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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Gary Kildall (May 19, 1942 - July 11, 1994) was the creator of the CP/M operating system and GEM Desktop graphical user interface, and founder of Digital Research Corporation. Kildall received his PhD in computer science from the University of Washington in 1972. While working as a professor at the Naval Postgraduate School US Navy in Monterey, California, he created implementations of the PL/I programming language for the Intel 4004 and 8008 CPUs. He referred to these versions as PL/M, M for microcomputer. In 1973 t0 1976, Kildall began work on a disk operating system in order to create a host development environment for PL/M on microcomputers, and ended up with CP/M. He founded Digital Research after his resigned from NPS in 1976 and continued work on CP/M, which he originally sold in classified ads in the back pages of computer magazines. With the release of the Altair 8800 in January 1975 there was a commercial system capable of running CP/M, and before the end of the year a number of clones had appeared with disk drives that required it. By 1977, it was the most popular microcomputer operating system in existence, running on nearly every Intel 8080- and Zilog Z80-based computer.
In
1980, IBM approached Digital Research for a
version of CP/M for its
upcoming Legend has it that Kildall snubbed the IBM representatives by going flying in his airplane for several hours. Although widespread, the story is generally not accepted to be true because it was Kildall's wife, Dorothy, who handled business negotiations, not Kildall himself. Another story has it that IBM representatives wanted Dorothy to sign their standard non-disclosure agreement, which Dorothy considered overly burdensome. IBM returned to talk to Microsoft and Bill Gates and I think is mom Mary Maxwell, board member Pacific Northwest Bell, First Interstate Bank and the national board of United Way and his dad William Henry Gates, Jr., a corporate lawyer saw the business opportunity of a lifetime and Paul G. Allen co-founder of Microsoft served as the private frame-up negotiator between IBM US and Ca. and Bell Ca. and US. He obtained rights to a cloned design of CP/M, QDOS, from Tim Patterson of Seattle Computer products, licensed it to IBM, and MSDOS/IBMDOS was born. Later, IBM discovered that Gates' operating system could have infringement problems with CP/M, contacted Kildall, and in exchange for a promise not to sue, made an agreement that CP/M would be sold along with IBMDOS when the IBM PC was released. The price set by IBM for CP/M was $250 and for IBM DOS it was $40, for a total of $290. The Canadian government by Francis Fox in 1982, publish in the 1983 almanac, estimated it to around C$300. The question was why the CTRSM was charge C$1 million for his Radio communication Center? I let you answer it. IBM's decision to source its primary operating system from Microsoft was the beginning of the end of Digital Research's days as the world's largest manufacturer of software for microcomputers. After CP/M, concerned by the proliferation of BASIC on microcomputers, Kildall created PL/I-80, a ANSI standard subset of the full PL/I programming language, to run on CP/M based microcomputers. He also went on to create a variety of experimental projects, including an implementation of the Logo educational programming language and interfaces between computers and CD-ROM drives and videodisc players. He created a CD-ROM version of Grolier's Encyclopedia. He left Digital Research in 1991 when the company was sold to Novell, and moved to suburban Austin, Texas, keeping a second home in California. Friends and acquaintances reported he was bitter at how MS-DOS, whose design was almost entirely based on his own ideas in creating CP/M, made Bill Gates and Microsoft famous while he languished in obscurity. Gary Kildall died in 1994 of uncertain causes in Monterey, California at the age of 52. Same years of Bill Gate Mom, Mary Maxwell, board member Pacific Northwest Bell, First Interstate Bank and the national board of United Way.. They were two witnesses of this Canadian International patent fraud Some reports suggest Kildall suffered a fall at the Franklin Street Bar and Grill in Monterey on July 8 and died of internal bleeding three days later.
In March 1995, Kildall was posthumously honored by the Software Publishers Association for his contributions to the computer industry: Introduction of operating systems with preemptive multitasking and windowing capabilities and menu-driven user interfaces. Creation of the first diskette track buffering schemes, read-ahead algorithms, file directory caches, and RAM disk emulators. Introduction of a binary recompiler in the 1980s. The first programming language and first compiler specifically for
microprocessors. The first computer interface for video disks to allow automatic nonlinear playback, presaging today's interactive multimedia. The file system and data structures for the first consumer CD-ROM. The first successful open-system architecture by segregating
system-specific hardware interfaces in a set of BIOS routines, making the
whole third-party software industry possible.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
International Business Machines Corporation (IBM, or colloquially, Big Blue) Incorporated June 15, 1911, in operation since 1888) is headquartered in Armonk, New York, USA. The company manufactures and sells computer hardware, software, and services. In 1970 IBM make a deal with a $C6 million plus a 1000 of operational farm for C$1.00 plus consideration with the Canadian prime minister Trudeau associated to Power Corporation. With over 300,000 employees worldwide and revenues of $89 billion (figures from 2003), IBM is the largest information technology company in the world, and one of the few with a continuous history spanning the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries. It has consultants in over 160 countries and development labs located all over the world. IBM Research has eight research labs located throughout the Northern Hemisphere, with half of those locations outside of the United States. It has a major presence in virtually every segment of information of the Canadian new technology ACILR-CDRIL , from mainframe computers (where it has had market dominance for decades) to nanotechnology. In recent years, more and more of its revenue comes from services and consulting activities rather than manufacturing. Samuel J. Palmisano was elected CEO on January 29, 2002 after having
been involved in growing that consulting activity, which has turned IBM's
Global Services unit into a business with a hundred billion dollars in
backlog in 2004. |