their philanthropic work around the world in the areas of health and education, particularly in Mexico, and specifically in the program «Un país de lectores«.[270]
  • Gates received the 2010 Bower Award for Business Leadership from The Franklin Institute for his achievements at Microsoft and his philanthropic work.[271]
  • Also in 2010, he was honored with the Silver Buffalo Award by the Boy Scouts of America, its highest award for adults, for his service to youth.[272]
  • In 2002, Bill and Melinda Gates received the Jefferson Award for Greatest Public Service Benefiting the Disadvantaged.[273]
  • He was given the 2006 James C. Morgan Global Humanitarian Award from the Tech Awards.[274]
  • In 2015, Gates and his wife Melinda received the Padma Bhushan, India’s third-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.[275][276]
  • In 2016, Barack Obama honored Bill and Melinda Gates with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for their philanthropic efforts.[277]
  • In 2017, François Hollande awarded Bill and Melinda Gates with France’s highest national order, as Commanders in the Legion of Honour, for their charity efforts.[278]
  • Entomologists named Bill Gates’ flower fly, Eristalis gatesi, in his honor in 1997.[279]
  • In 2020, Gates received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun for his contributions to Japan and the world in regards to worldwide technological transformation and advancement of global health.[280]
  • In 2021, Gates was nominated at the 11th annual Streamy Awards for the crossover for his personal YouTube channel.[281]
  • In 2022, Gates received the Hilal-e-Pakistan Second-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.

Depiction in media

Documentary films about Gates

External video
video icon The Machine That Changed The World; Interview with Bill Gates, 1990 (raw video), 44:03, Open Vault WGBH[282]
  • The Machine That Changed the World (1990)
  • Triumph of the Nerds (1996)
  • Nerds 2.0.1 (1998)
  • Waiting for «Superman» (2010)[283]
  • The Virtual Revolution (2010)
  • Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates (2019)

Feature films

  • 1999: Pirates of Silicon Valley, a film that chronicles the rise of Apple and Microsoft from the early 1970s to 1997. Gates is portrayed by Anthony Michael Hall.
  • 2002: Nothing So Strange, a mockumentary featuring Gates as the subject of a modern assassination. Gates briefly appears at the start, played by Steve Sires.
  • 2010: The Social Network, a film that chronicles the development of Facebook. Gates is portrayed by Steve Sires.[284]
  • 2015: Steve Jobs vs. Bill Gates: The Competition to Control the Personal Computer, 1974–1999: Original film from the National Geographic Channel for the American Genius series.[285]

Video and film clips

  • 1983: Steve Jobs hosts Gates and others in the «Macintosh dating game» at the Macintosh pre-launch event (a parody of the television game show The Dating Game)[286]
  • 1991: Gates spoke to the Berkeley Macintosh Users Group lively weekly Thursday night meeting with questions and answers in PSL Hall (renamed Pimentel Hall in 1994)[287] at University of California, Berkeley[288][289][290]
  • 2007: Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together at the D5 Conference on YouTube, All Things Digital
  • 2009− : Gates has given numerous TED talks on current concerns such as innovation, education and fighting global diseases[291]

Radio

Gates was the guest on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs on January 31, 2016, in which he talked about his relationships with his father and Steve Jobs, meeting Melinda Ann French, the start of Microsoft and some of his habits (for example reading The Economist «from cover to cover every week»). His choice of things to take on a desert island were, for music: «Blue Skies» by Willie Nelson; a book: The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker; and luxury item: a DVD Collection of Lectures from The Teaching Company.[292]

Television

Gates made a guest appearance as himself on the TV show The Big Bang Theory. The episode on which he appeared was appropriately titled «The Gates Excitation».[293] He also appeared in a cameo role in 2019 on the series finale of Silicon Valley.[294] Gates was parodied in The Simpsons episode «Das Bus».

In 2023, Gates was the interviewee in an episode of the Amol Rajan Interviews series on BBC Two,[295] and was the subject of an episode of the The Billionaires Who Made Our World UK Channel 4 series.[296]

See also

  • Big History Project
  • List of richest Americans in history
  • List of wealthiest historical figures

Notes

  1. ^ Gates regularly documents his share ownership through public U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Form 4 filings.[6][7]
  2. ^ His father was named William H. Gates II, but he is now generally known as William H. Gates, Senior to avoid confusion with his son.

References

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  2. ^ Manes 1994, p. 11.
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  4. ^ Foley, Mary Jo (August 15, 2017). «Bill Gates’ stake in Microsoft is now just 1.3 percent». ZDNet. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  5. ^ Sheridan, Patrick (May 2, 2014). «Bill Gates no longer Microsoft’s biggest shareholder». CNN Money. Archived from the original on August 20, 2014. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
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Bibliography

  • Fridson, Martin (2001). How to Be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-41617-7.
  • Gates, Bill (1996). The Road Ahead. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-026040-4.
  • Lesinski, Jeanne M. (2006). Bill Gates (biography). A&E Television Networks. ISBN 0-8225-7027-0.
  • Manes, Stephen (1994). Gates: How Microsoft’s Mogul Reinvented an Industry and Made Himself the Richest Man in America. Touchstone Pictures. ISBN 0-671-88074-8.
  • Wallace, James (1993). Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Microsoft Empire. New York City: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-471-56886-4.

Primary sources

  • Gates, Bill. «An exclusive interview with Bill Gates». Financial Times 1 (2013). online
  • Gates, Bill. «Remarks of Bill Gates, Harvard Commencement 2007». The Harvard Gazette 7 (2007). Online
  • Kinsley, Michael, and Conor Clarke, Eds. Creative Capitalism: A Conversation With Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Other Economic Leaders (Simon and Schuster, 2009).

Further reading

  • Leibovich, Mark. The New Imperialists (Prentice Hall, 2002) pp 139–182. online
  • Bank, David (2001). Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumbled the Future of Microsoft. New York City: Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-0315-1.
  • Rivlin, Gary (1999). The Plot to Get Bill Gates: An Irreverent Investigation of the World’s Richest Man… and the People Who Hate Him. New York City: Times Business. ISBN 0-8129-3006-1.
  • «83 Reasons Why Bill Gates’s Reign Is Over». Wired. Vol. 6, no. 12. December 1998. Archived from the original on August 22, 2010.
  • Kildall, Gary (October 25, 2004). «The Man Who Could Have Been Bill Gates». Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on April 4, 2006. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
  • «The Meaning of Bill Gates: As his reign at Microsoft comes to an end, so does the era he dominated», The Economist, June 28, 2008.
  • Wallace, James. Overdrive: Bill Gates and the Race to Control Cyberspace (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997).

External links

  • Official website
  • Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Official YouTube channel
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Bill Gates at IMDb
  • Bill Gates at TED Edit this at Wikidata
  • Forbes profile

This article is about the co-founder of Microsoft. For other people of the same name, see Bill Gates (disambiguation).

Bill Gates

Head and shoulders photo of Bill Gates

Gates in 2017

Born

William Henry Gates III

October 28, 1955 (age 67)

Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Education Harvard University
(dropped out)
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • investor
  • philanthropist
Years active 1972–present
Known for Co-founder of Microsoft and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Title

Partial list of founded and chaired companies

  • Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Chairman and founder of Branded Entertainment Network
  • Chairman and founder of Cascade Investment
  • Chairman and co-founder of TerraPower
  • Founder of Breakthrough Energy
  • Founder of Gates Ventures
  • Technology advisor of Microsoft[1]
Board member of
  • Berkshire Hathaway
  • Microsoft
  • (former, both)
Spouse

Melinda French

(m. 1994; div. 2021)​

Children 3
Parents
  • Bill Gates Sr. (father)
  • Mary Maxwell (mother)
Awards
  • Order of the British Empire (Civil) Ribbon.svg Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (2005)
  • Padma Bhushan Ribbon.svg Padma Bhushan (2015)
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016)
  • Hilal-e-Pakistan Breast Star.png Hilal-e-Pakistan (2022)
Website www.gatesnotes.com
Signature
William H. Gates III

William Henry Gates III (born October 28, 1955) is an American business magnate, investor, philanthropist, and writer. He is a co-founder of Microsoft, along with his late childhood friend Paul Allen.[2][3] During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of chairman, chief executive officer (CEO), president and chief software architect, while also being the largest individual shareholder until May 2014.[4] He was a major entrepreneur of the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s and 1980s.

Gates was born and raised in Seattle. In 1975, he and Allen founded Microsoft in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It became the world’s largest personal computer software company.[5][a] Gates led the company as chairman and CEO until stepping down as CEO in January 2000, succeeded by Steve Ballmer, but he remained chairman of the board of directors and became chief software architect.[8] During the late 1990s, he was criticized for his business tactics, which have been considered anti-competitive. This opinion has been upheld by numerous court rulings.[9] In June 2008, Gates transitioned to a part-time role at Microsoft and full-time work at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the private charitable foundation he and his then-wife Melinda established in 2000.[10] He stepped down as chairman of the board of Microsoft in February 2014 and assumed a new post as technology adviser to support the newly appointed CEO Satya Nadella.[11] In March 2020, Gates left his board positions at Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway to focus on his philanthropic efforts on climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes list of the world’s wealthiest people.[13][14] From 1995 to 2017, he held the Forbes title of the richest person in the world every year except from 2010 to 2013.[15] In October 2017, he was surpassed by Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, who had an estimated net worth of US$90.6 billion compared to Gates’s net worth of US$89.9 billion at the time.[16] As of February 2023, Gates has an estimated net worth of US$113 billion, making him the fourth-richest person in the world.[17]

Later in his career and since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft in 2008, Gates has pursued many business and philanthropic endeavors. He is the founder and chairman of several companies, including BEN, Cascade Investment, TerraPower, bgC3, and Breakthrough Energy. He has given sizable amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, reported to be the world’s largest private charity.[18] Through the foundation, he led an early 21st century vaccination campaign that significantly contributed to the eradication of the wild poliovirus in Africa.[19][20] In 2010, Gates and Warren Buffett founded The Giving Pledge, whereby they and other billionaires pledge to give at least half of their wealth to philanthropy.[21]

Early life

Bill Gates was born in Seattle, Washington on October 28, 1955.[3] He is the son of William H. Gates Sr.[b] (1925–2020) and Mary Maxwell Gates (1929–1994).[22] His ancestry includes English, German, and Irish/Scots-Irish.[23] His father was a prominent lawyer, and his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way of America. Gates’s maternal grandfather was J. W. Maxwell, a national bank president. Gates has an older sister Kristi (Kristianne) and a younger sister Libby. He is the fourth of his name in his family but is known as William Gates III or «Trey» (i.e., three) because his father had the «II» suffix.[24][25] The family lived in the Sand Point area of Seattle in a home that was damaged by a rare tornado when Gates was seven years old.[26]

Early in his life, Gates observed that his parents wanted him to pursue a law career.[27] When he was young, his family regularly attended a church of the Congregational Christian Churches, a Protestant Reformed denomination.[28][29][30] Gates was small for his age and was bullied as a child.[25] The family encouraged competition; one visitor reported that «it didn’t matter whether it was hearts or pickleball or swimming to the dock; there was always a reward for winning and there was always a penalty for losing».[31]

At 13, he enrolled in the private Lakeside prep school,[32][33] where he wrote his first software program.[34] When he was in the eighth grade, the Mothers’ Club at the school used proceeds from Lakeside School’s rummage sale to buy a Teletype Model 33 ASR terminal and a block of computer time on a General Electric (GE) computer for the students.[35] Gates took an interest in programming the GE system in BASIC, and he was excused from math classes to pursue his interest. He wrote his first computer program on this machine, an implementation of tic-tac-toe that allowed users to play games against the computer. Gates was fascinated by the machine and how it would always execute software code perfectly.[36] After the Mothers Club donation was exhausted, Gates and other students sought time on systems including DEC PDP minicomputers. One of these systems was a PDP-10 belonging to Computer Center Corporation (CCC) which banned Gates, Paul Allen, Ric Weiland, and Gates’s best friend and first business partner Kent Evans, for the summer after it caught them exploiting bugs in the operating system to obtain free computer time.[37][25]

The four students formed the Lakeside Programmers Club to make money.[25] At the end of the ban, they offered to find bugs in CCC’s software in exchange for extra computer time. Rather than using the system remotely via Teletype, Gates went to CCC’s offices and studied source code for various programs that ran on the system, including Fortran, Lisp, and machine language. The arrangement with CCC continued until 1970 when the company went out of business.

The following year, a Lakeside teacher enlisted Gates and Evans to automate the school’s class-scheduling system, providing them computer time and royalties in return. The duo worked diligently in order to have the program ready for their senior year. Towards the end of their junior year, Evans was killed in a mountain climbing accident, which Gates has described as one of the saddest days of his life. Gates then turned to Allen who helped him finish the system for Lakeside.[25]

At 17, Gates formed a venture with Allen called Traf-O-Data to make traffic counters based on the Intel 8008 processor.[38] In 1972, he served as a congressional page in the House of Representatives.[39][40] He was a National Merit Scholar when he graduated from Lakeside School in 1973.[41] He scored 1590 out of 1600 on the Scholastic Aptitude Tests (SAT) and enrolled at Harvard College in the autumn of 1973.[42][43] He chose a pre-law major but took mathematics (including Math 55) and graduate level computer science courses.[44] While at Harvard, he met fellow student Steve Ballmer. Gates left Harvard after two years while Ballmer stayed and graduated magna cum laude. Years later, Ballmer succeeded Gates as Microsoft’s CEO and maintained that position from 2000 until his resignation in 2014.[45][46]

Gates devised an algorithm for pancake sorting as a solution to one of a series of unsolved problems[47] presented in a combinatorics class by professor Harry Lewis. His solution held the record as the fastest version for over 30 years, and its successor is faster by only 2%.[47][48] His solution was formalized and published in collaboration with Harvard computer scientist Christos Papadimitriou.[49]

Gates remained in contact with Paul Allen and joined him at Honeywell during the summer of 1974.[50] In 1975, the MITS Altair 8800 was released based on the Intel 8080 CPU, and Gates and Allen saw the opportunity to start their own computer software company.[51] Gates dropped out of Harvard that same year. His parents were supportive of him after seeing how much he wanted to start his own company.[52] He explained his decision to leave Harvard: «if things hadn’t worked out, I could always go back to school. I was officially on leave.»[53]

Microsoft

BASIC

MITS Altair 8800 Computer with 8-inch (200 mm) floppy disk system whose first programming language was Microsoft’s founding product, Altair BASIC

Gates read the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics which demonstrated the Altair 8800, and he contacted Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) to inform them that he and others were working on a BASIC interpreter for the platform.[54] In reality, Gates and Allen did not have an Altair and had not written code for it; they merely wanted to gauge MITS’s interest. MITS president Ed Roberts agreed to meet them for a demonstration, and over the course of a few weeks they developed an Altair emulator that ran on a minicomputer, and then the BASIC interpreter. The demonstration was held at MITS’s offices in Albuquerque, New Mexico; it was a success and resulted in a deal with MITS to distribute the interpreter as Altair BASIC. MITS hired Allen,[55] and Gates took a leave of absence from Harvard to work with him at MITS in November 1975. Allen named their partnership «Micro-Soft», a combination of «microcomputer» and «software», and their first office was in Albuquerque. The first employee Gates and Allen hired was their high school collaborator Ric Weiland.[55] They dropped the hyphen within a year and officially registered the trade name «Microsoft» with the Secretary of the State of New Mexico on November 26, 1976.[55] Gates never returned to Harvard to complete his studies.

Microsoft’s Altair BASIC was popular with computer hobbyists, but Gates discovered that a pre-market copy had leaked out and was being widely copied and distributed. In February 1976, he wrote an Open Letter to Hobbyists in the MITS newsletter in which he asserted that more than 90% of the users of Microsoft Altair BASIC had not paid Microsoft for it and the Altair «hobby market» was in danger of eliminating the incentive for any professional developers to produce, distribute, and maintain high-quality software.[56] This letter was unpopular with many computer hobbyists, but Gates persisted in his belief that software developers should be able to demand payment. Microsoft became independent of MITS in late 1976, and it continued to develop programming language software for various systems.[55] The company moved from Albuquerque to Bellevue, Washington on January 1, 1979.[54]

Gates said he personally reviewed and often rewrote every line of code that the company produced in its first five years. As the company grew, he transitioned into a manager role, then an executive.[57]

DONKEY.BAS, is a computer game written in 1981 and included with early versions of the PC DOS operating system distributed with the original IBM PC. It is a driving game in which the player must avoid hitting donkeys. The game was written by Gates and Neil Konzen.[58][59]

IBM partnership

IBM, the leading supplier of computer equipment to commercial enterprises at the time, approached Microsoft in July 1980 concerning software for its upcoming personal computer, the IBM PC,[60] after Bill Gates’s mother, Mary Maxwell Gates, mentioned Microsoft to John Opel, IBM’s CEO.[61] IBM first proposed that Microsoft write the BASIC interpreter. IBM’s representatives also mentioned that they needed an operating system, and Gates referred them to Digital Research (DRI), makers of the widely used CP/M operating system.[62] IBM’s discussions with Digital Research went poorly, however, and they did not reach a licensing agreement. IBM representative Jack Sams mentioned the licensing difficulties during a subsequent meeting with Gates and asked if Microsoft could provide an operating system. A few weeks later, Gates and Allen proposed using 86-DOS, an operating system similar to CP/M, that Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products (SCP) had made for hardware similar to the PC.[63] Microsoft made a deal with SCP to be the exclusive licensing agent of 86-DOS, and later the full owner. Microsoft employed Paterson to adapt the operating system for the PC[64] and delivered it to IBM as PC DOS for a one-time fee of $50,000.[65]

The contract itself only earned Microsoft a relatively small fee. It was the prestige brought to Microsoft by IBM’s adoption of their operating system that would be the origin of Microsoft’s transformation from a small business to the leading software company in the world. Gates had not offered to transfer the copyright on the operating system to IBM because he believed that other personal computer makers would clone IBM’s PC hardware.[65] They did, making the IBM-compatible PC, running DOS, a de facto standard. The sales of MS-DOS (the version of DOS sold to customers other than IBM) made Microsoft a major player in the industry.[66] The press quickly identified Microsoft as being very influential on the IBM PC. PC Magazine asked if Gates was «the man behind the machine?».[60]

Gates oversaw Microsoft’s company restructuring on June 25, 1981, which re-incorporated the company in Washington state and made Gates the president and chairman of the board, with Paul Allen as vice president and vice chairman. In early 1983, Allen left the company after receiving a Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis, effectively ending the formal business partnership between Gates and Allen, which had been strained months prior due to a contentious dispute over Microsoft equity.[54][67] Later in the decade, Gates repaired his relationship with Allen and together the two donated millions to their childhood school Lakeside.[25] They remained friends until Allen’s death in October 2018.[68]

Windows

Microsoft and Gates launched their first retail version of Microsoft Windows on November 20, 1985, in an attempt to fend off competition from Apple’s Macintosh GUI, which had captivated consumers with its simplicity and ease of use.[69] In August of the following year, the company struck a deal with IBM to develop a separate operating system called OS/2. Although the two companies successfully developed the first version of the new system, the partnership deteriorated due to mounting creative differences.[70] The operating system grew out of DOS in an organic fashion over a decade until Windows 95, which hid the DOS prompt by default. Windows XP, released one year after Gates stepped down as Microsoft CEO, was the first to not be based on DOS.[71] Windows 8.1 was the last version of the OS released before Gates left the chair of the firm to John W. Thompson on February 5, 2014.[72]

Management style

During Microsoft’s early years, Gates was an active software developer, particularly in the company’s programming language products, but his primary role in most of the company’s history was as a manager and executive. He has not officially been on a development team since working on the TRS-80 Model 100,[73] but he wrote code that shipped with the company’s products as late as 1989.[74] Jerry Pournelle wrote in 1985 when Gates announced Microsoft Excel: «Bill Gates likes the program, not because it’s going to make him a lot of money (although I’m sure it will do that), but because it’s a neat hack.»[75]

On June 15, 2006, Gates announced that he would transition out of his role at Microsoft to dedicate more time to philanthropy. He gradually divided his responsibilities between two successors when he placed Ray Ozzie in charge of management and Craig Mundie in charge of long-term product strategy.[76] The process took two years to fully transfer his duties to Ozzie and Mundie, and was completed on June 27, 2008.[77]

Post-Microsoft

Since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft, Gates has continued his philanthropy and works on other projects.

According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Gates was the world’s highest-earning billionaire in 2013, as his net worth increased by US$15.8 billion to US$78.5 billion. As of January 2014, most of Gates’s assets are held in Cascade Investment LLC, an entity through which he owns stakes in numerous businesses, including Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, and Corbis Corp.[78] On February 4, 2014, Gates stepped down as chairman of Microsoft to become «technology advisor» at the firm, alongside CEO Satya Nadella.[11][79]

Gates provided his perspective on a range of issues in a substantial interview that was published in the March 27, 2014, issue of Rolling Stone magazine. In the interview, Gates provided his perspective on climate change, his charitable activities, various tech companies and people involved in them, and the state of America. In response to a question about his greatest fear when he looks 50 years into the future, Gates stated: «there’ll be some really bad things that’ll happen in the next 50 or 100 years, but hopefully none of them on the scale of, say, a million people that you didn’t expect to die from a pandemic, or nuclear or bioterrorism.» Gates also identified innovation as the «real driver of progress» and pronounced that «America’s way better today than it’s ever been.»[80]

Gates has expressed concern about the potential harms of superintelligence; in a Reddit «ask me anything», he stated that:

First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well. A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don’t understand why some people are not concerned.[81][82][83][84]

In an interview that was held at the TED conference in March 2015, with Baidu’s CEO, Robin Li, Gates said he would «highly recommend» Nick Bostrom’s recent work, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies.[85] During the conference, Gates warned that the world was not prepared for the next pandemic, a situation that would come to pass in late 2019 when the COVID-19 pandemic began.[86] In March 2018, Gates met at his home in Seattle with Mohammed bin Salman, the reformist crown prince and de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia to discuss investment opportunities for Saudi Vision 2030.[87][88] In June 2019, Gates admitted that losing the mobile operating system race to Android was his biggest mistake. He stated that it was within their skill set of being the dominant player, but partially blames the antitrust litigation during the time.[89] That same year, Gates became an advisory board member of the Bloomberg New Economy Forum.[90]

On March 13, 2020, Microsoft announced Gates would be leaving his board positions at Berkshire Hathaway and Microsoft to dedicate his efforts in philanthropic endeavors such as climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates has widely been looked at by media outlets as an expert on the issue, despite him not being a public official or having any prior medical training.[91] His foundation did, however, establish the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator in 2020 to hasten the development and evaluation of new and repurposed drugs and biologics to treat patients for COVID-19,[92] and, as of February 2021, Gates expressed that he and Anthony Fauci frequently talk and collaborate on matters including vaccines and other medical innovations to fight the pandemic.[93]

Business ventures and investments (partial list)

Gates has a multi-billion dollar investment portfolio with stake in various sectors[94] and has participated in several entrepreneurial ventures beyond Microsoft, including:

  • AutoNation, automotive retailer that Gates has a 16% stake in trading on the NYSE.[95]
  • bgC3 LLC, a think-tank and research company founded by Gates.[96]
  • Canadian National Railway (CN), a Canadian Class I freight railway. As of 2019, Gates is the largest single shareholder of CN stock.[97]
  • Cascade Investment LLC, a private investment and holding company incorporated in the United States, founded and controlled by Gates and headquartered in Kirkland, Washington.[98]
    • Gates is the top private owner of farmland in the United States with landholdings owned via Cascade Investment totalling 242,000 acres across 19 states.[99][100] He is the 49th largest private owner of land in the US.[101]
  • Carbon Engineering, a for-profit venture founded by David Keith, which Gates helped fund.[102][103][104] It is also supported by Chevron Corporation and Occidental Petroleum.[105]
    • SCoPEx, Keith’s academic venture in «sun-dimming» geoengineering, which Gates provided most of the $12 million for.[106]
  • Corbis (originally named Interactive Home Systems and now known as Branded Entertainment Network), a digital image licensing and rights services company founded and chaired by Gates.[107]
  • EarthNow, Seattle-based startup company aiming to blanket the Earth with live satellite video coverage. Gates is a large financial backer.[108]
  • Eclipse Aviation, a defunct manufacturer of very light jets. Gates was a major stake-holder early on in the project.[109]
  • Impossible Foods, a company that develops plant-based substitutes for meat products. Some of the $396 million Patrick O. Brown collected for his business came from Gates around 2014 to 2017.[110][111][112]
  • Ecolab, global provider of water, hygiene and energy technologies and services to the food, energy, healthcare, industrial and hospitality markets. Combined with the shares owned by the Foundation, Gates owns 11.6% of the company. A shareholder agreement in 2012 allowed him to own up to 25% of the company, but this agreement was removed.[113]
  • ResearchGate, a social networking site for scientists. Gates participated in a $35 million round of financing along with other investors.[114]
  • TerraPower, a nuclear reactor design company co-founded and chaired by Gates, which is developing next generation traveling-wave reactor nuclear power plants in an effort to tackle climate change.[115][116][117][118][119]
  • Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a closed fund for wealthy individuals who seek ROI on a 20-year horizon (see next section), which «is funding green start-ups and a host of other low-carbon entrepreneurial projects, including everything from advanced nuclear technology to synthetic breast milk.» It was founded by Gates in 2015.[120]
  • Ginkgo Bioworks, a biotech startup that received $350 million in venture funding in 2019, in part from Gates’s investment firm Cascade Investment.[121]
  • Luminous Computing, a company that develops neuromorphic photonic integrated circuits for AI acceleration.
  • Mologic, British diagnostic technology company that Gates purchased, along with the Soros Economic Development Fund, «which has developed 10-minute Covid lateral flow tests that it aims to make for as little as $1.»[122]

Climate change and energy

Gates considers climate change and global access to energy to be critical, interrelated issues. He has urged governments and the private sector to invest in research and development to make clean, reliable energy cheaper. Gates envisions that a breakthrough innovation in sustainable energy technology could drive down both greenhouse gas emissions and poverty, and bring economic benefits by stabilizing energy prices.[123] In 2011, he said: «If you gave me the choice between picking the next 10 presidents or ensuring that energy is environmentally friendly and a quarter as costly, I’d pick the energy thing.»[124]

In 2015, he wrote about the challenge of transitioning the world’s energy system from one based primarily on fossil fuels to one based on sustainable energy sources. Global energy transitions have historically taken decades. He wrote, «I believe we can make this transition faster, both because the pace of innovation is accelerating, and because we have never had such an urgent reason to move from one source of energy to another.»[125] This rapid transition, according to Gates, would depend on increased government funding for basic research and financially risky private-sector investment, to enable innovation in diverse areas such as nuclear energy, grid energy storage to facilitate greater use of solar and wind energy, and solar fuels.[126]

Gates spearheaded two initiatives that he announced at the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris. One was Mission Innovation, in which 20 national governments pledged to double their spending on research and development for carbon-free energy in over five years’ time.[123] Another initiative was Breakthrough Energy, a group of investors who agreed to fund high-risk startups in clean energy technologies. Gates, who had already invested $1 billion of his own money in innovative energy startups, committed a further $1 billion to Breakthrough Energy.[126] In December 2020, he called for the U.S. federal government to create institutes for clean energy research, analogous to the National Institutes of Health.[127] Gates has also urged rich nations to shift to 100% synthetic beef industries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production.[128]

Gates has been criticised for holding a large stake in Signature Aviation, a company that services emissions-intensive private jets.[129] In 2019, he began to divest from fossil fuels. He does not expect divestment itself to have much practical impact, but says that if his efforts to provide alternatives were to fail, he would not want to personally benefit from an increase in fossil fuel stock prices.[130] After he published his book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, parts of the climate activist community criticized Gate’s approach as technological solutionism.[131]

In June 2021, Gates’s company TerraPower and Warren Buffett’s PacifiCorp announced the first sodium nuclear reactor in Wyoming. Wyoming Governor Mike Gordon hailed the project as a step toward carbon-negative nuclear power. Wyoming Senator John Barrasso also said that it could boost the state’s once-active uranium mining industry.[132]

Gates spent many efforts to make pass the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 because of his importance to climate. He tried to convince Joe Manchin to support a climate bill from the year 2019 and especially in the months before the adoption of the bill. The bill should cut the global greenhouse gas emissions in a level similar to «eliminating the annual planet-warming pollution of France and Germany combined» and may help to limit the warming of the planet to 1.5 degrees — the target of the Paris Agreement.[133] He thanked both Joe Manchin and Chuck Schumer for their efforts in a guest essay in The New York Times, where he said «Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 may be the single most important piece of climate legislation in American history» given its potential to spur development of new technologies.[134]

Political positions

Regulation of the software industry

In 1998, Gates rejected the need for regulation of the software industry in testimony before the United States Senate.[135] During the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) investigation of Microsoft in the 1990s, Gates was reportedly upset at Commissioner Dennis Yao for «float[ing] a line of hypothetical questions suggesting possible curbs on Microsoft’s growing monopoly power». According to one source:

Gates was vexed. «He started by calling Yao’s ideas socialistic,» recalls a source familiar with the July 15 meeting, «and as he got angrier and angrier and louder and louder, he got into calling them Communistic.[136]

Donald Trump Facebook ban

On February 18, 2021, after Facebook and Twitter had banned Donald Trump from their platforms as a result of the 2020 United States presidential election which led to the January 6 United States Capitol attack, Gates said a permanent ban of Trump «would be a shame» and would be an «extreme measure». He warned that it would cause «polarization» if users with different political views divide up among various social networks, and said: «I don’t think banning somebody who actually did get a fair number of votes (in the presidential election) – well less than a majority – but I don’t think having him off forever would be that good.»[135]

Patents for COVID-19 vaccines

In April 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates was criticized for suggesting that pharmaceutical companies should hold onto patents for COVID-19 vaccines. The criticism came due to the possibility of this preventing poorer nations from obtaining adequate vaccines. Tara Van Ho of the University of Essex stated, «Gates speaks as if all the lives being lost in India are inevitable but eventually the West will help when in reality the US & UK are holding their feet on the neck of developing states by refusing to break [intellectual property rights] protections. It’s disgusting.»[137]

Gates is opposed to the TRIPS waiver.[138][139][140] Bloomberg News reported him as saying he argued that Oxford University should not give away the rights to its COVID-19 information, as it had announced, but instead sell it to a single industry partner, as it did.[141] His views on the value of legal monopolies in medicine have been linked to his views on legal monopolies in software.[139][140]

Cryptocurrencies

Gates is critical of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to Gates, cryptocurrencies provide no «valuable output», contribute nothing to society, and pose a danger especially for smaller investors who couldn’t survive the potentially high losses. Gates also doesn’t own any cryptocurrencies himself.[142]

Philanthropy

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Gates studied the work of Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, and donated some of his Microsoft stock in 1994 to create the «William H. Gates Foundation». In 2000, Gates and his wife combined three family foundations and Gates donated stock valued at $5 billion to create the charitable Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which was identified by the Funds for NGOs company in 2013, as the world’s wealthiest charitable foundation, with assets reportedly valued at more than $34.6 billion.[143][144] The foundation allows benefactors to access information that shows how its money is being spent, unlike other major charitable organizations such as the Wellcome Trust.[145][146] Gates, through his foundation, also donated $20 million to Carnegie Mellon University for a new building to be named Gates Center for Computer Science which opened in 2009.[147][148]

Gates has credited the generosity and extensive philanthropy of David Rockefeller as a major influence. Gates and his father met with Rockefeller several times, and their charity work is partly modeled on the Rockefeller family’s philanthropic focus, whereby they are interested in tackling the global problems that are ignored by governments and other organizations.[149] As of 2007, Bill and Melinda Gates were the second-most generous philanthropists in America, having given over $28 billion to charity;[150] the couple plan to eventually donate 95% of their wealth to charity.[151]

The foundation is organized into five program areas: Global Development Division, Global Health Division, United States Division, and Global Policy & Advocacy Division. Among others, it supports a wide range of public health projects, granting aid to fight transmissible diseases such AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, as well as widespread vaccine programs to eradicate polio. It grants funds to learning institutes and libraries and supports scholarships at universities. The foundation established a water, sanitation and hygiene program to provide sustainable sanitation services in poor countries.[152] Its agriculture division supports the International Rice Research Institute in developing Golden Rice, a genetically modified rice variant used to combat vitamin A deficiency.[153] The goal of the foundation is to provide 120 million women and girls, in the poorest countries, with high-quality contraceptive information and services, with the longer-term goal of universal access to voluntary family planning.[154] In 2007, the Los Angeles Times criticized the foundation for investing its assets in companies that have been accused of worsening poverty, pollution and pharmaceutical firms that do not sell to developing countries.[155] Although the foundation announced a review of its investments to assess social responsibility,[156] it was subsequently canceled and upheld its policy of investing for maximum return, while using voting rights to influence company practices.[157]

Gates delivered his thoughts in a fireside chat moderated by journalist and news anchor Shereen Bhan virtually at the Singapore FinTech Festival on December 8, 2020, on the topic, «Building Infrastructure for Resilience: What the COVID-19 Response Can Teach Us About How to Scale Financial Inclusion».[158]

Governments are there to think ahead to bad things that might happen. In the case of (the Covid-19) pandemic, not enough was done. We can’t forget that another pandemic will come and we’ll need to invest in being ready in that, … while not forgetting that we were not prepared and we’re going to have to invest – just like having a fire department – some money in an intelligent way and actually simulate what might happen and make sure that we’re ready for it.[158]

Gates favours the normalization of COVID-19 masks. In a November 2020 interview, he said: «What are these, like, nudists? I mean, you know, we ask you to wear pants, and no American says, or very few Americans say, that that’s, like, some terrible thing.»[159]

Personal donations

Melinda Gates suggested that people should emulate the philanthropic efforts of the Salwen family, who sold their home and gave away half of its value, as detailed in their book, The Power of Half.[160] Gates and his wife invited Joan Salwen to Seattle to speak about what the family had done, and on December 9, 2010, Bill and Melinda Gates and investor Warren Buffett each signed a commitment they called the «Giving Pledge», which is a commitment by all three to donate at least half of their wealth, over the course of time, to charity.[161][162][163]

Gates has also provided personal donations to educational institutions. In 1999, Gates donated $20 million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the construction of a computer laboratory named the «William H. Gates Building» that was designed by architect Frank Gehry. While Microsoft had previously given financial support to the institution, this was the first personal donation received from Gates.[164]

The Maxwell Dworkin Laboratory of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences is named after the mothers of both Gates and Microsoft President Steven A. Ballmer, both of whom were students (Ballmer was a member of the school’s graduating class of 1977, while Gates left his studies for Microsoft), and donated funds for the laboratory’s construction.[165] Gates also donated $6 million to the construction of the Gates Computer Science Building, completed in January 1996, on the campus of Stanford University. The building contains the Computer Science Department and the Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL) of Stanford’s Engineering department.[166]

Since 2005, Gates and his foundation have taken an interest in solving global sanitation problems. For example, they announced the «Reinvent the Toilet Challenge», which has received considerable media interest.[167] To raise awareness for the topic of sanitation and possible solutions, Gates drank water that was «produced from human feces» in 2014 – it was produced from a sewage sludge treatment process called the Omni Processor.[168][169] In early 2015, he also appeared with Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show and challenged him to see if he could taste the difference between this reclaimed water or bottled water.[170]

In November 2017, Gates said he would give $50 million to the Dementia Discovery Fund, a venture capital fund that seeks treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. He also pledged an additional $50 million to start-up ventures working in Alzheimer’s research.[171] Bill and Melinda Gates have said that they intend to leave their three children $10 million each as their inheritance. With only $30 million kept in the family, they are expected to give away about 99.96% of their wealth.[172] On August 25, 2018, Gates distributed $600,000 through his foundation via UNICEF which is helping flood affected victims in Kerala, India.[173]

In June 2018, Bill Gates offered free ebooks, to all new graduates of U.S. colleges and universities,[174] and in 2021, offered free ebooks, to all college and university students around the world.[175][176] The Bill And Melinda Gates Foundation partially funds OpenStax, which creates and provides free digital textbooks.[177]

Charity sports events

On April 29, 2017, Gates partnered with Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer in playing in the Match for Africa 4, a noncompetitive tennis match at a sold-out Key Arena in Seattle. The event was in support of the Roger Federer Foundation’s charity efforts in Africa.[178] Federer and Gates played against John Isner, the top-ranked American player for much of this decade, and Mike McCready, the lead guitarist for Pearl Jam. The pair won the match 6 games to 4. Overall, they raised $2 million for children in Africa.[179] The following year, Gates and Federer returned to play in the Match for Africa 5 on March 5, 2018, at San Jose’s SAP Center. Their opponents were Jack Sock, one of the top American players and a grand slam winner in doubles, and Savannah Guthrie, a co-anchor for NBC’s Today show. Gates and Federer recorded their second match victory together by a score of 6–3 and the event raised over $2.5 million.[180]

Books

Gates has written four books:

  • The Road Ahead, written with Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold and journalist Peter Rinearson, was published in November 1995. It summarized the implications of the personal computing revolution and described a future profoundly changed by the arrival of a global information superhighway.
  • Business @ the Speed of Thought was published in 1999, and discusses how business and technology are integrated, and shows how digital infrastructures and information networks can help to get an edge on the competition.
  • How to Avoid a Climate Disaster (February 2021) presents what Gates learned in over a decade of studying climate change and investing in innovations to address climate problems.[181]
  • How to Prevent the Next Pandemic (April 2022) details the COVID-19 pandemic and proposes a «Global Epidemic Response and Mobilization» (GERM) team with annual funding of $1 billion,[182] under the auspices of the WHO.[183]

Personal life

Gates is an avid reader,[184] and the ceiling of his large home library is engraved with a quotation from The Great Gatsby.[185] He also enjoys bridge, tennis and golf.[186][187] His days are planned for him on a minute-by-minute basis, similarly to the U.S. president’s schedule.[188] Despite his wealth and extensive business travel, Gates flew coach (economy class) in commercial aircraft until 1997, when he bought a private jet.[189]

Gates purchased the Codex Leicester, a collection of scientific writings by Leonardo da Vinci, for US$30.8 million at an auction in 1994.[190] In 1998, he reportedly paid $30 million for the original 1885 maritime painting Lost on the Grand Banks, at the time a record price for an American painting.[191]

In 2016, he revealed that he was color-blind.[192]

On May 10, 2022, Gates said that he tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing mild symptoms.[193] Gates has received three doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.[193]

Marriage and divorce

Gates married Melinda French on the Hawaiian Island of Lanai on January 1, 1994.[194] They met in 1987 after Melinda began working at Microsoft.[195] At the time of their marriage, Gates was given permission by Melinda to spend limited time with his ex-girlfriend, businesswoman Ann Winblad.[196] Bill and Melinda have three children: Jennifer, Rory and Phoebe.[197] The family’s residence is an earth-sheltered mansion in the side of a hill overlooking Lake Washington in Medina, Washington. In 2009, property taxes on the mansion were reported to be US$1.063 million, on a total assessed value of US$147.5 million.[198] The 66,000-square-foot (6,100 m2) estate has a 60-foot (18 m) swimming pool with an underwater music system, as well as a 2,500-square-foot (230 m2) gym and a 1,000-square-foot (93 m2) dining room.[199] On May 3, 2021, the Gateses announced they had decided to divorce after 27 years of marriage and 34 years as a couple.[200] They said they would keep working together on charitable efforts.[200][201] The Wall Street Journal reported that Melinda had been meeting with divorce attorneys since 2019, citing interviews that suggested Bill’s ties with Jeffrey Epstein was at least one of her concerns.[202] The divorce was finalized on August 2, 2021.[203]

Public image

Gates meets with U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, February 2017

Gates’s public image has changed over the years. At first he was perceived as a brilliant but ruthless «robber baron», a «nerd-turned-tycoon».[204] Starting in 2000 with the foundation of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and particularly after he stepped down as head of Microsoft, he turned his attention to philanthropy, spending more than $50 billion on causes like health, poverty, and education. His image morphed from «tyrannical technocrat to saintly savior» to a «huggable billionaire techno-philanthropist», celebrated on magazine covers and sought after for his opinions on major issues like global health and climate change.[204] Still another shift in public opinion came in 2021 with the announcement that he and Melinda were divorcing. Coverage of that proceeding brought out information about romantic pursuits of women who worked for him, a long-term extra-marital affair, and a friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.[205] This information and his response to the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in some deterioration of his public image, going from «a lovable nerd who was out to save the world» to «a tech supervillain who wants to protect profits over public health.»[206]

Investigative journalist Tim Schwab has accused Gates of using his contributions to the media to shape their coverage of him in order to protect his public image.[91][207] In September 2022, Politico published an expose’ critical of NGO leadership at the helm of the world-wide COVID-19 pandemic response, written in cooperation with the German newspaper Welt. Criticisms included the interconnectivity of the non-profits with Gates, as well as his personal lack of formal credentials in medicine.[208]

Gates and the projects of his foundation have been the subject of many conspiracy theories that proliferate on Facebook and elsewhere. He has been implausibly accused of attempting to depopulate the world, distributing harmful or unethical vaccines, and implanting people with privacy-violating microchips. These largely unfounded theories reached a new level of influence during the COVID-19 pandemic when, according to New York Times journalist Rory Smith, the uncertainties of pandemic life drove people to seek explanations from the internet.[209][210] When asked about the theories, Gates has remarked that some people are tempted by the «simple explanation» that an evil person rather than biological factors are to blame, and that he does not know for what purpose anyone believes he would want to track them with microchips.[211][212]

Religion

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Gates said in regard to his faith: «The moral systems of religion, I think, are super important. We’ve raised our kids in a religious way; they’ve gone to the Catholic church that Melinda goes to and I participate in. I’ve been very lucky, and therefore I owe it to try and reduce the inequity in the world. And that’s kind of a religious belief. I mean, it’s at least a moral belief.»[213] In the same 2014 interview he also said: «I agree with people like Richard Dawkins that mankind felt the need for creation myths. Before we really began to understand disease and the weather and things like that, we sought false explanations for them. Now science has filled in some of the realm – not all – that religion used to fill. But the mystery and the beauty of the world is overwhelmingly amazing, and there’s no scientific explanation of how it came about. To say that it was generated by random numbers, that does seem, you know, sort of an uncharitable view [laughs]. I think it makes sense to believe in God, but exactly what decision in your life you make differently because of it, I don’t know.»[213]

Wealth tallies

In 1999, his wealth briefly surpassed US$101 billion.[214][189] Since 2000, the nominal value of his Microsoft holdings has declined due to a fall in Microsoft’s stock price after the dot-com bubble burst and the multi-billion dollar donations he has made to his charitable foundations. In May 2006, Gates remarked that he wished that he were not the richest man in the world because he disliked the attention it brought.[215] In March 2010, Gates was the second wealthiest person after Carlos Slim, but regained the top position in 2013, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires List.[216][217] Slim retook the position again in June 2014[218][219] (but then lost the top position back to Gates). Between 2009 and 2014, his wealth doubled from US$40 billion to more than US$82 billion.[220] In October 2017, Gates was surpassed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as the richest person in the world.[16] On November 15, 2019, he once again became the richest person in the world after a 48% increase in Microsoft shares, surpassing Bezos.[221] Gates told the BBC, «I’ve paid more tax than any individual ever, and gladly so … I’ve paid over $6 billion in taxes.»[222] He is a proponent of higher taxes, particularly for the rich.[223]

By 2017, Gates had held the top spot on the list of The World’s Billionaires for 18 out of the previous 23 years.[224] Gates has several investments outside Microsoft, which in 2006 paid him a salary of US$616,667 and US$350,000 bonus totalling US$966,667.[225] In 1989, he founded Corbis, a digital imaging company. In 2004, he became a director of Berkshire Hathaway, the investment company headed by long-time friend Warren Buffett.[226]

In 1987, Gates was listed as a billionaire in Forbes magazine’s 400 Richest People in America issue, worth $1.25 billion at the time, and was the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.[14] Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes The World’s Billionaires list and was the wealthiest person from 1995 to 1996,[227] 1998 to 2007, 2009, and held the spot until 2018 before being overtaken by Jeff Bezos.[15] Gates was number one on the Forbes 400 list from 1993 through to 2007, 2009, and 2014 through 2017.[228][229]

Controversies

Antitrust litigation

Gates giving his deposition at Microsoft on August 27, 1998

Gates approved of many decisions that led to antitrust litigation over Microsoft’s business practices. In the 1998 United States v. Microsoft case, Gates gave deposition testimony that several journalists characterized as evasive. He argued with examiner David Boies over the contextual meaning of words such as «compete», «concerned», and «we». Later in the year, when portions of the videotaped deposition were played back in court, the judge was seen laughing and shaking his head.[230] BusinessWeek reported:

Early rounds of his deposition show him offering obfuscatory answers and saying «I don’t recall» so many times that even the presiding judge had to chuckle. Worse, many of the technology chief’s denials and pleas of ignorance were directly refuted by prosecutors with snippets of e-mail that Gates both sent and received.[231]

Gates later said that he had simply resisted attempts by Boies to mischaracterize his words and actions. «Did I fence with Boies? … I plead guilty … rudeness to Boies in the first degree.»[232] Despite Gates’s denials, the judge ruled that Microsoft had committed monopolization, tying and blocking competition, each in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.[232]

Treatment of colleagues and employees

Gates had primary responsibility for Microsoft’s product strategy from the company’s founding from 1975 until 2006. He gained a reputation for being distant from others; an industry executive complained in 1981 that «Gates is notorious for not being reachable by phone and for not returning phone calls.»[233] An Atari executive recalled that he showed Gates a game and defeated him 35 of 37 times. When they met again a month later, Gates «won or tied every game. He had studied the game until he solved it. That is a competitor».[234]

In the early 1980s, while business partner Paul Allen was undergoing treatments for cancer, Gates — according to Allen — conspired to reduce Allen’s share in Microsoft by issuing himself stock options.[235][236][237] In his autobiography, Allen would later recall that Gates was «scheming to rip me off. It was mercenary opportunism plain and simple».[235] Gates says he remembers the episode differently.[236] Allen would also recall that Gates was prone to shouting episodes.[237]

Gates met regularly with Microsoft’s senior managers and program managers, and the managers described him as being verbally combative. He also berated them for perceived holes in their business strategies or proposals that placed the company’s long-term interests at risk.[238][239] Gates saw competition in personal terms; when Borland’s Turbo Pascal performed better than Microsoft’s own tools, he yelled at programming director Greg Whitten «for half an hour» because, Gates believed, Borland’s Philippe Kahn had surpassed Gates.[240] Gates interrupted presentations with such comments as «that’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard»[241] and «why don’t you just give up your options and join the Peace Corps?»[242] The target of his outburst would then have to defend the proposal in detail until Gates was fully convinced.[241] Not all harsh language was criticism; a manager recalled that «You’re full of shit. That’s the stupidest fucking thing I’ve ever heard» meant that Gates was amazed. «In the lore of Microsoft, if Bill says that to you, you’re made».[243] When subordinates appeared to be procrastinating, he was known to remark sarcastically, «I’ll do it over the weekend».[244][74][245] Gates has been accused of bullying Microsoft employees.[246]

Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein

A 2019 New York Times article reported that Gates’s relationship with financier Jeffrey Epstein started in 2011, just a few years after Epstein’s conviction for procuring a child for prostitution, and continued for some years, including a visit to Epstein’s house with Melinda in the fall of 2013, despite her declared discomfort.[247] Gates said in 2011 about Epstein: «His lifestyle is very different and kind of intriguing although it would not work for me».[205]

The depth of the friendship between Gates and Epstein is unclear. Gates generally commented about his relationship with Epstein that «I met him. I didn’t have any business relationship or friendship with him».[248] However, Gates visited Epstein «many times, despite [Epstein’s] past».[247]

It was reported that Epstein and Gates «discussed the Gates Foundation and philanthropy».[247] However, in an interview in 2019 Gates completely denied any connection between Epstein and the Gates Foundation or his philanthropy generally.[248] In August 2021, Gates said the reason he had meetings with Epstein was because Gates hoped Epstein could provide money for philanthropic work, though nothing came of the idea. Gates added, «It was a huge mistake to spend time with him, to give him the credibility of being there.»[246]

It has also been reported that Epstein and Gates met with Nobel Committee chair Thorbjørn Jagland at his residence in Strasbourg, France in March 2013 to discuss the Nobel Prize.[249] Also in attendance were representatives of the International Peace Institute which has received millions in grants from the Gates Foundation, including a $2.5 million «community engagement» grant in October 2013.[250]

Recognition

Bill and Melinda Gates being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2016

  • Time magazine named Gates one of the 100 people who most influenced the 20th century, as well as one of the 100 most influential people of 2004, 2005, and 2006.[251]
  • Time also collectively named Gates, his wife Melinda and U2’s lead singer Bono as the 2005 Persons of the Year for their humanitarian efforts.[252] In 2006, he was voted eighth in the list of «Heroes of our time».[253]
  • Gates was listed in the London Sunday Times power list in 1999, named CEO of the year by Chief Executive Officers magazine in 1994, ranked number one in the «Top 50 Cyber Elite» by Time in 1998, ranked number two in the Upside Elite 100 in 1999, and was included in The Guardian as one of the «Top 100 influential people in media» in 2001.[254]
  • Gates was elected Member of the US National Academy of Engineering in 1996 «for contributions to the founding and development of personal computing».[255]
  • He was named Honorary Member of the American Library Association in 1998.[256]
  • He was elected a foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering in 2017.[257]
  • According to Forbes, Gates was ranked as the fourth most powerful person in the world in 2012,[258] up from fifth in 2011.[259]
  • In 1994, he was honored as the 20th Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society (DFBCS). In 1999, Gates received New York Institute of Technology’s President’s Medal.[260]
  • Gates has received honorary doctorates from Nyenrode Business Universiteit (1996),[261] KTH Royal Institute of Technology (2002),[262] Waseda University (2005),[263] Tsinghua University (2007),[264] Harvard University (2007),[265] the Karolinska Institute (2007),[266] and Cambridge University (2009).[267]
  • He was also made an honorary trustee of Peking University in 2007.[268]
  • Gates was made an Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005.[269]
  • In January 2006, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Henry by the President of Portugal Jorge Sampaio
  • In November 2006, he was awarded the Placard of the Order of the Aztec Eagle, together with his wife Melinda who was awarded the Insignia of the same order, both for their philanthropic work around the world in the areas of health and education, particularly in Mexico, and specifically in the program «Un país de lectores«.[270]
  • Gates received the 2010 Bower Award for Business Leadership from The Franklin Institute for his achievements at Microsoft and his philanthropic work.[271]
  • Also in 2010, he was honored with the Silver Buffalo Award by the Boy Scouts of America, its highest award for adults, for his service to youth.[272]
  • In 2002, Bill and Melinda Gates received the Jefferson Award for Greatest Public Service Benefiting the Disadvantaged.[273]
  • He was given the 2006 James C. Morgan Global Humanitarian Award from the Tech Awards.[274]
  • In 2015, Gates and his wife Melinda received the Padma Bhushan, India’s third-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.[275][276]
  • In 2016, Barack Obama honored Bill and Melinda Gates with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for their philanthropic efforts.[277]
  • In 2017, François Hollande awarded Bill and Melinda Gates with France’s highest national order, as Commanders in the Legion of Honour, for their charity efforts.[278]
  • Entomologists named Bill Gates’ flower fly, Eristalis gatesi, in his honor in 1997.[279]
  • In 2020, Gates received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun for his contributions to Japan and the world in regards to worldwide technological transformation and advancement of global health.[280]
  • In 2021, Gates was nominated at the 11th annual Streamy Awards for the crossover for his personal YouTube channel.[281]
  • In 2022, Gates received the Hilal-e-Pakistan Second-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.

Depiction in media

Documentary films about Gates

External video
video icon The Machine That Changed The World; Interview with Bill Gates, 1990 (raw video), 44:03, Open Vault WGBH[282]
  • The Machine That Changed the World (1990)
  • Triumph of the Nerds (1996)
  • Nerds 2.0.1 (1998)
  • Waiting for «Superman» (2010)[283]
  • The Virtual Revolution (2010)
  • Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates (2019)

Feature films

  • 1999: Pirates of Silicon Valley, a film that chronicles the rise of Apple and Microsoft from the early 1970s to 1997. Gates is portrayed by Anthony Michael Hall.
  • 2002: Nothing So Strange, a mockumentary featuring Gates as the subject of a modern assassination. Gates briefly appears at the start, played by Steve Sires.
  • 2010: The Social Network, a film that chronicles the development of Facebook. Gates is portrayed by Steve Sires.[284]
  • 2015: Steve Jobs vs. Bill Gates: The Competition to Control the Personal Computer, 1974–1999: Original film from the National Geographic Channel for the American Genius series.[285]

Video and film clips

  • 1983: Steve Jobs hosts Gates and others in the «Macintosh dating game» at the Macintosh pre-launch event (a parody of the television game show The Dating Game)[286]
  • 1991: Gates spoke to the Berkeley Macintosh Users Group lively weekly Thursday night meeting with questions and answers in PSL Hall (renamed Pimentel Hall in 1994)[287] at University of California, Berkeley[288][289][290]
  • 2007: Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together at the D5 Conference on YouTube, All Things Digital
  • 2009− : Gates has given numerous TED talks on current concerns such as innovation, education and fighting global diseases[291]

Radio

Gates was the guest on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs on January 31, 2016, in which he talked about his relationships with his father and Steve Jobs, meeting Melinda Ann French, the start of Microsoft and some of his habits (for example reading The Economist «from cover to cover every week»). His choice of things to take on a desert island were, for music: «Blue Skies» by Willie Nelson; a book: The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker; and luxury item: a DVD Collection of Lectures from The Teaching Company.[292]

Television

Gates made a guest appearance as himself on the TV show The Big Bang Theory. The episode on which he appeared was appropriately titled «The Gates Excitation».[293] He also appeared in a cameo role in 2019 on the series finale of Silicon Valley.[294] Gates was parodied in The Simpsons episode «Das Bus».

In 2023, Gates was the interviewee in an episode of the Amol Rajan Interviews series on BBC Two,[295] and was the subject of an episode of the The Billionaires Who Made Our World UK Channel 4 series.[296]

See also

  • Big History Project
  • List of richest Americans in history
  • List of wealthiest historical figures

Notes

  1. ^ Gates regularly documents his share ownership through public U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Form 4 filings.[6][7]
  2. ^ His father was named William H. Gates II, but he is now generally known as William H. Gates, Senior to avoid confusion with his son.

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Bibliography

  • Fridson, Martin (2001). How to Be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-41617-7.
  • Gates, Bill (1996). The Road Ahead. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-026040-4.
  • Lesinski, Jeanne M. (2006). Bill Gates (biography). A&E Television Networks. ISBN 0-8225-7027-0.
  • Manes, Stephen (1994). Gates: How Microsoft’s Mogul Reinvented an Industry and Made Himself the Richest Man in America. Touchstone Pictures. ISBN 0-671-88074-8.
  • Wallace, James (1993). Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Microsoft Empire. New York City: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-471-56886-4.

Primary sources

  • Gates, Bill. «An exclusive interview with Bill Gates». Financial Times 1 (2013). online
  • Gates, Bill. «Remarks of Bill Gates, Harvard Commencement 2007». The Harvard Gazette 7 (2007). Online
  • Kinsley, Michael, and Conor Clarke, Eds. Creative Capitalism: A Conversation With Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Other Economic Leaders (Simon and Schuster, 2009).

Further reading

  • Leibovich, Mark. The New Imperialists (Prentice Hall, 2002) pp 139–182. online
  • Bank, David (2001). Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumbled the Future of Microsoft. New York City: Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-0315-1.
  • Rivlin, Gary (1999). The Plot to Get Bill Gates: An Irreverent Investigation of the World’s Richest Man… and the People Who Hate Him. New York City: Times Business. ISBN 0-8129-3006-1.
  • «83 Reasons Why Bill Gates’s Reign Is Over». Wired. Vol. 6, no. 12. December 1998. Archived from the original on August 22, 2010.
  • Kildall, Gary (October 25, 2004). «The Man Who Could Have Been Bill Gates». Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on April 4, 2006. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
  • «The Meaning of Bill Gates: As his reign at Microsoft comes to an end, so does the era he dominated», The Economist, June 28, 2008.
  • Wallace, James. Overdrive: Bill Gates and the Race to Control Cyberspace (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997).

External links

  • Official website
  • Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Official YouTube channel
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Bill Gates at IMDb
  • Bill Gates at TED Edit this at Wikidata
  • Forbes profile

This article is about the co-founder of Microsoft. For other people of the same name, see Bill Gates (disambiguation).

Bill Gates

Head and shoulders photo of Bill Gates

Gates in 2017

Born

William Henry Gates III

October 28, 1955 (age 67)

Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Education Harvard University
(dropped out)
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • investor
  • philanthropist
Years active 1972–present
Known for Co-founder of Microsoft and Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Title

Partial list of founded and chaired companies

  • Co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Chairman and founder of Branded Entertainment Network
  • Chairman and founder of Cascade Investment
  • Chairman and co-founder of TerraPower
  • Founder of Breakthrough Energy
  • Founder of Gates Ventures
  • Technology advisor of Microsoft[1]
Board member of
  • Berkshire Hathaway
  • Microsoft
  • (former, both)
Spouse

Melinda French

(m. 1994; div. 2021)​

Children 3
Parents
  • Bill Gates Sr. (father)
  • Mary Maxwell (mother)
Awards
  • Order of the British Empire (Civil) Ribbon.svg Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (2005)
  • Padma Bhushan Ribbon.svg Padma Bhushan (2015)
  • Presidential Medal of Freedom (ribbon).svg Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016)
  • Hilal-e-Pakistan Breast Star.png Hilal-e-Pakistan (2022)
Website www.gatesnotes.com
Signature
William H. Gates III

William Henry Gates III (born October 28, 1955) is an American business magnate, investor, philanthropist, and writer. He is a co-founder of Microsoft, along with his late childhood friend Paul Allen.[2][3] During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of chairman, chief executive officer (CEO), president and chief software architect, while also being the largest individual shareholder until May 2014.[4] He was a major entrepreneur of the microcomputer revolution of the 1970s and 1980s.

Gates was born and raised in Seattle. In 1975, he and Allen founded Microsoft in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It became the world’s largest personal computer software company.[5][a] Gates led the company as chairman and CEO until stepping down as CEO in January 2000, succeeded by Steve Ballmer, but he remained chairman of the board of directors and became chief software architect.[8] During the late 1990s, he was criticized for his business tactics, which have been considered anti-competitive. This opinion has been upheld by numerous court rulings.[9] In June 2008, Gates transitioned to a part-time role at Microsoft and full-time work at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the private charitable foundation he and his then-wife Melinda established in 2000.[10] He stepped down as chairman of the board of Microsoft in February 2014 and assumed a new post as technology adviser to support the newly appointed CEO Satya Nadella.[11] In March 2020, Gates left his board positions at Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway to focus on his philanthropic efforts on climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes list of the world’s wealthiest people.[13][14] From 1995 to 2017, he held the Forbes title of the richest person in the world every year except from 2010 to 2013.[15] In October 2017, he was surpassed by Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos, who had an estimated net worth of US$90.6 billion compared to Gates’s net worth of US$89.9 billion at the time.[16] As of February 2023, Gates has an estimated net worth of US$113 billion, making him the fourth-richest person in the world.[17]

Later in his career and since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft in 2008, Gates has pursued many business and philanthropic endeavors. He is the founder and chairman of several companies, including BEN, Cascade Investment, TerraPower, bgC3, and Breakthrough Energy. He has given sizable amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, reported to be the world’s largest private charity.[18] Through the foundation, he led an early 21st century vaccination campaign that significantly contributed to the eradication of the wild poliovirus in Africa.[19][20] In 2010, Gates and Warren Buffett founded The Giving Pledge, whereby they and other billionaires pledge to give at least half of their wealth to philanthropy.[21]

Early life

Bill Gates was born in Seattle, Washington on October 28, 1955.[3] He is the son of William H. Gates Sr.[b] (1925–2020) and Mary Maxwell Gates (1929–1994).[22] His ancestry includes English, German, and Irish/Scots-Irish.[23] His father was a prominent lawyer, and his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way of America. Gates’s maternal grandfather was J. W. Maxwell, a national bank president. Gates has an older sister Kristi (Kristianne) and a younger sister Libby. He is the fourth of his name in his family but is known as William Gates III or «Trey» (i.e., three) because his father had the «II» suffix.[24][25] The family lived in the Sand Point area of Seattle in a home that was damaged by a rare tornado when Gates was seven years old.[26]

Early in his life, Gates observed that his parents wanted him to pursue a law career.[27] When he was young, his family regularly attended a church of the Congregational Christian Churches, a Protestant Reformed denomination.[28][29][30] Gates was small for his age and was bullied as a child.[25] The family encouraged competition; one visitor reported that «it didn’t matter whether it was hearts or pickleball or swimming to the dock; there was always a reward for winning and there was always a penalty for losing».[31]

At 13, he enrolled in the private Lakeside prep school,[32][33] where he wrote his first software program.[34] When he was in the eighth grade, the Mothers’ Club at the school used proceeds from Lakeside School’s rummage sale to buy a Teletype Model 33 ASR terminal and a block of computer time on a General Electric (GE) computer for the students.[35] Gates took an interest in programming the GE system in BASIC, and he was excused from math classes to pursue his interest. He wrote his first computer program on this machine, an implementation of tic-tac-toe that allowed users to play games against the computer. Gates was fascinated by the machine and how it would always execute software code perfectly.[36] After the Mothers Club donation was exhausted, Gates and other students sought time on systems including DEC PDP minicomputers. One of these systems was a PDP-10 belonging to Computer Center Corporation (CCC) which banned Gates, Paul Allen, Ric Weiland, and Gates’s best friend and first business partner Kent Evans, for the summer after it caught them exploiting bugs in the operating system to obtain free computer time.[37][25]

The four students formed the Lakeside Programmers Club to make money.[25] At the end of the ban, they offered to find bugs in CCC’s software in exchange for extra computer time. Rather than using the system remotely via Teletype, Gates went to CCC’s offices and studied source code for various programs that ran on the system, including Fortran, Lisp, and machine language. The arrangement with CCC continued until 1970 when the company went out of business.

The following year, a Lakeside teacher enlisted Gates and Evans to automate the school’s class-scheduling system, providing them computer time and royalties in return. The duo worked diligently in order to have the program ready for their senior year. Towards the end of their junior year, Evans was killed in a mountain climbing accident, which Gates has described as one of the saddest days of his life. Gates then turned to Allen who helped him finish the system for Lakeside.[25]

At 17, Gates formed a venture with Allen called Traf-O-Data to make traffic counters based on the Intel 8008 processor.[38] In 1972, he served as a congressional page in the House of Representatives.[39][40] He was a National Merit Scholar when he graduated from Lakeside School in 1973.[41] He scored 1590 out of 1600 on the Scholastic Aptitude Tests (SAT) and enrolled at Harvard College in the autumn of 1973.[42][43] He chose a pre-law major but took mathematics (including Math 55) and graduate level computer science courses.[44] While at Harvard, he met fellow student Steve Ballmer. Gates left Harvard after two years while Ballmer stayed and graduated magna cum laude. Years later, Ballmer succeeded Gates as Microsoft’s CEO and maintained that position from 2000 until his resignation in 2014.[45][46]

Gates devised an algorithm for pancake sorting as a solution to one of a series of unsolved problems[47] presented in a combinatorics class by professor Harry Lewis. His solution held the record as the fastest version for over 30 years, and its successor is faster by only 2%.[47][48] His solution was formalized and published in collaboration with Harvard computer scientist Christos Papadimitriou.[49]

Gates remained in contact with Paul Allen and joined him at Honeywell during the summer of 1974.[50] In 1975, the MITS Altair 8800 was released based on the Intel 8080 CPU, and Gates and Allen saw the opportunity to start their own computer software company.[51] Gates dropped out of Harvard that same year. His parents were supportive of him after seeing how much he wanted to start his own company.[52] He explained his decision to leave Harvard: «if things hadn’t worked out, I could always go back to school. I was officially on leave.»[53]

Microsoft

BASIC

MITS Altair 8800 Computer with 8-inch (200 mm) floppy disk system whose first programming language was Microsoft’s founding product, Altair BASIC

Gates read the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics which demonstrated the Altair 8800, and he contacted Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS) to inform them that he and others were working on a BASIC interpreter for the platform.[54] In reality, Gates and Allen did not have an Altair and had not written code for it; they merely wanted to gauge MITS’s interest. MITS president Ed Roberts agreed to meet them for a demonstration, and over the course of a few weeks they developed an Altair emulator that ran on a minicomputer, and then the BASIC interpreter. The demonstration was held at MITS’s offices in Albuquerque, New Mexico; it was a success and resulted in a deal with MITS to distribute the interpreter as Altair BASIC. MITS hired Allen,[55] and Gates took a leave of absence from Harvard to work with him at MITS in November 1975. Allen named their partnership «Micro-Soft», a combination of «microcomputer» and «software», and their first office was in Albuquerque. The first employee Gates and Allen hired was their high school collaborator Ric Weiland.[55] They dropped the hyphen within a year and officially registered the trade name «Microsoft» with the Secretary of the State of New Mexico on November 26, 1976.[55] Gates never returned to Harvard to complete his studies.

Microsoft’s Altair BASIC was popular with computer hobbyists, but Gates discovered that a pre-market copy had leaked out and was being widely copied and distributed. In February 1976, he wrote an Open Letter to Hobbyists in the MITS newsletter in which he asserted that more than 90% of the users of Microsoft Altair BASIC had not paid Microsoft for it and the Altair «hobby market» was in danger of eliminating the incentive for any professional developers to produce, distribute, and maintain high-quality software.[56] This letter was unpopular with many computer hobbyists, but Gates persisted in his belief that software developers should be able to demand payment. Microsoft became independent of MITS in late 1976, and it continued to develop programming language software for various systems.[55] The company moved from Albuquerque to Bellevue, Washington on January 1, 1979.[54]

Gates said he personally reviewed and often rewrote every line of code that the company produced in its first five years. As the company grew, he transitioned into a manager role, then an executive.[57]

DONKEY.BAS, is a computer game written in 1981 and included with early versions of the PC DOS operating system distributed with the original IBM PC. It is a driving game in which the player must avoid hitting donkeys. The game was written by Gates and Neil Konzen.[58][59]

IBM partnership

IBM, the leading supplier of computer equipment to commercial enterprises at the time, approached Microsoft in July 1980 concerning software for its upcoming personal computer, the IBM PC,[60] after Bill Gates’s mother, Mary Maxwell Gates, mentioned Microsoft to John Opel, IBM’s CEO.[61] IBM first proposed that Microsoft write the BASIC interpreter. IBM’s representatives also mentioned that they needed an operating system, and Gates referred them to Digital Research (DRI), makers of the widely used CP/M operating system.[62] IBM’s discussions with Digital Research went poorly, however, and they did not reach a licensing agreement. IBM representative Jack Sams mentioned the licensing difficulties during a subsequent meeting with Gates and asked if Microsoft could provide an operating system. A few weeks later, Gates and Allen proposed using 86-DOS, an operating system similar to CP/M, that Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products (SCP) had made for hardware similar to the PC.[63] Microsoft made a deal with SCP to be the exclusive licensing agent of 86-DOS, and later the full owner. Microsoft employed Paterson to adapt the operating system for the PC[64] and delivered it to IBM as PC DOS for a one-time fee of $50,000.[65]

The contract itself only earned Microsoft a relatively small fee. It was the prestige brought to Microsoft by IBM’s adoption of their operating system that would be the origin of Microsoft’s transformation from a small business to the leading software company in the world. Gates had not offered to transfer the copyright on the operating system to IBM because he believed that other personal computer makers would clone IBM’s PC hardware.[65] They did, making the IBM-compatible PC, running DOS, a de facto standard. The sales of MS-DOS (the version of DOS sold to customers other than IBM) made Microsoft a major player in the industry.[66] The press quickly identified Microsoft as being very influential on the IBM PC. PC Magazine asked if Gates was «the man behind the machine?».[60]

Gates oversaw Microsoft’s company restructuring on June 25, 1981, which re-incorporated the company in Washington state and made Gates the president and chairman of the board, with Paul Allen as vice president and vice chairman. In early 1983, Allen left the company after receiving a Hodgkin lymphoma diagnosis, effectively ending the formal business partnership between Gates and Allen, which had been strained months prior due to a contentious dispute over Microsoft equity.[54][67] Later in the decade, Gates repaired his relationship with Allen and together the two donated millions to their childhood school Lakeside.[25] They remained friends until Allen’s death in October 2018.[68]

Windows

Microsoft and Gates launched their first retail version of Microsoft Windows on November 20, 1985, in an attempt to fend off competition from Apple’s Macintosh GUI, which had captivated consumers with its simplicity and ease of use.[69] In August of the following year, the company struck a deal with IBM to develop a separate operating system called OS/2. Although the two companies successfully developed the first version of the new system, the partnership deteriorated due to mounting creative differences.[70] The operating system grew out of DOS in an organic fashion over a decade until Windows 95, which hid the DOS prompt by default. Windows XP, released one year after Gates stepped down as Microsoft CEO, was the first to not be based on DOS.[71] Windows 8.1 was the last version of the OS released before Gates left the chair of the firm to John W. Thompson on February 5, 2014.[72]

Management style

During Microsoft’s early years, Gates was an active software developer, particularly in the company’s programming language products, but his primary role in most of the company’s history was as a manager and executive. He has not officially been on a development team since working on the TRS-80 Model 100,[73] but he wrote code that shipped with the company’s products as late as 1989.[74] Jerry Pournelle wrote in 1985 when Gates announced Microsoft Excel: «Bill Gates likes the program, not because it’s going to make him a lot of money (although I’m sure it will do that), but because it’s a neat hack.»[75]

On June 15, 2006, Gates announced that he would transition out of his role at Microsoft to dedicate more time to philanthropy. He gradually divided his responsibilities between two successors when he placed Ray Ozzie in charge of management and Craig Mundie in charge of long-term product strategy.[76] The process took two years to fully transfer his duties to Ozzie and Mundie, and was completed on June 27, 2008.[77]

Post-Microsoft

Since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft, Gates has continued his philanthropy and works on other projects.

According to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, Gates was the world’s highest-earning billionaire in 2013, as his net worth increased by US$15.8 billion to US$78.5 billion. As of January 2014, most of Gates’s assets are held in Cascade Investment LLC, an entity through which he owns stakes in numerous businesses, including Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, and Corbis Corp.[78] On February 4, 2014, Gates stepped down as chairman of Microsoft to become «technology advisor» at the firm, alongside CEO Satya Nadella.[11][79]

Gates provided his perspective on a range of issues in a substantial interview that was published in the March 27, 2014, issue of Rolling Stone magazine. In the interview, Gates provided his perspective on climate change, his charitable activities, various tech companies and people involved in them, and the state of America. In response to a question about his greatest fear when he looks 50 years into the future, Gates stated: «there’ll be some really bad things that’ll happen in the next 50 or 100 years, but hopefully none of them on the scale of, say, a million people that you didn’t expect to die from a pandemic, or nuclear or bioterrorism.» Gates also identified innovation as the «real driver of progress» and pronounced that «America’s way better today than it’s ever been.»[80]

Gates has expressed concern about the potential harms of superintelligence; in a Reddit «ask me anything», he stated that:

First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well. A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don’t understand why some people are not concerned.[81][82][83][84]

In an interview that was held at the TED conference in March 2015, with Baidu’s CEO, Robin Li, Gates said he would «highly recommend» Nick Bostrom’s recent work, Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies.[85] During the conference, Gates warned that the world was not prepared for the next pandemic, a situation that would come to pass in late 2019 when the COVID-19 pandemic began.[86] In March 2018, Gates met at his home in Seattle with Mohammed bin Salman, the reformist crown prince and de facto ruler of Saudi Arabia to discuss investment opportunities for Saudi Vision 2030.[87][88] In June 2019, Gates admitted that losing the mobile operating system race to Android was his biggest mistake. He stated that it was within their skill set of being the dominant player, but partially blames the antitrust litigation during the time.[89] That same year, Gates became an advisory board member of the Bloomberg New Economy Forum.[90]

On March 13, 2020, Microsoft announced Gates would be leaving his board positions at Berkshire Hathaway and Microsoft to dedicate his efforts in philanthropic endeavors such as climate change, global health and development, and education.[12]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates has widely been looked at by media outlets as an expert on the issue, despite him not being a public official or having any prior medical training.[91] His foundation did, however, establish the COVID-19 Therapeutics Accelerator in 2020 to hasten the development and evaluation of new and repurposed drugs and biologics to treat patients for COVID-19,[92] and, as of February 2021, Gates expressed that he and Anthony Fauci frequently talk and collaborate on matters including vaccines and other medical innovations to fight the pandemic.[93]

Business ventures and investments (partial list)

Gates has a multi-billion dollar investment portfolio with stake in various sectors[94] and has participated in several entrepreneurial ventures beyond Microsoft, including:

  • AutoNation, automotive retailer that Gates has a 16% stake in trading on the NYSE.[95]
  • bgC3 LLC, a think-tank and research company founded by Gates.[96]
  • Canadian National Railway (CN), a Canadian Class I freight railway. As of 2019, Gates is the largest single shareholder of CN stock.[97]
  • Cascade Investment LLC, a private investment and holding company incorporated in the United States, founded and controlled by Gates and headquartered in Kirkland, Washington.[98]
    • Gates is the top private owner of farmland in the United States with landholdings owned via Cascade Investment totalling 242,000 acres across 19 states.[99][100] He is the 49th largest private owner of land in the US.[101]
  • Carbon Engineering, a for-profit venture founded by David Keith, which Gates helped fund.[102][103][104] It is also supported by Chevron Corporation and Occidental Petroleum.[105]
    • SCoPEx, Keith’s academic venture in «sun-dimming» geoengineering, which Gates provided most of the $12 million for.[106]
  • Corbis (originally named Interactive Home Systems and now known as Branded Entertainment Network), a digital image licensing and rights services company founded and chaired by Gates.[107]
  • EarthNow, Seattle-based startup company aiming to blanket the Earth with live satellite video coverage. Gates is a large financial backer.[108]
  • Eclipse Aviation, a defunct manufacturer of very light jets. Gates was a major stake-holder early on in the project.[109]
  • Impossible Foods, a company that develops plant-based substitutes for meat products. Some of the $396 million Patrick O. Brown collected for his business came from Gates around 2014 to 2017.[110][111][112]
  • Ecolab, global provider of water, hygiene and energy technologies and services to the food, energy, healthcare, industrial and hospitality markets. Combined with the shares owned by the Foundation, Gates owns 11.6% of the company. A shareholder agreement in 2012 allowed him to own up to 25% of the company, but this agreement was removed.[113]
  • ResearchGate, a social networking site for scientists. Gates participated in a $35 million round of financing along with other investors.[114]
  • TerraPower, a nuclear reactor design company co-founded and chaired by Gates, which is developing next generation traveling-wave reactor nuclear power plants in an effort to tackle climate change.[115][116][117][118][119]
  • Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a closed fund for wealthy individuals who seek ROI on a 20-year horizon (see next section), which «is funding green start-ups and a host of other low-carbon entrepreneurial projects, including everything from advanced nuclear technology to synthetic breast milk.» It was founded by Gates in 2015.[120]
  • Ginkgo Bioworks, a biotech startup that received $350 million in venture funding in 2019, in part from Gates’s investment firm Cascade Investment.[121]
  • Luminous Computing, a company that develops neuromorphic photonic integrated circuits for AI acceleration.
  • Mologic, British diagnostic technology company that Gates purchased, along with the Soros Economic Development Fund, «which has developed 10-minute Covid lateral flow tests that it aims to make for as little as $1.»[122]

Climate change and energy

Gates considers climate change and global access to energy to be critical, interrelated issues. He has urged governments and the private sector to invest in research and development to make clean, reliable energy cheaper. Gates envisions that a breakthrough innovation in sustainable energy technology could drive down both greenhouse gas emissions and poverty, and bring economic benefits by stabilizing energy prices.[123] In 2011, he said: «If you gave me the choice between picking the next 10 presidents or ensuring that energy is environmentally friendly and a quarter as costly, I’d pick the energy thing.»[124]

In 2015, he wrote about the challenge of transitioning the world’s energy system from one based primarily on fossil fuels to one based on sustainable energy sources. Global energy transitions have historically taken decades. He wrote, «I believe we can make this transition faster, both because the pace of innovation is accelerating, and because we have never had such an urgent reason to move from one source of energy to another.»[125] This rapid transition, according to Gates, would depend on increased government funding for basic research and financially risky private-sector investment, to enable innovation in diverse areas such as nuclear energy, grid energy storage to facilitate greater use of solar and wind energy, and solar fuels.[126]

Gates spearheaded two initiatives that he announced at the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris. One was Mission Innovation, in which 20 national governments pledged to double their spending on research and development for carbon-free energy in over five years’ time.[123] Another initiative was Breakthrough Energy, a group of investors who agreed to fund high-risk startups in clean energy technologies. Gates, who had already invested $1 billion of his own money in innovative energy startups, committed a further $1 billion to Breakthrough Energy.[126] In December 2020, he called for the U.S. federal government to create institutes for clean energy research, analogous to the National Institutes of Health.[127] Gates has also urged rich nations to shift to 100% synthetic beef industries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production.[128]

Gates has been criticised for holding a large stake in Signature Aviation, a company that services emissions-intensive private jets.[129] In 2019, he began to divest from fossil fuels. He does not expect divestment itself to have much practical impact, but says that if his efforts to provide alternatives were to fail, he would not want to personally benefit from an increase in fossil fuel stock prices.[130] After he published his book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, parts of the climate activist community criticized Gate’s approach as technological solutionism.[131]

In June 2021, Gates’s company TerraPower and Warren Buffett’s PacifiCorp announced the first sodium nuclear reactor in Wyoming. Wyoming Governor Mike Gordon hailed the project as a step toward carbon-negative nuclear power. Wyoming Senator John Barrasso also said that it could boost the state’s once-active uranium mining industry.[132]

Gates spent many efforts to make pass the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 because of his importance to climate. He tried to convince Joe Manchin to support a climate bill from the year 2019 and especially in the months before the adoption of the bill. The bill should cut the global greenhouse gas emissions in a level similar to «eliminating the annual planet-warming pollution of France and Germany combined» and may help to limit the warming of the planet to 1.5 degrees — the target of the Paris Agreement.[133] He thanked both Joe Manchin and Chuck Schumer for their efforts in a guest essay in The New York Times, where he said «Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 may be the single most important piece of climate legislation in American history» given its potential to spur development of new technologies.[134]

Political positions

Regulation of the software industry

In 1998, Gates rejected the need for regulation of the software industry in testimony before the United States Senate.[135] During the Federal Trade Commission’s (FTC) investigation of Microsoft in the 1990s, Gates was reportedly upset at Commissioner Dennis Yao for «float[ing] a line of hypothetical questions suggesting possible curbs on Microsoft’s growing monopoly power». According to one source:

Gates was vexed. «He started by calling Yao’s ideas socialistic,» recalls a source familiar with the July 15 meeting, «and as he got angrier and angrier and louder and louder, he got into calling them Communistic.[136]

Donald Trump Facebook ban

On February 18, 2021, after Facebook and Twitter had banned Donald Trump from their platforms as a result of the 2020 United States presidential election which led to the January 6 United States Capitol attack, Gates said a permanent ban of Trump «would be a shame» and would be an «extreme measure». He warned that it would cause «polarization» if users with different political views divide up among various social networks, and said: «I don’t think banning somebody who actually did get a fair number of votes (in the presidential election) – well less than a majority – but I don’t think having him off forever would be that good.»[135]

Patents for COVID-19 vaccines

In April 2021, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Gates was criticized for suggesting that pharmaceutical companies should hold onto patents for COVID-19 vaccines. The criticism came due to the possibility of this preventing poorer nations from obtaining adequate vaccines. Tara Van Ho of the University of Essex stated, «Gates speaks as if all the lives being lost in India are inevitable but eventually the West will help when in reality the US & UK are holding their feet on the neck of developing states by refusing to break [intellectual property rights] protections. It’s disgusting.»[137]

Gates is opposed to the TRIPS waiver.[138][139][140] Bloomberg News reported him as saying he argued that Oxford University should not give away the rights to its COVID-19 information, as it had announced, but instead sell it to a single industry partner, as it did.[141] His views on the value of legal monopolies in medicine have been linked to his views on legal monopolies in software.[139][140]

Cryptocurrencies

Gates is critical of cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. According to Gates, cryptocurrencies provide no «valuable output», contribute nothing to society, and pose a danger especially for smaller investors who couldn’t survive the potentially high losses. Gates also doesn’t own any cryptocurrencies himself.[142]

Philanthropy

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Gates studied the work of Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, and donated some of his Microsoft stock in 1994 to create the «William H. Gates Foundation». In 2000, Gates and his wife combined three family foundations and Gates donated stock valued at $5 billion to create the charitable Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which was identified by the Funds for NGOs company in 2013, as the world’s wealthiest charitable foundation, with assets reportedly valued at more than $34.6 billion.[143][144] The foundation allows benefactors to access information that shows how its money is being spent, unlike other major charitable organizations such as the Wellcome Trust.[145][146] Gates, through his foundation, also donated $20 million to Carnegie Mellon University for a new building to be named Gates Center for Computer Science which opened in 2009.[147][148]

Gates has credited the generosity and extensive philanthropy of David Rockefeller as a major influence. Gates and his father met with Rockefeller several times, and their charity work is partly modeled on the Rockefeller family’s philanthropic focus, whereby they are interested in tackling the global problems that are ignored by governments and other organizations.[149] As of 2007, Bill and Melinda Gates were the second-most generous philanthropists in America, having given over $28 billion to charity;[150] the couple plan to eventually donate 95% of their wealth to charity.[151]

The foundation is organized into five program areas: Global Development Division, Global Health Division, United States Division, and Global Policy & Advocacy Division. Among others, it supports a wide range of public health projects, granting aid to fight transmissible diseases such AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, as well as widespread vaccine programs to eradicate polio. It grants funds to learning institutes and libraries and supports scholarships at universities. The foundation established a water, sanitation and hygiene program to provide sustainable sanitation services in poor countries.[152] Its agriculture division supports the International Rice Research Institute in developing Golden Rice, a genetically modified rice variant used to combat vitamin A deficiency.[153] The goal of the foundation is to provide 120 million women and girls, in the poorest countries, with high-quality contraceptive information and services, with the longer-term goal of universal access to voluntary family planning.[154] In 2007, the Los Angeles Times criticized the foundation for investing its assets in companies that have been accused of worsening poverty, pollution and pharmaceutical firms that do not sell to developing countries.[155] Although the foundation announced a review of its investments to assess social responsibility,[156] it was subsequently canceled and upheld its policy of investing for maximum return, while using voting rights to influence company practices.[157]

Gates delivered his thoughts in a fireside chat moderated by journalist and news anchor Shereen Bhan virtually at the Singapore FinTech Festival on December 8, 2020, on the topic, «Building Infrastructure for Resilience: What the COVID-19 Response Can Teach Us About How to Scale Financial Inclusion».[158]

Governments are there to think ahead to bad things that might happen. In the case of (the Covid-19) pandemic, not enough was done. We can’t forget that another pandemic will come and we’ll need to invest in being ready in that, … while not forgetting that we were not prepared and we’re going to have to invest – just like having a fire department – some money in an intelligent way and actually simulate what might happen and make sure that we’re ready for it.[158]

Gates favours the normalization of COVID-19 masks. In a November 2020 interview, he said: «What are these, like, nudists? I mean, you know, we ask you to wear pants, and no American says, or very few Americans say, that that’s, like, some terrible thing.»[159]

Personal donations

Melinda Gates suggested that people should emulate the philanthropic efforts of the Salwen family, who sold their home and gave away half of its value, as detailed in their book, The Power of Half.[160] Gates and his wife invited Joan Salwen to Seattle to speak about what the family had done, and on December 9, 2010, Bill and Melinda Gates and investor Warren Buffett each signed a commitment they called the «Giving Pledge», which is a commitment by all three to donate at least half of their wealth, over the course of time, to charity.[161][162][163]

Gates has also provided personal donations to educational institutions. In 1999, Gates donated $20 million to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for the construction of a computer laboratory named the «William H. Gates Building» that was designed by architect Frank Gehry. While Microsoft had previously given financial support to the institution, this was the first personal donation received from Gates.[164]

The Maxwell Dworkin Laboratory of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences is named after the mothers of both Gates and Microsoft President Steven A. Ballmer, both of whom were students (Ballmer was a member of the school’s graduating class of 1977, while Gates left his studies for Microsoft), and donated funds for the laboratory’s construction.[165] Gates also donated $6 million to the construction of the Gates Computer Science Building, completed in January 1996, on the campus of Stanford University. The building contains the Computer Science Department and the Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL) of Stanford’s Engineering department.[166]

Since 2005, Gates and his foundation have taken an interest in solving global sanitation problems. For example, they announced the «Reinvent the Toilet Challenge», which has received considerable media interest.[167] To raise awareness for the topic of sanitation and possible solutions, Gates drank water that was «produced from human feces» in 2014 – it was produced from a sewage sludge treatment process called the Omni Processor.[168][169] In early 2015, he also appeared with Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show and challenged him to see if he could taste the difference between this reclaimed water or bottled water.[170]

In November 2017, Gates said he would give $50 million to the Dementia Discovery Fund, a venture capital fund that seeks treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. He also pledged an additional $50 million to start-up ventures working in Alzheimer’s research.[171] Bill and Melinda Gates have said that they intend to leave their three children $10 million each as their inheritance. With only $30 million kept in the family, they are expected to give away about 99.96% of their wealth.[172] On August 25, 2018, Gates distributed $600,000 through his foundation via UNICEF which is helping flood affected victims in Kerala, India.[173]

In June 2018, Bill Gates offered free ebooks, to all new graduates of U.S. colleges and universities,[174] and in 2021, offered free ebooks, to all college and university students around the world.[175][176] The Bill And Melinda Gates Foundation partially funds OpenStax, which creates and provides free digital textbooks.[177]

Charity sports events

On April 29, 2017, Gates partnered with Swiss tennis legend Roger Federer in playing in the Match for Africa 4, a noncompetitive tennis match at a sold-out Key Arena in Seattle. The event was in support of the Roger Federer Foundation’s charity efforts in Africa.[178] Federer and Gates played against John Isner, the top-ranked American player for much of this decade, and Mike McCready, the lead guitarist for Pearl Jam. The pair won the match 6 games to 4. Overall, they raised $2 million for children in Africa.[179] The following year, Gates and Federer returned to play in the Match for Africa 5 on March 5, 2018, at San Jose’s SAP Center. Their opponents were Jack Sock, one of the top American players and a grand slam winner in doubles, and Savannah Guthrie, a co-anchor for NBC’s Today show. Gates and Federer recorded their second match victory together by a score of 6–3 and the event raised over $2.5 million.[180]

Books

Gates has written four books:

  • The Road Ahead, written with Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold and journalist Peter Rinearson, was published in November 1995. It summarized the implications of the personal computing revolution and described a future profoundly changed by the arrival of a global information superhighway.
  • Business @ the Speed of Thought was published in 1999, and discusses how business and technology are integrated, and shows how digital infrastructures and information networks can help to get an edge on the competition.
  • How to Avoid a Climate Disaster (February 2021) presents what Gates learned in over a decade of studying climate change and investing in innovations to address climate problems.[181]
  • How to Prevent the Next Pandemic (April 2022) details the COVID-19 pandemic and proposes a «Global Epidemic Response and Mobilization» (GERM) team with annual funding of $1 billion,[182] under the auspices of the WHO.[183]

Personal life

Gates is an avid reader,[184] and the ceiling of his large home library is engraved with a quotation from The Great Gatsby.[185] He also enjoys bridge, tennis and golf.[186][187] His days are planned for him on a minute-by-minute basis, similarly to the U.S. president’s schedule.[188] Despite his wealth and extensive business travel, Gates flew coach (economy class) in commercial aircraft until 1997, when he bought a private jet.[189]

Gates purchased the Codex Leicester, a collection of scientific writings by Leonardo da Vinci, for US$30.8 million at an auction in 1994.[190] In 1998, he reportedly paid $30 million for the original 1885 maritime painting Lost on the Grand Banks, at the time a record price for an American painting.[191]

In 2016, he revealed that he was color-blind.[192]

On May 10, 2022, Gates said that he tested positive for COVID-19 and was experiencing mild symptoms.[193] Gates has received three doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.[193]

Marriage and divorce

Gates married Melinda French on the Hawaiian Island of Lanai on January 1, 1994.[194] They met in 1987 after Melinda began working at Microsoft.[195] At the time of their marriage, Gates was given permission by Melinda to spend limited time with his ex-girlfriend, businesswoman Ann Winblad.[196] Bill and Melinda have three children: Jennifer, Rory and Phoebe.[197] The family’s residence is an earth-sheltered mansion in the side of a hill overlooking Lake Washington in Medina, Washington. In 2009, property taxes on the mansion were reported to be US$1.063 million, on a total assessed value of US$147.5 million.[198] The 66,000-square-foot (6,100 m2) estate has a 60-foot (18 m) swimming pool with an underwater music system, as well as a 2,500-square-foot (230 m2) gym and a 1,000-square-foot (93 m2) dining room.[199] On May 3, 2021, the Gateses announced they had decided to divorce after 27 years of marriage and 34 years as a couple.[200] They said they would keep working together on charitable efforts.[200][201] The Wall Street Journal reported that Melinda had been meeting with divorce attorneys since 2019, citing interviews that suggested Bill’s ties with Jeffrey Epstein was at least one of her concerns.[202] The divorce was finalized on August 2, 2021.[203]

Public image

Gates meets with U.S. Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis, February 2017

Gates’s public image has changed over the years. At first he was perceived as a brilliant but ruthless «robber baron», a «nerd-turned-tycoon».[204] Starting in 2000 with the foundation of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and particularly after he stepped down as head of Microsoft, he turned his attention to philanthropy, spending more than $50 billion on causes like health, poverty, and education. His image morphed from «tyrannical technocrat to saintly savior» to a «huggable billionaire techno-philanthropist», celebrated on magazine covers and sought after for his opinions on major issues like global health and climate change.[204] Still another shift in public opinion came in 2021 with the announcement that he and Melinda were divorcing. Coverage of that proceeding brought out information about romantic pursuits of women who worked for him, a long-term extra-marital affair, and a friendship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.[205] This information and his response to the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in some deterioration of his public image, going from «a lovable nerd who was out to save the world» to «a tech supervillain who wants to protect profits over public health.»[206]

Investigative journalist Tim Schwab has accused Gates of using his contributions to the media to shape their coverage of him in order to protect his public image.[91][207] In September 2022, Politico published an expose’ critical of NGO leadership at the helm of the world-wide COVID-19 pandemic response, written in cooperation with the German newspaper Welt. Criticisms included the interconnectivity of the non-profits with Gates, as well as his personal lack of formal credentials in medicine.[208]

Gates and the projects of his foundation have been the subject of many conspiracy theories that proliferate on Facebook and elsewhere. He has been implausibly accused of attempting to depopulate the world, distributing harmful or unethical vaccines, and implanting people with privacy-violating microchips. These largely unfounded theories reached a new level of influence during the COVID-19 pandemic when, according to New York Times journalist Rory Smith, the uncertainties of pandemic life drove people to seek explanations from the internet.[209][210] When asked about the theories, Gates has remarked that some people are tempted by the «simple explanation» that an evil person rather than biological factors are to blame, and that he does not know for what purpose anyone believes he would want to track them with microchips.[211][212]

Religion

In an interview with Rolling Stone, Gates said in regard to his faith: «The moral systems of religion, I think, are super important. We’ve raised our kids in a religious way; they’ve gone to the Catholic church that Melinda goes to and I participate in. I’ve been very lucky, and therefore I owe it to try and reduce the inequity in the world. And that’s kind of a religious belief. I mean, it’s at least a moral belief.»[213] In the same 2014 interview he also said: «I agree with people like Richard Dawkins that mankind felt the need for creation myths. Before we really began to understand disease and the weather and things like that, we sought false explanations for them. Now science has filled in some of the realm – not all – that religion used to fill. But the mystery and the beauty of the world is overwhelmingly amazing, and there’s no scientific explanation of how it came about. To say that it was generated by random numbers, that does seem, you know, sort of an uncharitable view [laughs]. I think it makes sense to believe in God, but exactly what decision in your life you make differently because of it, I don’t know.»[213]

Wealth tallies

In 1999, his wealth briefly surpassed US$101 billion.[214][189] Since 2000, the nominal value of his Microsoft holdings has declined due to a fall in Microsoft’s stock price after the dot-com bubble burst and the multi-billion dollar donations he has made to his charitable foundations. In May 2006, Gates remarked that he wished that he were not the richest man in the world because he disliked the attention it brought.[215] In March 2010, Gates was the second wealthiest person after Carlos Slim, but regained the top position in 2013, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires List.[216][217] Slim retook the position again in June 2014[218][219] (but then lost the top position back to Gates). Between 2009 and 2014, his wealth doubled from US$40 billion to more than US$82 billion.[220] In October 2017, Gates was surpassed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as the richest person in the world.[16] On November 15, 2019, he once again became the richest person in the world after a 48% increase in Microsoft shares, surpassing Bezos.[221] Gates told the BBC, «I’ve paid more tax than any individual ever, and gladly so … I’ve paid over $6 billion in taxes.»[222] He is a proponent of higher taxes, particularly for the rich.[223]

By 2017, Gates had held the top spot on the list of The World’s Billionaires for 18 out of the previous 23 years.[224] Gates has several investments outside Microsoft, which in 2006 paid him a salary of US$616,667 and US$350,000 bonus totalling US$966,667.[225] In 1989, he founded Corbis, a digital imaging company. In 2004, he became a director of Berkshire Hathaway, the investment company headed by long-time friend Warren Buffett.[226]

In 1987, Gates was listed as a billionaire in Forbes magazine’s 400 Richest People in America issue, worth $1.25 billion at the time, and was the world’s youngest self-made billionaire.[14] Since 1987, Gates has been included in the Forbes The World’s Billionaires list and was the wealthiest person from 1995 to 1996,[227] 1998 to 2007, 2009, and held the spot until 2018 before being overtaken by Jeff Bezos.[15] Gates was number one on the Forbes 400 list from 1993 through to 2007, 2009, and 2014 through 2017.[228][229]

Controversies

Antitrust litigation

Gates giving his deposition at Microsoft on August 27, 1998

Gates approved of many decisions that led to antitrust litigation over Microsoft’s business practices. In the 1998 United States v. Microsoft case, Gates gave deposition testimony that several journalists characterized as evasive. He argued with examiner David Boies over the contextual meaning of words such as «compete», «concerned», and «we». Later in the year, when portions of the videotaped deposition were played back in court, the judge was seen laughing and shaking his head.[230] BusinessWeek reported:

Early rounds of his deposition show him offering obfuscatory answers and saying «I don’t recall» so many times that even the presiding judge had to chuckle. Worse, many of the technology chief’s denials and pleas of ignorance were directly refuted by prosecutors with snippets of e-mail that Gates both sent and received.[231]

Gates later said that he had simply resisted attempts by Boies to mischaracterize his words and actions. «Did I fence with Boies? … I plead guilty … rudeness to Boies in the first degree.»[232] Despite Gates’s denials, the judge ruled that Microsoft had committed monopolization, tying and blocking competition, each in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.[232]

Treatment of colleagues and employees

Gates had primary responsibility for Microsoft’s product strategy from the company’s founding from 1975 until 2006. He gained a reputation for being distant from others; an industry executive complained in 1981 that «Gates is notorious for not being reachable by phone and for not returning phone calls.»[233] An Atari executive recalled that he showed Gates a game and defeated him 35 of 37 times. When they met again a month later, Gates «won or tied every game. He had studied the game until he solved it. That is a competitor».[234]

In the early 1980s, while business partner Paul Allen was undergoing treatments for cancer, Gates — according to Allen — conspired to reduce Allen’s share in Microsoft by issuing himself stock options.[235][236][237] In his autobiography, Allen would later recall that Gates was «scheming to rip me off. It was mercenary opportunism plain and simple».[235] Gates says he remembers the episode differently.[236] Allen would also recall that Gates was prone to shouting episodes.[237]

Gates met regularly with Microsoft’s senior managers and program managers, and the managers described him as being verbally combative. He also berated them for perceived holes in their business strategies or proposals that placed the company’s long-term interests at risk.[238][239] Gates saw competition in personal terms; when Borland’s Turbo Pascal performed better than Microsoft’s own tools, he yelled at programming director Greg Whitten «for half an hour» because, Gates believed, Borland’s Philippe Kahn had surpassed Gates.[240] Gates interrupted presentations with such comments as «that’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard»[241] and «why don’t you just give up your options and join the Peace Corps?»[242] The target of his outburst would then have to defend the proposal in detail until Gates was fully convinced.[241] Not all harsh language was criticism; a manager recalled that «You’re full of shit. That’s the stupidest fucking thing I’ve ever heard» meant that Gates was amazed. «In the lore of Microsoft, if Bill says that to you, you’re made».[243] When subordinates appeared to be procrastinating, he was known to remark sarcastically, «I’ll do it over the weekend».[244][74][245] Gates has been accused of bullying Microsoft employees.[246]

Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein

A 2019 New York Times article reported that Gates’s relationship with financier Jeffrey Epstein started in 2011, just a few years after Epstein’s conviction for procuring a child for prostitution, and continued for some years, including a visit to Epstein’s house with Melinda in the fall of 2013, despite her declared discomfort.[247] Gates said in 2011 about Epstein: «His lifestyle is very different and kind of intriguing although it would not work for me».[205]

The depth of the friendship between Gates and Epstein is unclear. Gates generally commented about his relationship with Epstein that «I met him. I didn’t have any business relationship or friendship with him».[248] However, Gates visited Epstein «many times, despite [Epstein’s] past».[247]

It was reported that Epstein and Gates «discussed the Gates Foundation and philanthropy».[247] However, in an interview in 2019 Gates completely denied any connection between Epstein and the Gates Foundation or his philanthropy generally.[248] In August 2021, Gates said the reason he had meetings with Epstein was because Gates hoped Epstein could provide money for philanthropic work, though nothing came of the idea. Gates added, «It was a huge mistake to spend time with him, to give him the credibility of being there.»[246]

It has also been reported that Epstein and Gates met with Nobel Committee chair Thorbjørn Jagland at his residence in Strasbourg, France in March 2013 to discuss the Nobel Prize.[249] Also in attendance were representatives of the International Peace Institute which has received millions in grants from the Gates Foundation, including a $2.5 million «community engagement» grant in October 2013.[250]

Recognition

Bill and Melinda Gates being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2016

  • Time magazine named Gates one of the 100 people who most influenced the 20th century, as well as one of the 100 most influential people of 2004, 2005, and 2006.[251]
  • Time also collectively named Gates, his wife Melinda and U2’s lead singer Bono as the 2005 Persons of the Year for their humanitarian efforts.[252] In 2006, he was voted eighth in the list of «Heroes of our time».[253]
  • Gates was listed in the London Sunday Times power list in 1999, named CEO of the year by Chief Executive Officers magazine in 1994, ranked number one in the «Top 50 Cyber Elite» by Time in 1998, ranked number two in the Upside Elite 100 in 1999, and was included in The Guardian as one of the «Top 100 influential people in media» in 2001.[254]
  • Gates was elected Member of the US National Academy of Engineering in 1996 «for contributions to the founding and development of personal computing».[255]
  • He was named Honorary Member of the American Library Association in 1998.[256]
  • He was elected a foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering in 2017.[257]
  • According to Forbes, Gates was ranked as the fourth most powerful person in the world in 2012,[258] up from fifth in 2011.[259]
  • In 1994, he was honored as the 20th Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society (DFBCS). In 1999, Gates received New York Institute of Technology’s President’s Medal.[260]
  • Gates has received honorary doctorates from Nyenrode Business Universiteit (1996),[261] KTH Royal Institute of Technology (2002),[262] Waseda University (2005),[263] Tsinghua University (2007),[264] Harvard University (2007),[265] the Karolinska Institute (2007),[266] and Cambridge University (2009).[267]
  • He was also made an honorary trustee of Peking University in 2007.[268]
  • Gates was made an Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005.[269]
  • In January 2006, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Henry by the President of Portugal Jorge Sampaio
  • In November 2006, he was awarded the Placard of the Order of the Aztec Eagle, together with his wife Melinda who was awarded the Insignia of the same order, both for their philanthropic work around the world in the areas of health and education, particularly in Mexico, and specifically in the program «Un país de lectores«.[270]
  • Gates received the 2010 Bower Award for Business Leadership from The Franklin Institute for his achievements at Microsoft and his philanthropic work.[271]
  • Also in 2010, he was honored with the Silver Buffalo Award by the Boy Scouts of America, its highest award for adults, for his service to youth.[272]
  • In 2002, Bill and Melinda Gates received the Jefferson Award for Greatest Public Service Benefiting the Disadvantaged.[273]
  • He was given the 2006 James C. Morgan Global Humanitarian Award from the Tech Awards.[274]
  • In 2015, Gates and his wife Melinda received the Padma Bhushan, India’s third-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.[275][276]
  • In 2016, Barack Obama honored Bill and Melinda Gates with the Presidential Medal of Freedom for their philanthropic efforts.[277]
  • In 2017, François Hollande awarded Bill and Melinda Gates with France’s highest national order, as Commanders in the Legion of Honour, for their charity efforts.[278]
  • Entomologists named Bill Gates’ flower fly, Eristalis gatesi, in his honor in 1997.[279]
  • In 2020, Gates received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun for his contributions to Japan and the world in regards to worldwide technological transformation and advancement of global health.[280]
  • In 2021, Gates was nominated at the 11th annual Streamy Awards for the crossover for his personal YouTube channel.[281]
  • In 2022, Gates received the Hilal-e-Pakistan Second-highest civilian award for their social work in the country.

Depiction in media

Documentary films about Gates

External video
video icon The Machine That Changed The World; Interview with Bill Gates, 1990 (raw video), 44:03, Open Vault WGBH[282]
  • The Machine That Changed the World (1990)
  • Triumph of the Nerds (1996)
  • Nerds 2.0.1 (1998)
  • Waiting for «Superman» (2010)[283]
  • The Virtual Revolution (2010)
  • Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates (2019)

Feature films

  • 1999: Pirates of Silicon Valley, a film that chronicles the rise of Apple and Microsoft from the early 1970s to 1997. Gates is portrayed by Anthony Michael Hall.
  • 2002: Nothing So Strange, a mockumentary featuring Gates as the subject of a modern assassination. Gates briefly appears at the start, played by Steve Sires.
  • 2010: The Social Network, a film that chronicles the development of Facebook. Gates is portrayed by Steve Sires.[284]
  • 2015: Steve Jobs vs. Bill Gates: The Competition to Control the Personal Computer, 1974–1999: Original film from the National Geographic Channel for the American Genius series.[285]

Video and film clips

  • 1983: Steve Jobs hosts Gates and others in the «Macintosh dating game» at the Macintosh pre-launch event (a parody of the television game show The Dating Game)[286]
  • 1991: Gates spoke to the Berkeley Macintosh Users Group lively weekly Thursday night meeting with questions and answers in PSL Hall (renamed Pimentel Hall in 1994)[287] at University of California, Berkeley[288][289][290]
  • 2007: Steve Jobs and Bill Gates Together at the D5 Conference on YouTube, All Things Digital
  • 2009− : Gates has given numerous TED talks on current concerns such as innovation, education and fighting global diseases[291]

Radio

Gates was the guest on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs on January 31, 2016, in which he talked about his relationships with his father and Steve Jobs, meeting Melinda Ann French, the start of Microsoft and some of his habits (for example reading The Economist «from cover to cover every week»). His choice of things to take on a desert island were, for music: «Blue Skies» by Willie Nelson; a book: The Better Angels of Our Nature by Steven Pinker; and luxury item: a DVD Collection of Lectures from The Teaching Company.[292]

Television

Gates made a guest appearance as himself on the TV show The Big Bang Theory. The episode on which he appeared was appropriately titled «The Gates Excitation».[293] He also appeared in a cameo role in 2019 on the series finale of Silicon Valley.[294] Gates was parodied in The Simpsons episode «Das Bus».

In 2023, Gates was the interviewee in an episode of the Amol Rajan Interviews series on BBC Two,[295] and was the subject of an episode of the The Billionaires Who Made Our World UK Channel 4 series.[296]

See also

  • Big History Project
  • List of richest Americans in history
  • List of wealthiest historical figures

Notes

  1. ^ Gates regularly documents his share ownership through public U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Form 4 filings.[6][7]
  2. ^ His father was named William H. Gates II, but he is now generally known as William H. Gates, Senior to avoid confusion with his son.

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  295. ^ «Amol Rajan Interviews: Bill Gates». BBC. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
  296. ^ «The Billionaires Who Made Our World: Bill Gates». Channel 4. Retrieved February 20, 2023.

Bibliography

  • Fridson, Martin (2001). How to Be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-41617-7.
  • Gates, Bill (1996). The Road Ahead. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-026040-4.
  • Lesinski, Jeanne M. (2006). Bill Gates (biography). A&E Television Networks. ISBN 0-8225-7027-0.
  • Manes, Stephen (1994). Gates: How Microsoft’s Mogul Reinvented an Industry and Made Himself the Richest Man in America. Touchstone Pictures. ISBN 0-671-88074-8.
  • Wallace, James (1993). Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Microsoft Empire. New York City: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-471-56886-4.

Primary sources

  • Gates, Bill. «An exclusive interview with Bill Gates». Financial Times 1 (2013). online
  • Gates, Bill. «Remarks of Bill Gates, Harvard Commencement 2007». The Harvard Gazette 7 (2007). Online
  • Kinsley, Michael, and Conor Clarke, Eds. Creative Capitalism: A Conversation With Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, and Other Economic Leaders (Simon and Schuster, 2009).

Further reading

  • Leibovich, Mark. The New Imperialists (Prentice Hall, 2002) pp 139–182. online
  • Bank, David (2001). Breaking Windows: How Bill Gates Fumbled the Future of Microsoft. New York City: Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-0315-1.
  • Rivlin, Gary (1999). The Plot to Get Bill Gates: An Irreverent Investigation of the World’s Richest Man… and the People Who Hate Him. New York City: Times Business. ISBN 0-8129-3006-1.
  • «83 Reasons Why Bill Gates’s Reign Is Over». Wired. Vol. 6, no. 12. December 1998. Archived from the original on August 22, 2010.
  • Kildall, Gary (October 25, 2004). «The Man Who Could Have Been Bill Gates». Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on April 4, 2006. Retrieved June 9, 2010.
  • «The Meaning of Bill Gates: As his reign at Microsoft comes to an end, so does the era he dominated», The Economist, June 28, 2008.
  • Wallace, James. Overdrive: Bill Gates and the Race to Control Cyberspace (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1997).

External links

  • Official website
  • Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Official YouTube channel
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Bill Gates at IMDb
  • Bill Gates at TED Edit this at Wikidata
  • Forbes profile

1955—
Born
Seattle, WA.

1973
Entered Harvard
University.

1967
Enrolled at Lakeside
School. First used computer.

1968
Began programming
with Paul Allen in the computer center.

Bill Gates is a technologist, business leader, and philanthropist. He grew up in Seattle, Washington, with an amazing and supportive family who encouraged his interest in computers at an early age. He dropped out of college to start Microsoft with his childhood friend Paul Allen. Today, Bill co-chairs the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation with Melinda French Gates, where he works to give his wealth back to society.

Bill grew up in Seattle with his two sisters. His late father, William H. Gates Sr., was a Seattle attorney and one of the co-chairs of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. His late mother, Mary Gates, was a schoolteacher, University of Washington regent, and chairwoman of United Way International. Bill has three children.

1976
Changed company name to Microsoft.

Microsoft

1975–

When Bill and Paul Allen started Microsoft, their vision of “a computer on every desktop and in every home”

seemed farfetched to most people. Today, thanks to Microsoft and many other companies, that vision is a reality in many parts of the world, and

personal technology is an integral part of society.

Bill is passionate about Microsoft’s work and will always be involved with the company, including his present

role as a member of the board and technology advisor.

1975
Started Micro-Soft with Paul Allen in Albuquerque, NM.

1979
Microsoft moved to Washington State.

1985
Windows 1.0 launched.

1995
Windows 95 launched.

2000
Assumed role of Chief Software Architect, as Steve Ballmer assumed role of Microsoft CEO.

2001
The original Xbox released.

2008
Left his daily job at Microsoft.

2014
Stepped down as chairman. Remained on the board and began serving as technology advisor.

2000
Bill and Melinda officially
established the foundation. They also announced the first round of Gates

Millennium Scholars, part of a $1 billion effort to help 20,000 young people afford college over the next two decades.

2002
The foundation completed efforts to help install 47,000 computers in 11,000 libraries in all 50 states.

Ninety-five percent of libraries have computers with Internet access, up from 27 percent in 1996.

2006
Warren Buffett pledged the bulk of his wealth to the foundation.

2010
Bill and Melinda challenged the global health community to declare this the Decade of Vaccines. They pledged

$10 billion over the next 10 years to help research, develop, and deliver vaccines for the world’s poorest countries.

2013
Bill helped launch a $5.5 billion effort to eradicate polio by 2018. India was certified polio-free by the

World Health Organization, leaving only three countries that have never been free of the disease.

2015
Bill announced the formation of the Child Health and Mortality Prevention Surveillance Network (CHAMPS), a network of disease surveillance sites in developing countries, to help prevent childhood deaths.

2017
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation committed $300 million to helping farmers in Africa and Asia cope with climate change.

2018
Bill shared the stage with a beaker of poop at the Reinvented Toilet Expo in Beijing. His “co-star” helped draw attention to a serious problem that kills more than 500,000 people every year: poor sanitation.

Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation

2000–

These days Bill focuses most of his time on the work he is doing through his foundation. People are often surprised to hear him say that this work has a lot in common with his work at Microsoft. In both cases, he gets to bring together smart people and collaborate with them to solve big, tough problems.

Bill is gratified to know that the foundation and its many partners are helping people all over the world live healthier, more productive lives.

Other Interests


…once you’ve found a solution
that works, catalytic philanthropy
can harness political and market
forces to get those innovations to
the people who need them most.”

In addition to the foundation’s work, Bill has separately taken on some projects to address issues that

interest him personally, such as delivering clean energy to everyone who needs it.

In all his work—with the foundation and otherwise—he’s focused on what he calls catalytic philanthropy:

investments in innovations that will improve life for the poorest. They’re solutions to problems where markets and governments underinvest.

2006
Bill helped launch TerraPower, a company that aims to provide the world with a more affordable, secure, and

environmentally friendly form of nuclear energy.

2010
Melinda, Warren Buffett, and Bill launched the Giving Pledge, a commitment by the world’s wealthiest people

to dedicate most of their wealth to philanthropy.

2015
Bill spearheaded the formation of the Breakthrough Energy Coalition to fund clean energy initiatives, avoid a climate disaster, and make sure that everyone on the planet can enjoy a good standard of living.

2017
Bill teamed up with Roger Federer in the fourth annual Match for Africa, a charity tennis match that raises money for the Roger Federer Foundation.

2018
Bill joined forces with a group of philanthropists to create the Diagnostics Accelerator, a program aimed at finding a way to diagnose Alzheimer’s earlier.

2019
Bill joined long-time friend Warren Buffett to serve customers at Dairy Queen. It did not go well.

2019
The Netflix documentary Inside Bill’s Brain: Decoding Bill Gates was released. The three-part series told the story of Bill’s life from childhood through Microsoft through his work today.

2020
Bill and Melinda committed about $1.75 billion to support the global response to COVID-19.

2020
Bill and Rashida Jones co-hosted a new podcast, “Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions.”

2021
Bill published his book How to Avoid a Climate Disaster, proposing a plan to prevent the worst effects of climate change.

A Message From Bill

I feel very lucky to get to connect with so many extraordinary people. Whenever I have the chance, I set

aside a few minutes to share what I’m learning here on the Gates Notes. Thanks for reading.

Представлено сочинение на английском языке Биография Билла Гейтса/ The Biography of Bill Gates с переводом на русский язык.

The Biography of Bill Gates Биография Билла Гейтса
There isn’t a person in the world who doesn’t know about Bill Gates. He is the founder and co-leader of Microsoft Corporation. He is also an American business magnate, who is considered to be one of the richest people on the planet. Не существует в мире человека, который не знал бы Билла Гейтса. Он является основателем и одним из руководителей корпорации Microsoft. Он также является американским бизнес магнатом, который считается одним из богатейших людей на планете.
Bill Gates was born on the 28th of October 1955, in Seattle, state Washington. His full name is William Henry Gates III. For several years he has worked as a chief executive of Microsoft, but later he became a chairman of the company. Apart from being one of the richest and best known people in the world, Bill Gates also wrote several interesting books and currently he works a lot on Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, specializing in charity donations. In 2010 he has even suggested the billionaires to transfer half of their state to charity. Билл Гейтс родился 28 октября 1955 года в Сиэтле, штат Вашингтон. Его полное имя Уильям Генри Гейтс III. В течение нескольких лет он работал в качестве исполнительного директора Microsoft, но позже он стал председателем компании. Помимо того, что он один из самых богатых и известных людей в мире, Билл Гейтс также написал несколько интересных книг и в настоящее время он много работает на Фонд Билла и Мелинды Гейтс, специализирующийся на благотворительных пожертвованиях. В 2010 году он даже предложил миллиардерам передать половину своего состояния на благотворительность.
Bill Gates originally comes from a quite intelligent family. He studied in the most privileged school in Seattle, where he developed his programming skills at school computer. In 1973 he enrolled at Harvard University, but was expelled after two years and immediately started working on software development. And in 1975 Gates together with Paul Allen founded the company Micro-Soft, which was later named Microsoft Corporation. His software has literally changed the world. Nowadays nearly everybody uses Microsoft software on daily basis. Билл Гейтс родом из очень интеллигентной семьи. Он учился в самой привилегированной школе в Сиэтле, где он развивал свои навыки программирования на школьном компьютере. В 1973 году он поступил в Гарвардский университет, но был исключен после двух лет, и сразу, же начал работать над разработкой программного обеспечения. А в 1975 году Гейтс совместно с Полом Алленом основали компанию Micro-Soft, которая была позже названа Microsoft Corporation. Его программное обеспечение в буквальном смысле изменило мир. В настоящее время почти все используют программное обеспечение Microsoft на ежедневной основе.

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Bill Gates — full name William Henry Gates III, KBE[1] — (born October 28, 1955) is the Chairman and former Chief Executive and Chief Software Architect of Microsoft. Gates co-founded Microsoft in 1975 with Paul Allen.

He is consistently ranked among the world’s wealthiest people and was the wealthiest overall from 1995 to 2009, excluding 2008, when he was ranked third; in 2011 he was the wealthiest American and the second wealthiest person.

During his career at Microsoft, Gates held the positions of CEO and chief software architect, and remains the largest individual shareholder, with 6.4 percent of the common stock. He has also authored or co-authored several books.

Gates is one of the best-known entrepreneurs of the personal computer revolution. Gates has been criticized for his business tactics, which have been considered anti-competitive, an opinion which has in some cases been upheld by the courts. In the later stages of his career, Gates has pursued a number of philanthropic endeavors, donating large amounts of money to various charitable organizations and scientific research programs through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, established in 2000.

Gates stepped down as chief executive officer of Microsoft in January 2000. He remained as chairman and created the position of chief software architect. In June 2006, Gates announced that he would be transitioning from full-time work at Microsoft to part-time work, and full-time work at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. He gradually transferred his duties to Ray Ozzie, chief software architect, and Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer. Gates’s last full-time day at Microsoft was June 27, 2008. He remains at Microsoft as non-executive chairman.

Biography

Gates was born in Seattle, Washington, to William H. Gates, Sr. and Mary Maxwell Gates. His parents are of English, German, and Scots-Irish descent. His father was a prominent lawyer, and his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way. Gates’s maternal grandfather was J. W. Maxwell, a national bank president. Gates has one elder sister, Kristi (Kristianne), and one younger sister, Libby. He was the fourth of his name in his family, but was known as William Gates III or «Trey» because his father had the «II» suffix. When Gates was young, his family regularly attended a Congregational church.

At 13 he enrolled in the Lakeside School, an exclusive preparatory school. When he was in the eighth grade, the Mothers Club at the school used proceeds from Lakeside School’s rummage sale to buy a Teletype Model 33 ASR terminal and a block of computer time on a General Electric (GE) computer for the school’s students. Gates took an interest in programming the GE system in BASIC, and was excused from math classes to pursue his interest. He wrote his first computer program on this machine: an implementation of tic-tac-toe that allowed users to play games against the computer. Gates was fascinated by the machine and how it would always execute software code perfectly. When he reflected back on that moment, he said, «There was just something neat about the machine.» After the Mothers Club donation was exhausted, he and other students sought time on systems including DEC PDP minicomputers. One of these systems was a PDP-10 belonging to Computer Center Corporation (CCC), which banned four Lakeside students—Gates, Paul Allen, Ric Weiland, and Kent Evans—for the summer after it caught them exploiting bugs in the operating system to obtain free computer time.

At the end of the ban, the four students offered to find bugs in CCC’s software in exchange for computer time. Rather than use the system via Teletype, Gates went to CCC’s offices and studied source code for various programs that ran on the system, including programs in FORTRAN, LISP, and machine language. The arrangement with CCC continued until 1970, when the company went out of business. The following year, Information Sciences, Inc. hired the four Lakeside students to write a payroll program in COBOL, providing them computer time and royalties. After his administrators became aware of his programming abilities, Gates wrote the school’s computer program to schedule students in classes. He modified the code so that he was placed in classes with mostly female students. He later stated that «it was hard to tear myself away from a machine at which I could so unambiguously demonstrate success.» At age 17, Gates formed a venture with Allen, called Traf-O-Data, to make traffic counters based on the Intel 8008 processor. In early 1973, Bill Gates served as a congressional page in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Gates graduated from Lakeside School in 1973. He scored 1590 out of 1600 on the SAT and enrolled at Harvard College in the autumn of 1973. While at Harvard, he met Steve Ballmer, who later succeeded Gates as CEO of Microsoft.

The Poker Room in Currier House at Harvard University, in which Bill Gates and Paul Allen formed Microsoft

In his sophomore year, Gates devised an algorithm for pancake sorting as a solution to one of a series of unsolved problems presented in a combinatorics class by Harry Lewis, one of his professors. Gates’s solution held the record as the fastest version for over thirty years; its successor is faster by only one percent. His solution was later formalized in a published paper in collaboration with Harvard computer scientist Christos Papadimitriou.

Gates did not have a definite study plan while a student at Harvard and spent a lot of time using the school’s computers. Gates remained in contact with Paul Allen, and he joined him at Honeywell during the summer of 1974. The following year saw the release of the MITS Altair 8800 based on the Intel 8080 CPU, and Gates and Allen saw this as the opportunity to start their own computer software company. Gates dropped out of Harvard at this time. He had talked this decision over with his parents, who were supportive of him after seeing how much Gates wanted to start a company.

Microsoft

BASIC

MITS Altair 8800 Computer with 8-inch floppy disk system

After reading the January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics that demonstrated the Altair 8800, Gates contacted Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS), the creators of the new microcomputer, to inform them that he and others were working on a BASIC interpreter for the platform. In reality, Gates and Allen did not have an Altair and had not written code for it; they merely wanted to gauge MITS’s interest. MITS president Ed Roberts agreed to meet them for a demo, and over the course of a few weeks they developed an Altair emulator that ran on a minicomputer, and then the BASIC interpreter. The demonstration, held at MITS’s offices in Albuquerque was a success and resulted in a deal with MITS to distribute the interpreter as Altair BASIC. Paul Allen was hired into MITS, and Gates took a leave of absence from Harvard to work with Allen at MITS in Albuquerque in November 1975. They named their partnership «Micro-Soft» and had their first office located in Albuquerque. Within a year, the hyphen was dropped, and on November 26, 1976, the trade name «Microsoft» was registered with the Office of the Secretary of the State of New Mexico. Gates never returned to Harvard to complete his studies.

Gates is in the bottom row, at the left, with Microsoft’s Albuquerque staff in 1978.

Microsoft’s BASIC was popular with computer hobbyists, but Gates discovered that a pre-market copy had leaked into the community and was being widely copied and distributed. In February 1976, Gates wrote an Open Letter to Hobbyists in the MITS newsletter saying that MITS could not continue to produce, distribute, and maintain high-quality software without payment. This letter was unpopular with many computer hobbyists, but Gates persisted in his belief that software developers should be able to demand payment. Microsoft became independent of MITS in late 1976, and it continued to develop programming language software for various systems. The company moved from Albuquerque to its new home in Bellevue, Washington on January 1, 1979, after the former rejected his loan application.

During Microsoft’s early years, all employees had broad responsibility for the company’s business. Gates oversaw the business details, but continued to write code as well. In the first five years, Gates personally reviewed every line of code the company shipped, and often rewrote parts of it as he saw fit.

IBM partnership

IBM approached Microsoft in July 1980 regarding its upcoming personal computer, the IBM PC.Template:R The computer company first proposed that Microsoft write the BASIC interpreter. When IBM’s representatives mentioned that they needed an operating system, Gates referred them to Digital Research (DRI), makers of the widely used CP/M operating system.

IBM’s discussions with Digital Research went poorly, and they did not reach a licensing agreement. IBM representative Jack Sams mentioned the licensing difficulties during a subsequent meeting with Gates and told him to get an acceptable operating system. A few weeks later Gates proposed using 86-DOS (QDOS), an operating system similar to CP/M that Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products (SCP) had made for hardware similar to the PC. Microsoft made a deal with SCP to become the exclusive licensing agent, and later the full owner, of 86-DOS. After adapting the operating system for the PC, Microsoft delivered it to IBM as PC-DOS in exchange for a one-time fee of $50,000.Template:R

Gates did not offer to transfer the copyright on the operating system, because he believed that other hardware vendors would clone IBM’s system They did, and the sales of MS-DOS made Microsoft a major player in the industry. Despite IBM’s name on the operating system the press quickly identified Microsoft as being very influential on the new computer, with PC Magazine asking if Gates were «The Man Behind The Machine?» He oversaw Microsoft’s company restructuring on June 25, 1981, which re-incorporated the company in Washington state and made Gates President of Microsoft and the
Chairman of the Board.

Windows

Hello,_I'm_Bill_Gates,_Chairman_of_Microsoft

Hello, I’m Bill Gates, Chairman of Microsoft

Microsoft launched its first retail version of Microsoft Windows on November 20, 1985, and in August, the company struck a deal with IBM to develop a separate operating system called OS/2. Although the two companies successfully developed the first version of the new system, mounting creative differences caused the partnership to deteriorate. It ended in 1991, when Gates led Microsoft to develop a version of OS/2 independently from IBM.

Management style

From Microsoft’s founding in 1975 until 2006, Gates had primary responsibility for the company’s product strategy. He aggressively broadened the company’s range of products, and wherever Microsoft achieved a dominant position he vigorously defended it. He gained a reputation for being distant to others; as early as 1981 an industry executive complained in public that «Gates is notorious for not being reachable by phone and for not returning phone calls.»

As an executive, Gates met regularly with Microsoft’s senior managers and program managers. Firsthand accounts of these meetings describe him as verbally combative, berating managers for perceived holes in their business strategies or proposals that placed the company’s long-term interests at risk.

He often interrupted presentations with such comments as, «That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard!» and, «Why don’t you just give up your options and join the Peace Corps?» The target of his outburst then had to defend the proposal in detail until, hopefully, Gates was fully convinced. When subordinates appeared to be procrastinating, he was known to remark sarcastically, «I’ll do it over the weekend.»

Gates’s role at Microsoft for most of its history was primarily a management and executive role. However, he was an active software developer in the early years, particularly on the company’s programming language products. He has not officially been on a development team since working on the TRS-80 Model 100, but wrote code as late as 1989 that shipped in the company’s products. On June 15, 2006, Gates announced that he would transition out of his day-to-day role over the next two years to dedicate more time to philanthropy. He divided his responsibilities between two successors, placing Ray Ozzie in charge of day-to-day management and Craig Mundie in charge of long-term product strategy.

Antitrust litigation

Further information: United States Microsoft antitrust case and European Union Microsoft competition case

Bill Gates giving his deposition at Microsoft on August 27, 1998

Many decisions that led to antitrust litigation over Microsoft’s business practices have had Gates’s approval. In the 1998 United States v. Microsoft case, Gates gave deposition testimony that several journalists characterized as evasive. He argued with examiner David Boies over the contextual meaning of words such as, «compete», «concerned», and «we». BusinessWeek reported:

{{quotation|Early rounds of his deposition show him offering obfuscatory answers and saying ‘I don’t recall,’ so many times that even the presiding judge had to chuckle. Worse, many of the technology chief’s denials and pleas of ignorance were directly refuted by prosecutors with snippets of e-mail that Gates both sent and received.

Gates later said he had simply resisted attempts by Boies to mischaracterize his words and actions. As to his demeanor during the deposition, he said, «Did I fence with Boies? … I plead guilty. Whatever that penalty is should be levied against me: rudeness to Boies in the first degree.» Despite Gates’s denials, the judge ruled that Microsoft had committed monopolization and tying, and blocking competition, both in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Appearance in ads

Gates appeared in a series of ads to promote Microsoft in 2008. The first commercial, co-starring Jerry Seinfeld, is a 90-second talk between strangers as Seinfeld walks up on a discount shoe store (Shoe Circus) in a mall and notices Gates buying shoes inside. The salesman is trying to sell Mr. Gates shoes that are a size too big. As Gates is buying the shoes, he holds up his discount card, which uses a slightly altered version of his own mugshot of his arrest in New Mexico in 1977 for a traffic violation. As they are walking out of the mall, Seinfeld asks Gates if he has melded his mind to other developers, after getting a yes, he then asks if they are working on a way to make computers edible, again getting a yes. Some say that this is an homage to Seinfeld’s own show about «nothing» (Seinfeld). In a second commercial in the series, Gates and Seinfeld are at the home of an average family trying to fit in with normal people.

Post-Microsoft

Since leaving day-to-day operations at Microsoft (where he remains Chairman), Gates continues his philanthropy and, among other projects, purchased the video rights to the Messenger Lectures series called The Character of Physical Law, given at Cornell University by Richard Feynman in 1964 and recorded by the BBC. The videos are available online to the public at Microsoft’s Project Tuva.

In April 2010, Gates was invited to visit and speak at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he asked the students to take on the hard problems of the world in their futures.

Personal life

Bill and Melinda Gates, June 2009

Gates married Melinda French on January 1, 1994. They have three children: daughters Jennifer Katharine (born 1996) and Phoebe Adele (born 2002) and son Rory John (born 1999).

The family resides in The Gates’s home, an earth-sheltered house in the side of a hill overlooking Lake Washington in Medina. According to King County public records, as of 2006 the total assessed value of the property (land and house) is $125 million, and the annual property tax is $991,000.

His 66,000 sq ft (6,100 m2) estate has a Template:Convert/LoffAoffDbSon swimming pool with an underwater music system, as well as a 2,500 sq ft (230 m2) gym and a 1,000 sq ft (93 m2) dining room.

Also among Gates’s private acquisitions is the Codex Leicester, a collection of writings by Leonardo da Vinci, which Gates bought for $30.8 million at an auction in 1994. Gates is also known as an avid reader, and the ceiling of his large home library is engraved with a quotation from The Great Gatsby. He also enjoys playing bridge, tennis, and golf.

Gates was number one on the Forbes 400 list from 1993 through to 2007 and number one on Forbes list of The World’s Richest People from 1995 to 2007 and 2009. In 1999, Gates’s wealth briefly surpassed $101 billion, causing the media to call him a «centibillionaire». Since 2000, the nominal value of his Microsoft holdings has declined due to a fall in Microsoft’s stock price after the dot-com bubble burst and the multi-billion dollar donations he has made to his charitable foundations. In a May 2006 interview, Gates commented that he wished that he were not the richest man in the world because he disliked the attention it brought. Gates has several investments outside Microsoft, which in 2006 paid him a salary of $616,667 and $350,000 bonus totalling $966,667. He founded Corbis, a digital imaging company, in 1989. In 2004 he became a director of Berkshire Hathaway, the investment company headed by long-time friend Warren Buffett. In March 2010 Bill Gates was bumped down to the second wealthiest man behind Carlos Slim.

On May 3, 2021, Gates announced that he and Melinda were divorcing,[2] leaving the future of their foundation in question.[3]

Philanthropy

Gates (second from right) with Bono, Queen Rania of Jordan, Former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, President Umaru Yar’Adua of Nigeria and other participants in a ‘Call to Action on the Millennium Development Goals’ during the Annual Meeting 2008 of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland

Further information: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Gates began to appreciate the expectations others had of him when public opinion mounted suggesting that he could give more of his wealth to charity. Gates studied the work of Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller, and in 1994 sold some of his Microsoft stock to create the William H. Gates Foundation. In 2000, Gates and his wife combined three family foundations into one to create the charitable Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which is the largest transparently operated charitable foundation in the world. The foundation allows benefactors access to information regarding how its money is being spent, unlike other major charitable organizations such as the Wellcome Trust. The generosity and extensive philanthropy of David Rockefeller has been credited as a major influence. Gates and his father met with Rockefeller several times, and modeled their giving in part on the Rockefeller family‘s philanthropic focus, namely those global problems that are ignored by governments and other organizations. As of 2007, Bill and Melinda Gates were the second-most generous philanthropists in America, having given over $28 billion to charity. They plan to eventually give 95% of their wealth to charity.

The foundation was at the same time criticized because it invests assets that it has not yet distributed with the exclusive goal of maximizing return on investment. As a result, its investments include companies that have been charged with worsening poverty in the same developing countries where the Foundation is attempting to relieve poverty. These include companies that pollute heavily, and pharmaceutical companies that do not sell into the developing world.
In response to press criticism, the foundation announced in 2007 a review of its investments, to assess social responsibility. It subsequently canceled the review and stood by its policy of investing for maximum return, while using voting rights to influence company practices. The Gates Millennium Scholars program has been criticized for its exclusion of Caucasian students.

Gates’s wife urged people to learn a lesson from the philanthropic efforts of the Salwen family, which had sold its home and given away half of its value, as detailed in The Power of Half. Gates and his wife invited Joan Salwen to Seattle to speak about what the family had done, and on December 9, 2010, Gates, investor Warren Buffett, and Mark Zuckerberg (Facebook’s CEO) signed a promise they called the «Gates-Buffet Giving Pledge«, in which they promised to donate to charity at least half of their wealth over the course of time.

Recognition

In 1987, Gates was listed as a billionaire in the pages of Forbes’ 400 Richest People in America issue, just days before his 32nd birthday. As the world’s youngest self-made billionaire, he was worth $1.25 billion, over $900 million more than he’d been worth the year before, when he’d debuted on the list.

Bill Gates and Steve Jobs at the fifth D: All Things Digital conference (D5) in 2007

Time magazine named Gates one of the 100 people who most influenced the 20th century, as well as one of the 100 most influential people of 2004, 2005, and 2006. Time also collectively named Gates, his wife Melinda and U2’s lead singer Bono as the 2005 Persons of the Year for their humanitarian efforts. Gates was listed in the Sunday Times power list in 1999, named CEO of the year by Chief Executive Officers magazine in 1994, ranked number one in the «Top 50 Cyber Elite» by Time in 1998, ranked number two in the Upside Elite 100 in 1999 and was included in The Guardian as one of the «Top 100 influential people in media» in 2001.

In 1994, he was honoured as the twentieth Distinguished Fellow of the British Computer Society. Gates has received honorary doctorates from Nyenrode Business Universiteit, Breukelen, The Netherlands, in 2000; the Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, in 2002; Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan, in 2005; Tsinghua University, Beijing, China, in April 2007; Harvard University in June 2007; the Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, in January 2008, and Cambridge University in June 2009. He was also made an honorary trustee of Peking University in 2007. Gates was also made an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire (KBE) by Queen Elizabeth II in 2005, in addition to having entomologists name the Bill Gates flower fly, Eristalis gatesi, in his honor.

In November 2006, he and his wife were awarded the Order of the Aztec Eagle for their philanthropic work around the world in the areas of health and education, particularly in Mexico, and specifically in the program «Un país de lectores». In October 2009, it was announced that Gates will be awarded the 2010 Bower Award for Business Leadership of The Franklin Institute for his achievements in business and for his philanthropic work. In 2010 he was honored with the Silver Buffalo Award by the Boy Scouts of America, its highest award for adults, for his service to youth.

In 2011, Bill Gates was ranked as the fifth most powerful person in the world, according to rankings by Forbes magazine.

Investments

  • Cascade Investments LLC, a private investment and holding company, incorporated in United States, is controlled by Bill Gates, and is headquartered in the city of Kirkland, Washington.
  • bgC3, a new think-tank company founded by Bill Gates.
  • Corbis, a digital image licensing and rights services company.
  • TerraPower, a nuclear reactor design company.

Books and films

Bill Gates has authored the following books:

  • The Road Ahead (Bill Gates book)|The Road Ahead, written with Microsoft executive Nathan Myhrvold and journalist Peter Rinearson, (November 1995) * Business @ the Speed of Thought (1999)

Gates has appeared in the following documentaries:

  • Waiting for «Superman»
  • The Virtual Revolution.

Gates was prominently featured in the following films:

  • Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999, portrayed by Anthony Michael Hall)

Video gallery

Bill Gates- The 2021 60 Minutes interview

Bill Gates- The 2021 60 Minutes interview

Bill Gates’ advice on how to combat mistrust in science

Bill Gates’ advice on how to combat mistrust in science

See also

  • Paul Allen – Microsoft’s co-founder, friend, and fellow billionaire
  • Gary Kildall (October 25, 2004). «The Man Who Could Have Been Bill Gates». Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Retrieved June 9, 2010.

Books

  • Fridson, Martin (2001). How to Be a Billionaire: Proven Strategies from the Titans of Wealth. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-41617-7.
  • Gates, Bill (1996). The Road Ahead. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-026040-4.
  • Lesinski, Jeanne M. (2006). Bill Gates (Biography (a & E)). A&E Television Networks. ISBN 0-8225-7027-0.
  • Manes, Stephen (1994). Gates: How Microsoft’s Mogul Reinvented an Industry and Made Himself The Richest Man in America. Touchstone Pictures. ISBN 0-671-88074-8.
  • Wallace, James (1993). Hard Drive: Bill Gates and the Making of the Microsoft Empire. New York: HarperCollins Publishers. ISBN 0-471-56886-4.

Further reading

  • «The Meaning of Bill Gates: As his reign at Microsoft comes to an end, so does the era he dominated», The Economist, June 28, 2008.
  • Rivlin, Gary (1999). The plot to get Bill Gates: an irreverent investigation of the world’s richest man…and the people who hate him. New York: Times Business. ISBN 0-8129-3006-1.
  • «83 Reasons Why Bill Gates’s Reign Is Over». Wired (Wired) 6 (12). December 1998.
  • Bank, David (2001). Breaking Windows: how Bill Gates fumbled the future of Microsoft. New York: Free Press. ISBN 0-7432-0315-1.

References

  1. American citizens with honorary British knighthoods and damehoods, The London Gazette. 2019-11-25.
  2. After a great deal of though and a lot of work on our relationship, by Bill Gates., Twitter. 2021-05-03.
  3. Bill and Melinda Gates are getting divorced, future of foundation in question by Tim Stelloh, Dylan Byers and Ben Popken, NBC News. 2021-05-03.

External links

  • The Gates Notes
  • Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Profile at Microsoft
  • Profile at Forbes
  • How I Work: Bill Gates, Fortune, March 30, 2006
  • The Forbes 400
  • Bill Gates at Wikipedia

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