30 Nov 2019

What I'm reading ...

I have started Gates: How Microsoft's Mogul Reinvented an Industry and Made Himself the Richest Man in America by Stephen Manes and Paul Andrews. I have been sitting on this for a while and it was time for some down to earth non-fiction. Here’s the blurb:

Bill Gates is an American icon, the ultimate revenge of the nerd. The youngest self-made billionaire in history was for many years the most powerful person in the computer industry. His tantrums, his odd rocking tic, and his lavish philanthropy have become the stuff of legend. Gates is the one book that truly illuminates the early years of the man and his company.
In high school he organized computer enterprises for profit. At Harvard he co-wrote Microsoft BASIC, the first commercial personal computer software, then dropped out and made it a global standard. At 25, he offered IBM a program he did not yet own--a program called DOS that would become the essential operating system for more than 100 million personal computers and the foundation of the Gates empire. As Microsoft's dominance extended around the globe, Bill Gates became idolized, hated, and feared.
In this riveting independent biography, veteran computer journalists Stephen Manes and Paul Andrews draw on a dozen sessions with Gates himself and nearly a thousand hours of interviews with his friends, family, employees, and competitors to debunk the myths and paint the definitive picture of the real Bill Gates, "bugs" and all. Here is the shy but fearless competitor with the guts and brass to try anything once--on a computer, at a negotiation, or on water skis. Here is the cocky 23-year-old who calmly spurned an enormous buyout offer from Ross Perot. Here is the supersalesman who motivated his Smart Guys, fought bitter battles with giant IBM, and locked horns with Apple's Steve Jobs--and usually won. Here, too, is the workaholic pessimist who presided over Microsoft's meteoric rise while most other personal computer pioneers fell by the wayside. Gates extended his vision of software to art, entertainment, education, and even biotechnology, and made good on much of his promise to put his software "on every desk and in every home."
Gates is a bracing, comprehensive portrait of the microcomputer industry, one of its leading companies, and the man who helped create a world where software is everything.

1 comment:

mosagepa said...


Hi there Colin.

It's been really interesting to have a look both at your readings blog and also great learning about your successful and long career with embedded systems.

I am from Spain, I see you love the spanish island both Canarias and Baleares, you are welcome for a quick city tour ride if you happen to pass by Madrid in your next travel to those hehe...

I am a part-time embedded systems hobbyist part time musical gadget/technology/synth programmer guy. I just adquired some strange Coldfire 5307 development board from eBay which for which I am getting my head around yet... have no documentation directly related, JUST a 20+ old CD labelled "XRAY BDM Debugger for Coldfire" or along that, YET unopened!!! Have no license for this I guess... too old technology maybe? But I like challengues like this...

If you could please help me getting around this XRAY software's installation or licensing model please feel free to contact me. I wouldn't like to get this "new" development board sitting aside in my workbench without giving it a good try...

Love embedded, love life.
Kind regards and God bless,
Moises