Interesting window into the history that likely shaped Microsoft's view of customers for decades since then.<p>I'd say MS still probably has that attitude baked into their company, treating customers as adversaries that need to be protected against.<p>They are definitely not known for their customer service, but they ARE known for their complex licensing and sometimes heavy-handed enforcement, that I guess maybe one could draw a line back to this as the source.
Funny that Gates mentions "$40K of computer time" when he and Paul Allen were hacking the computers paid for by someone else, and figuring out how to get themselves ... free computer time.<p>See comment and reference at <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18279370">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=18279370</a>
Much as people will hate hearing this, ultimately Gates won the argument. Formerly pro-FOSS software developers are turning away from FOSS to "open core" and other fake FOSS licenses that are actually proprietary to try to monetize their software using arguments largely identical to Gates' that it's unfair for software to be used by businesses and corporations without its creators getting some compensation for it. FOSS project owners are burning out from pressure where FAANG + MSFT simply hire new developers to replace any that want to move on to doing something new because they have the income to do so.
It's been pointed out elsewhere that the $40,000 of computer time referred to was largely on their utilization of government/publically-funded computers.
I know it isn’t popular to have this point of view, but I think Gates was right at the time. The work Microsoft did on BASIC back then was good, and it made computers usable. That people wouldn’t pay made the entire thing worthless. This ended up being why Microsoft went for hardware makers and BASIC came on ROM and MSDOS came with your PC: it was the only way to make any money on software. Today, everything people use aside from an OS (or in the case of the Linux or BSD folks, including the OS) is open source or it’s SaaS. The SaaS phenomenon gets people to pay EVEN more for software, so it will never end. The same with crappy apps on phones that are charged monthly or annually.
> Nothing would please me more than being able to hire ten programmers and deluge the hobby market with good software.<p>And after 50 years they are still not able to make good software.
If you enjoy history of computing then I can very strongly recommend you get the audiobook of "The Innovators" <a href="https://www.amazon.com/The-Innovators-Walter-Isaacson-audiobook/dp/B00M9KICAY" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.amazon.com/The-Innovators-Walter-Isaacson-audiob...</a><p>The audiobook I found thoroughly entertaining.
I’m surprised this is on the NYT site, as I thought it was first published in the homebrew computer club newsletter or creative computing.<p>I do remember that letter, not from 1976 when I was too young to grok it (or even encounter it), but from a couple of years later when it was still controversial and I was just starting to get into S-100.