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The earliest employees at Microsoft were part of a group now affectionately known as the "Albuquerque Eleven."
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Neither of the two founders are still active day-to-day at Microsoft. Gates handed over the CEO reins to , an early Microsoft employee, in 2000, and stepped into a technology advisor role himself. Gates served as chairman until 2014, and currently is heavily involved in the foundation he and his former wife, Melinda also started in 2000.
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has given away since its founding to causes tied to eradicating diseases and reducing poverty and inequity around the world.
Paul Allen resigned as Microsoft’s chief technologist after being diagnosed with Hodgkin disease in He went on to start several different ventures, including another software company, and a He also was the owner of two American sports teams: the and the Diagnosed with cancer in 2009, Allen passed away on
Marc McDonald is generally identified as Microsoft’s first-ever employee (after its founders). McDonald was hired in 1976 as He is credited for creating a computer file system that adapted to BASIC (an early computer programming language) and Microsoft’s earliest operating system—Windows.
He left the company in 1984 to join a company Paul Allen went on to start, Aysemtrix. McDonald found himself back at Microsoft in 1993 when it Design Intelligence, the Seattle-based software company where he was then working.
Ric Weiland is credited as the, joining the team a year after McDonald in 1977 as a computer programmer. A high school friend of both Gates and Allen, Weiland, the trio started the Lakeside Programming Group together at their high school in 1969. Weiland ended up postponing his last undergraduate year at Stanford to join his old classmates to build Microsoft. He eventually became lead programmer at the company, until he left in 1988.
Outside of Microsoft, Weiland was — living with a positive diagnosis himself. After he left Microsoft, Weiland turned his attention to philanthropy, donating nearly in his lifetime to fund medical advancements in HIV/AIDs research, and to aid legal, social and educational change for LGBTQ groups. He died by suicide in June 2006 at the age of 53.
Bob Greenberg was hired in 1977 as a computer programmer. Greenberg was the one to arrange the of the 11 early Microsoft employees. He won the portrait through a radio call-in contest in Albuquerque, where they were originally based. He left Microsoft in 1981, after helping build a new version of the computer programming language BASIC.
Interestingly enough, Greenberg went on to help his family’s company, Coelco, , another successful business venture.
One of Microsoft’s earliest hires was Andrea Lewis, a technical writer from Albuquerque. Her job was to write documents She left Microsoft in 1983 to work as a freelance journalist and a fiction writer. She went on to co-found , a literary community center in Seattle that’s been operating as a hub for writers since 1996.
While the order is not confirmed for when the rest of the group was hired, there were several early employees pictured that were instrumental in the early success of Microsoft.
Bob O’Rear was and also one of the oldest employees working at Microsoft at the time. O’Rear spent most of his career at NASA, and was even at mission control during the moon landing. He joined Gates and Allen as its chief mathematician, and is credited with reworking code in DOS and getting it into IBM personal computers. O’Rear eventually left the company in 1993 and moved back to his home state of Texas to become a cattle rancher.
Steve Wood worked as a programmer and his wife Maria also worked for the company as a bookkeeper. Maria was the first employee to leave, just two years after she was hired in 1980, and sued the company for sex discrimination. Microsoft eventually settled the case with her.
Jim Lane, Bob Wallace and Gordon Letwin all worked together as a trio of programmers.
While not pictured, office manager was also a key player in keeping all office administration up to date in the early years at Microsoft. She was hired by Steve Wood once while Gates was away, and even joined her fellow colleagues inof the iconic 1978 photo that she missed because of a snowstorm in 2000, when Gates stepped away from a daily role at Microsoft.
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