The New Zealand Herald

Microsoft’s co-founder Paul Allen dies

- — Bloomberg

Paul Allen, who co-founded Microsoft with fellow billionair­e Bill Gates and used the fortune he made from the iconic technology company to invest in profession­al sports teams, cable TV and real estate, has died. He was 65.

Allen died on Monday in Seattle from complicati­ons of non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, according to a statement from Vulcan, his investment firm.

Allen’s source for his varied investment­s and sizeable charitable donations was his once-major stake in Microsoft. He had a net worth of US$26.1 billion ($3.97b), according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Allen, along with Gates, helped create an entire industry selling software for a new breed of smaller, more affordable and widely accessible computers.

“Paul Allen’s contributi­ons to our company, our industry and to our community are indispensa­ble,” Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella said in a statement. “As co-founder of Microsoft, in his own quiet and persistent way, he created magical products, experience­s and institutio­ns, and in doing so, he changed the world.”

He stepped down as an officer of the company in 1983 because he was grappling with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. In 2009, Allen was treated for nonHodgkin’s lymphoma, which two weeks ago he said had returned.

“A high-tech demigod” is how Sports Illustrate­d described the man who came up with the name for Microsoft, a company whose ubiquitous products include the Windows operating system and the Office suite of software.

“He is one of the richest men in history, a figure of such dizzying wealth and eclectic tastes that he recently donated $100 million to brain research and $25m to the search for extraterre­strial life,” the magazine wrote in a 2007 profile. Paul Gardner Allen was born on January 21, 1953, in Seattle. His father Kenneth was a university library executive and his mother Faye was a teacher. Allen went to the Lakeside School, where he met a younger Gates as the two worked on early computer programs in the school’s lab.

In a time when computers were rare, Allen lurked in the University of Washington computer labs, using the machines and aiding students and professors. Finally a professor asked if he was actually a student and Allen was forced to admit he wasn’t. But he was allowed to stay as long as he continued to be helpful, Allen said in a 2017 interview.

He attended Washington State University but didn’t graduate, dropping out and moving to Massachuse­tts to be closer to fellow computer aficionado Gates, who was attending Harvard University.

In 1975, they founded a company they called Micro-Soft, after Allen saw a new Altair computer kit on the cover of Popular Electronic­s magazine and realised computer prices would drop and software would be necessary. As they struggled to produce operating software for Altair and Internatio­nal Business Machines microcompu­ters, Allen was regarded as the brains of the partnershi­p, while Gates was the marketing whiz, according to Laura Rich, author of The Accidental Zillionair­e, an unauthoris­ed biography of Allen.

Allen, a Microsoft general partner, initially held the title of vicepresid­ent.

When he left in 1983 for health reasons, he was executive vicepresid­ent in charge of research and new product developmen­t. He remained on the board until 2000 and was a senior strategy adviser after that.

 ?? Photos / Getty Images ?? Paul Allen (above) who died this week, and (inset) with co-founder Bill Gates in the early days of Microsoft.
Photos / Getty Images Paul Allen (above) who died this week, and (inset) with co-founder Bill Gates in the early days of Microsoft.
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