
Upon reading this update, many would not understand why I chose to write about William H. Gates III as an upstander. But this is the whole reason I’m typing this, isn’t it? The answer is actually pretty simple. He didn’t stand up for himself, his wife, nor another person. He stood up for millions of people who currently own a computer. I think I can safely say that without Bill Gates’ help, most of us would have a thingamajig on our desks weighing around 200 to 300 pounds.

When Bill Gates and Paul Allen developed a BASIC program that would run on an Altair 8800, MITS was highly interested, and they developed a partnership. Bill Gates and Paul Allen called it “Micro-Soft.” A year later, the hyphen was dropped and “Microsoft” was born. When MITS refused to pay Microsoft for the software they developed, they became independent and moved to Bellevue, in Washington. From there, Microsoft was now a true business, and Bill Gates personally inspected each code that was shipped.
In 1980, IBM approached Microsoft, requesting that they make a BASIC interpreter for their upcoming PC. Bill Gates told them to go talk to Digital Research, but that negotiation went to shambles, and an agreement was not reached. Bill Gates decided that they would use another operating system, the 86-DOS. The 86-DOS was not made by Microsoft, but by Seattle Computing Programs. Microsoft and SCP agreed that they would give Microsoft full licensing and use rights. After that, Microsoft adapted the program for IBM’s PC, and named it MS-DOS. This single action skyrocketed Microsoft’s lifelong dream to have "a computer on every desk and in every home.”
