Iran Daily

Microsoft co-founder, investor, philanthro­pist Allen dead at 65

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Paul Allen, who founded Microsoft with Bill Gates in the 1970s and later went on to become an investor, philanthro­pist and sports team owner, died Monday after his latest battle with cancer at age 65.

“My brother was a remarkable individual on every level. While most knew Paul Allen as a technologi­st and philanthro­pist, for us he was a much loved brother and uncle and an exceptiona­l friend,” Allen’s sister Jody said in a statement announcing his death, AFP wrote.

In recent years, Allen was known as the owner of the NFL’S Seattle Seahawks and the NBA’S Portland Trail Blazers, and part owner of the Major League Soccer team the Seattle Sounders, along with a variety of business and charitable ventures.

One of the world’s wealthiest billionair­es, Allen also founded Stratolaun­ch Systems, which built the world’s largest plane designed as a colossal rocket-launching aircraft touted as the future of space travel.

The craft was on track for its first launch demonstrat­ion as early as 2019.

Allen died just two weeks after publicly revealing that non-hodgkin’s lymphoma he fought into remission nine years ago had returned. The incurable cancer affects white blood cells.

He never married and had no children.

Classmate of Gates

Allen was a high school classmate of Gates in Seattle, and later, while working as a computer programmer, persuaded his friend to drop out of Harvard to create Microsoft, which became the world’s most valuable company in the 1990s.

A ‘heartbroke­n’ Gates remembered Allen as “one of my oldest and dearest friends”.

“Personal computing would not have existed without him,” Gates added.

“He was fond of saying, ‘If it has the potential to do good, then we should do it’. That’s the kind of person he was.”

Allen had left Microsoft by 1983 for health reasons but held on to shares that made up the bulk of his fortune, estimated at some $20 billion.

“All of us who had the honor of working with Paul feel inexpressi­ble loss today,” said a statement by Vulcan, the investment firm that managed his operations.

“He possessed a remarkable intellect and a passion to solve some of the world’s most difficult problems, with the conviction that creative thinking and new approaches could make profound and lasting impact.”

Microsoft said Allen’s “contributi­ons to our company, our industry and to our community are indispensa­ble”.

“As cofounder of Microsoft, in his own quiet and persistent way, he created magical products, experience­s and institutio­ns. And in doing so, he changed the world,” added the company’s CEO, Satya Nadella.

While Gates attended Harvard, Allen studied at the University of Washington and invested heavily in research projects in his hometown of Seattle.

He invested $100 million to found the Allen Institute for Brain Science in 2003.

A decade later, he founded the Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligen­ce to study the impacts on society of new technologi­es and the Allen Institute for Cell Science to fund research for treatment of diseases.

Big man in sports

In the world of sports, Allen in 1988 bought the Trail Blazers, taking the team to the NBA finals twice.

“Paul Allen was the ultimate trail blazer — in business, philanthro­py and in sports,” said the NBA commission­er, Adam Silver.

“As one of the longest-tenured owners in the NBA, Paul brought a sense of discovery and vision to every league matter large and small.”

He was also credited with putting Seattle on the map for the NFL.

“Paul Allen was the driving force behind keeping the NFL in the Pacific Northwest,” the NFL commission­er, Roger Goodell, said in a statement.

“His vision led to the constructi­on of Centurylin­k Field and the building of a team that played in three Super Bowls, winning the championsh­ip in Super Bowl XLVIII.”

His personal charitable foundation gave to a diverse array of causes, including anti-poaching initiative­s in Africa, climate and energy research and projects on homelessne­ss as well as the arts and culture.

Actor and environmen­talist Leonardo Dicaprio hailed Allen as a “strong advocate for environmen­tal protection”.

“His legacy lives on via his incredible work as a philanthro­pist and investor,” he added.

Amazon, Blue Origin and The Washington Post owner, Jeff Bezos, said Allen’s “passion for invention and pushing forward inspired so many. He was relentless to the end”.

In his 2011 memoir ‘Idea Man’, Allen described a somewhat stormy relationsh­ip with Gates in the early days of Microsoft.

Allen wrote that he had expected a 50-50 split in the new company, but Gates insisted on taking 60 percent, and later raised it to 64 percent, claiming that Gates schemed to ‘rip me off’.

 ??  ?? MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGESNORT­H AMERICA Paul Allen is seen during a 2006 event at the US Capitol in Washington where he spoke about the completion of the Allen Brain Atlas, a neuroscien­ce initiative.
MARK WILSON/GETTY IMAGESNORT­H AMERICA Paul Allen is seen during a 2006 event at the US Capitol in Washington where he spoke about the completion of the Allen Brain Atlas, a neuroscien­ce initiative.

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