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Summer of 69 (Bill Gates version)

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Bill Gates is now retired from the software business, but he has fond memories of a Summer in 1969, when he met his first PC...
 
 
Summer of 69 (Summer of 69, Bryan Adams)
 
I got my first real P-C
Bought it for my leis-ure time
'Keyed it 'till my fingers bled
Was the summer of 69
 
Me and some guys from school
Wrote some code and we tried real hard
Jimmy quit and Joey got married
Whoda known we'd ever get far
 
Oh when I look back now
That summer seemed to last forever
And if I had the choice
Yeah - I'd always wanna be there
Those were the best days of my life
 
Ain't no use in complainin'
When you got a job to do
Spent my evenin's down in the code room
And that's when I met you yeah
 
Clickin' on your plas-tic keys
You told me that you'd wait forever
Oh and when you touch my hand
I knew that it was now or never
Those were the best days of my life
Back in the summer of 69
 
Man we were killin' time
We were young and restless
We needed to unwind
I guess no-one can code forever - forever, no,yeah
 
And now the times are changin'
Look at everything that's come and gone
Sometimes when I code on my P-C
I think about you, wonder what went wrong
 
Clickin' on your plas-tic keys
You told me that it'd last forever
Oh when you touch my hand
I knew that it was now or never
Those were the best days of my life, oh yeah
Back in the summer of 69,uh-huh
It was the summer of 69,o yeah, me n my baby in 69
It was the summer, the summer, summer of 69
 
From wikipedia:
William Henry "Bill" Gates III (born October 28, 1955)
Early life
 
Gates was born in Seattle, Washington, to William H. Gates, Sr. and Mary Maxwell Gates. His family was upper middle class; his father was a prominent lawyer, his mother served on the board of directors for First Interstate BancSystem and the United Way, and her father, J. W. Maxwell, was 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 dropped his own "III" suffix. Early on in his life, Gates's parents had a law career in mind for him.
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 an ASR-33 teletype 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 commented on it and 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 it 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 subsequently enrolled at Harvard College in the fall of 1973.

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