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← Engineering Education "Today in History" Blog: First public cell phone call Engineering Education "Today in History" Blog: Teflon is discovered →

Engineering Education "Today in History" Microsoft Founded?

by Alice AgoginogravatarcloseAuthor: Alice Agogino Name: Alice Agogino
Email: agogino@berkeley.edu
Site: http://www.me.berkeley.edu/faculty/agogino/
About: Alice M. Agogino is the Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering and is affiliated faculty at the Haas School of Business in their Operations and Information Technology Management Group. Her research interests include: community-based design; sustainable engineering; intelligent learning systems; information retrieval and data mining; multiobjective and strategic product design; nonlinear optimization; probabilistic modeling; intelligent control and manufacturing; sensor validation, fusion and diagnostics; wireless sensor networks; multimedia and computer-aided design; design databases; design theory and methods; MEMS/NEMS synthesis and computer-aided design; artificial intelligence and decision and expert systems; and gender/ethnic equity. She has served in a number of administrative positions at UC Berkeley, including Chair of the Faculty Senate, Associate Dean of Engineering and Faculty Assistant to the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost in Educational Development and Technology. Prof. Agogino also served as Director for Synthesis, an NSF-sponsored coalition of eight universities with the goal of reforming undergraduate engineering education, and continues as PI for the NEEDS (www.needs.org) and SMETE.ORG digital libraries of courseware in science, mathematics, engineering and technology. Prof. Agogino received a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of New Mexico (1975), M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering (1978) from the University of California at Berkeley and Ph.D. from the Department of Engineering-Economic Systems at Stanford University (1984). Prior to joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, she worked in industry for Dow Chemical, General Electric and SRI International. She has authored over 150 scholarly publications; has won numerous teaching, best paper and research awards; and is a member of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE). At NAE she served on the Committee on Engineering Education, working on the Technologically Speaking and the Engineer 2020 projects. She is currently a member of the National Research Council's Board on Education and the Women in Academic Science Engineering Committee. She has supervised 66 MS projects/theses, 26 doctoral dissertations and numerous undergraduate researchers.See Authors Posts (122)
· April 4th, 2008 · 1 Comment

Founders of Microsoft

Photo of Altair computer
Popular Electronics magazine

Today in History - April 4, 1975 - The Microsoft Company founded.
Well actually, Microsoft’s archivist has no record of a noteworthy Microsoft event that might have happened on April 4. The closest event appears to be a hand written tax form dated on April 1 that may have reached the IRS on April 4. As a number of websites lists April 4 as the founding date for Microsoft, I thought I’d write the blog anyway. But this date may be an urban myth, possibly started with a Wikipedia error on the date. Do stay tuned to Amy Stevenson’s more informed blog on July 22, the date that Bill Gates and Paul Allen Licensed BASIC to Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems (MITS). BASIC was the first computer language program written for a personal computer. This really was what launched Gates and Allen as a viable business entity.

Bill Gates and Paul Allen grew up in Seattle and started programming while still in elementary school. Paul Allen went was a bit older and took a job at Honeywell. In 1973, Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer, now Microsoft’s chief executive officer, were both undergraduates at Harvard University. All three were totally blown away by the possibilities offered by the MITS (Micro Instrumentation and Telemetry Systems) Altair 8800, based on an article they had read in the 1st January 1975 issue of Popular Electronics.

Gates had developed a preliminary version of the programming language BASIC for the MITS Altair and left during his junior year at Harvard and moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico to devote his energies to continue working on BASIC. Gates and Allen are reported to have worked in marathon 24-hour sessions to complete the BASIC programming language to the level at which it could be licensed to MITS. Gates and Allen were driven by the belief that computers had the potential to be a powerful tool for everyone, not just dedicated hobbyists. It was only in later licensing agreements with MITS that the informal partnership called Micro-Soft, was formalized.

The Microsoft history website provides the following overview of significant events that shaped the company in 1975.

  • Revenues: $16,005
  • Employees: 3 (Allen, Gates and Ric Weiland)
  • MITS promotes Altair BASIC, the computer language developed by Gates and Allen for the Altair computer. Hobbyists are ecstatic, despite the fact that, even with BASIC, there is little you can actually do with the Altair.

I love the picture above of Microsoft on December 7, 1978 (upper left photo) with Steve Wood (left), Bob Wallace, Jim Lane. Middle row: Bob O’Rear, Bob Greenberg, Marc McDonald, Gordon Letwin. Bottom row: Bill Gates, Andrea Lewis, Marla Wood, Paul Allen. Clearly they of the 70’s generation.

Check out the Engineering Pathway’s educational resources on Microsoft, the Altair and history of computing. For more educational resources, see our electrical engineering education, computer science education and computer engineering education community pages. The Engineering Pathway also hosts Engineering Education communities in all ABET-accredited disciplines.

Tags: Computer Engineering · Computer Science · Information Systems · Information Technology · Software Engineering

1 response so far ↓

  • 1 Engineering Education "Today in History": Gates and Allen License Basic // Jul 22, 2008 at 12:26 am

    [...] in April, Alice and I discussed the founding date issue. It is absolutely obvious that Microsoft started out in 1975. It is absolutely impossible to [...]

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