Bill
Gates Retires
by
George Giles
by George Giles
DIGG THIS
One of the
greatest industrialists of all times, certainly the greatest of
modern times retired last Friday. William Henry Gates, after 33
years as the Chief Executive Officer, Software Architect and Chairman
of the Board of the Microsoft Corporation called it quits. His retirement
closes out the era in which the microprocessor-based computer went
from a hobbyist curiosity to the ubiquitous device of the modern
world. Distributed computing grew from an obscure niche in computer
science to the communication fabric of the current digital millennium.
Bill Gates'
vision took Microsoft Corporation from a group of young, wild-eyed,
enthusiastic iconoclasts to being one of the most valuable corporations
in the world. He did it without a dollar from the taxpayers, without
the assistance of any government agency, asking only to be paid
for his product. It is a classic story of creating wealth from nothingness
through the power of vision, human creativity and hard work.
Gates' detractors
were largely competitors that fell by the wayside as they could
not keep up with his vision as he redefined the modern corporation
in its abilities to respond to customer needs and input in a rapidly
changing market and technological infrastructure. Xerox, Apple,
IBM, Digital Equipment, and Sun all at one time or another had superior
technologies, higher market valuations and larger capital pools
than Microsoft. Yet by the dawn of the twenty-first century, after
only 25 years they had all been left behind. Xerox was out of the
computer business entirely, after having invented the graphical
user interface, networking and the mouse pointer. Digital Equipment
and the VAX architecture are dead and buried. Sun is on life support
as it watches market share crumble away. IBM dramatically reinvented
itself when it had one foot in the grave but now sells more services
than hardware. Apple emulated Microsoft by remaking itself with
its multimedia products, the iPod and iPhone.
When Sun and
Netscape conspired successfully to get the justice department to
consider Microsoft as a monopoly, there was a momentary hesitation
by Gates as he was dragged in to a world that he had never considered
relevant: the politics of envy in Washington. When this happened
Microsoft did not even have an office in Washington, let alone any
lobbyists. That was as foreign to Bill Gates mentality as alchemy.
The world owes a debt of gratitude to Judge Robert Penfield Jackson
when he struck a blow for economic freedom by ruling in favor of
the defendant, Microsoft.
Along the way
Bill Gates created more billionaires and millionaires than any firm
in history. Microsoft has extended his vision of distributed computing
in a networked world from the Ivy League towers of Harvard to every
country and continent on the face of the earth, from outer space
to huts in the third world. All he asked was that people pay for
his product. Don’t steal it he implored: a voluntary transaction
between vendor and customer.
Microsoft,
when sued by Sun et al., had not had a price increase in many years.
They continue to donate millions of dollars of hardware and software
every year to charity. Their development tools and libraries are
available for free on the internet to anyone that has the desire,
the knowledge and the ability to make the next killer app and join
the millionaires club.
There could
be no Google unless there first had been a Microsoft. Linux is only
viable because of it's devoted copying of Windows. The internet
started as a device for laboratories to communicate with one another
rapidly if primitively; now it has come in multi-media splendor
to your living room. Only providence knows where it will go next.
Bill Gates
ennobled mankind by empowering it to see deeper, to stretch its
imaginations farther, and to connect with others from different
faiths, philosophies, and continents by sharing the joint intellectual
property of knowledge. A classic positive-sum economic game where
the whole is greater than its parts and no one loses because all
commerce is of free will and voluntary. Bill Gates is a giant of
capitalism.
Thank for your
effort.
June
30, 2008
George
Giles [send him mail] is
an Independent writer in Nashville, TN.
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© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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