Originally published June 28, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified June 28, 2008 at 11:21 PM
Microsoft says goodbye to Bill Gates
For all the superlatives used to describe Microsoft's rise and stature over the years, at its heart are two guys who never would have guessed how big the company and the industry have become.
Seattle Times technology reporter
Bill Gates Retires
Bill Gates, who ends his full-time involvement with Microsoft Friday, was often right. He made a career, a company and an industry by looking over the horizon.
Brier Dudley
What's Bill Gates really like? That's a billion-dollar question
Steve Ballmer talks about his buddy Bill, his golf game and basketball
Microsoft says goodbye to Bill Gates
Hey Bill, sorry I kept your book since high school
Gates' big-picture memos shaped Microsoft, changed tech world
An interview with Bill Gates interview
China one of first stops for Gates in new philanthropy job
Gates memos | An Open Letter to Hobbyists
Gates memos | Applications Strategy
Gates memos | 12 Month Progress Report
Gates memos | 'Sea change' brings Opportunity
Gates memos | The Internet Tidal Wave
Gates memos | Changing the World Together
Gates memos | Microsoft .NET Today
Gates memos | Trustworthy computing
Gates memos | The Internet Services Disruption
Interactive time line: Bill Gates and Microsoft grow up together
What do think the Gates legacy will be?
What would you write on Bill Gates' going away card?
Gallery | Bill Gates: His Legacy at Microsoft
YouTube | Spoof video from Gates' last CES
Audio clips from the Gates interview
"Is Microsoft ready to go on without him?"
"Could Foundation activities have unintended consequences?"
For all the superlatives used to describe Microsoft's rise and stature over the years, at its heart are two guys who never would have guessed how big the company and the industry have become.
That sentiment came out as Microsoft said goodbye Friday to Bill Gates, who co-founded the company 33 years ago and now turns his full-time attention to philanthropy.
Gates made an exception to his usual distaste for self-congratulation, spending more than an hour in an open, emotional reminiscence with his friend, business partner and successor, Steve Ballmer.
"My life's work really is about software and working with incredible people," Gates said with tears in his eyes at a gathering on the company's Redmond campus. "And I love working with smart people. I love working with Steve. I love working with all the incredible people here."
Earlier in the week, Gates learned that the company's software-development-tools business had passed $1 billion in sales for the year.
"I remember Steve and I staying up late at night wondering if any software company, whether it was Microsoft or anyone, could ever get to a billion in sales," Gates said. "That is a big number."
In the fiscal year that ends Monday, Microsoft is expected to have total sales of more than $60 billion.
Microsoft has its origins in the big dreams of Gates and Paul Allen, who discovered computing together at Lakeside School in North Seattle. They imagined a time when computers would be affordable and software would do amazing things. Gates said the dream "seemed very crazy" at the time.
"I dropped out of school, we got the company going and people thought we were kind of strange guys," he said. "... We've come an amazing distance."
A defining triumph was the company's battle with the dominant company of the day, IBM. Gates called it a David vs. Goliath story that "came out with the right ending."
In other areas, Gates acknowledged the company made mistakes and has been late to appreciate some trends in technology. "But we've come back and we learn from those things, and a lot of our best work is the result of that," he said.
The areas where Microsoft is the biggest underdog today are Internet search and advertising. Gates said Microsoft is applying its time-tested formula of putting together teams of smart people, studying the competition, conducting research of its own and coming out with a better product.
"Even though it takes years before people see the full effect of that, it's an exciting thing," he said. "We have so many opportunities to surprise people."
Ballmer said it's more fun to come from behind in business.
"It's actually harder, and a lot of people who work for the company now have never done it," he said.
The two men shared a small stage in an auditorium on Microsoft's headquarters campus, which now sprawls on both sides of Highway 520 — a physical representation of the company's dramatic growth.
Gates recalled nearly 30 years ago when he was trying to attract Ballmer to the company, which only had about 30 employees at the time.
"I'd hired my friends, which was a small set, and that wasn't going to get us there," Gates said.
Gates and Ballmer discussed the need to grow the staff. They could imagine doubling, from 100 to 200, or 200 to 400. "But we always thought that would be it," Gates said.
In pursuing the company's dream of a computer on every desk, they were more preoccupied with "whether the company could handle the craziness of our current size. We never said, 'Well, someday we'll be 10,000, so let's not worry about the problems of being 2,000,' " Gates said.
As of Wednesday, the company counted 91,192 employees worldwide. Nearly 39,500 of them work in the Puget Sound region.
"But if anybody's wondering when we're going to have 180,000 people, stop wondering," Ballmer said.
Gates added, "No, I don't think we'll double again. But I've been wrong before."
About 800 employees, family members and figures from Microsoft's past attended live. Others watched on big screens in cafeterias around the campus and at their desks in Microsoft's offices around the world.
"It's an emotional day for everyone," said Tracy Chen, one of the employees who won a lottery to see Gates' send off in person. "I think he was very sincere and we were hearing a lot of personal stories."
Ballmer said he struggled with an adequate way to mark Gates' departure after more than three decades, the creation of a company and an industry for it to dominate. First, he gave Gates a scrapbook. Then he said an emotional thank you.
Every individual at Microsoft, "whether you started last week or whether you started 28 years ago," has the opportunity to contribute to society, develop as a professional, work with the best and the brightest in the world and prosper personally, Ballmer said.
"We've been given an enormous opportunity, and Bill gave us that opportunity," Ballmer said, choking out the words through tears. "I want to thank Bill for that and I want you to, too."
Benjamin J. Romano: 206-464-2149 or bromano@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Glass half full for Microsoft shareholders
Future bright for Microsoft cloud computing, server president says
Mood should be merrier at Microsoft shareholders meeting
Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud-computing platform goes live Jan. 1

LA Galaxy's David Beckham
Los Angeles Galaxy's David Beckham talks about the upcoming MLS Cup final during after a team practice.
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- Monfort fired after excellent worker turned unreliable
- Sentence request for US woman in Italy murder case
- 31 years for man who killed girlfriend, then lit cigarette and waited for police
- Boeing facility death was suicide
- Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
- Man falls 8 stories, suffers minor injuries
- Mariners Blog | A Mariners-Tigers swap makes a whole lot of sense for both teams
- Man shot in chest on E. Union Street in Capitol Hill
- Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
- Mariners Blog | Dustin Ackley to move to second base; Mariners add six to 40-man roster
- Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
170 - Italian prosecutors wrap up in Knox murder trial
109 - Boeing breaks ground for historic SC plant
86 - A Mariners-Tigers swap makes a whole lot of sense for both teams
84 - Mariners add six to 40-man roster
83 - Man sentenced to 31 years in prison in girlfriend's slaying on I-5
79 - First key vote today on Senate health bill
71 - Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again
53 - Man shot in Capitol Hill
52 - Italian lead prosecutor argues Knox motive was hatred
43
- Swedish threatens to end Regence BlueShield's contract
- Washington state wines make annual best-of list
- Recipes: Sesame Pork Roast, Sour Cream Mashed Potatoes, Gingerbread with Lemon Sauce and more
- It's possible to recover a life lost to hoarding
- Restaurant review | Artisanal at The Bravern shows French flair in delicious style
- Seattle industrial artist Rusty Oliver is the man behind 'Smash Putt'
- Peruvian police: Gang killed people for their fat
- Nonprofits get creative using Twitter and Facebook to make donation easier
- $335 million in education grants
- Lynnwood is reinventing itself — again











