Beyond being a talented and dedicated programmer, Bill Gates was
always interested in the idea of software as intellectual property—as
something that could be licensed and commercialized. Additionally, while
keen on the promise of home computing he also wanted to put software at
the service of large- and small-scale enterprises. Beyond his own
business interests, Gates was truly inspired by the proliferation of
software applications built on the company’s operating systems, and
their potential to improve lives and livelihoods across every category
of business.
Obsessively dedicated to computing and software since his student
days, Bill Gates became galvanized by the advent of an early personal
computer, the Altair, which appeared in 1975. His passion for seeing
what the computer could do was so great, in fact, that he took a leave
of absence from Harvard and moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, home of
MITS, the Altair's parent company, to write code for it. Capitalizing on
this initial success, Gates and his team went on to write the programs
in BASIC for the IBM PC that proved instrumental in launching the
personal computing revolution.