by stkai on 4/3/25, 10:45 PM
The source code is such a fun read (for the comments). I found some source code for GW-BASIC, and here are two of my favorites:
;WE COULD NOT FIT THE NUMBER INTO THE BUFFER DESPITE OUR VALIENT
;EFFORTS WE MUST POP ALL THE CHARACTERS BACK OFF THE STACK AND
;POP OFF THE BEGINNING BUFFER PRINT LOCATION AND INPUT A "%" SIGN THERE
;CONSTANTS FOR THE RANDOM NUMBER GENERATOR FOLLOW
;DO NOT CHANGE THESE WITHOUT CONSULTING KNUTH VOL 2
;CHAPTER 3 FIRST
Edit: GW-BASIC, not QBASIC (
https://github.com/microsoft/GW-BASIC)
by nilsbunger on 4/4/25, 1:47 PM
Steve Jobs used to say the problem with Microsoft is they don’t have taste.
The font-shimmering effect on scroll immediately reminded me of that, it is really distracting. And you can’t use reader mode to disable it.
(FWIW, I’m a fan of Bill Gates and all he’s done for the world)
by zabzonk on 4/4/25, 12:17 AM
I've written an Intel 8080 emulator that was portable between Dec10/VAX/IBM VM CMS. That was easy - the 8080 can be done quite simply with a 256 value switch - I did mine in FORTRAN77.
Writing a BASIC interpreter, with floating point, is much harder. Gates, Allen and other collaborators BASIC was pretty damned good.
by Barrin92 on 4/4/25, 2:34 AM
What stands out to me about Gates and Allen is the serious technical chops. Writing an emulator for the PDP-10 and then an interpreter, line editor, I/O system all in 4KB of memory. The code is worth reading and in addition to that they had a very solid business sense and pretty serious work ethic for people who were 20 years old.
It stands to me in real contrast to the "fake it till you make it", "if it works you shipped too late" hustle culture that took hold of the industry, with entire products just being API wrappers. Really hope we see more companies that start out like Microsoft again.
by jwnin on 4/3/25, 10:35 PM
Some luck, and willingness to take risks paid off in ways that could never be anticipated. Not sure I'll see something like the pc era in my lifetime. Perhaps mobile phones, or the Internet.
by jer0me on 4/3/25, 10:14 PM
by n0rdy on 4/4/25, 3:34 PM
Flipping through the source code is like a time machine tour of tech's evolution over the past 50 years. It made me wonder: will our 2025 code look as ancient by 2075?
And, btw, great infographics within the post.
by azemetre on 4/4/25, 2:20 AM
It's interesting reading this after finishing Palo Alto by Malcom Harris.
by MrFurious on 4/4/25, 7:14 PM
This website froze my phone, not joking.
by _fat_santa on 4/4/25, 2:49 PM
Total sidenode but "Gates Notes" has to be one of the most exotic personal blogs I've ever seen. At this point would you even consider this a personal blog?
by ChuckMcM on 4/4/25, 1:04 AM
I would say, "Looking forward to the github repo with this code in ASCII" but I realize Microsoft would likely not allow that.
by keepamovin on 4/4/25, 4:02 AM
Damn this is cool. I think text is an underutilized medium for design.
by santiagobasulto on 4/3/25, 10:46 PM
Microsoft (and maybe even Bill Gates personally) generated a strong "dislike" sentiment to the hacker community. But we can't deny that he and Paul Allen were pure breed hackers and helped a lot the development of technology. Of course, we all prefer OSS and we'd pick Linus (or insert OSS dev name here) 100 times over one of the "evil capitalists"/s, but nevertheless they have to be recognized.
by -__---____-ZXyw on 4/4/25, 10:08 PM
Tried to open this page and the music I was streaming started to stutter so hard I just exed out. Is this a preposterously heavy page, or just very heavy?
by jlmcgraw on 4/4/25, 10:42 PM
I wonder who the handwritten notes on page 98 are by?
Starts with "confirm plane reservation on Tue. Sept 2 or Wed. Sept 3" which is correct for 1975
by djmips on 4/4/25, 8:07 PM
by PythonicIT on 4/4/25, 10:42 PM
I'm not as smart as you guys but I figured that I'm going to try and write wine for life every single thing on GitHub unless someone has done it already so that we could try to compile and build this thing directly on our own computers.
by dr_dshiv on 4/4/25, 11:57 PM
by starik36 on 4/3/25, 10:21 PM
The screenshot of the source code at the end of the article is a ton of printed code.
How was it then entered into the Altair? Did someone have to retype it? Or was there media that predated floppies that was used?
by ElijahLynn on 4/4/25, 8:02 PM
What's compelling is that he basically starts off saying that they lied... to MITS.
by froggertoaster on 4/4/25, 3:07 AM
I met Bill Gates briefly a few years ago. Nice guy. Definitely buying his book.
by djmips on 4/4/25, 8:22 PM
Note that the constants in the PDF are in Octal!
by rayiner on 4/4/25, 1:16 AM
The fact that Microsoft has a $2.77 trillion market cap despite being terrible at virtually everything it tries to do proves large swaths of the economy are fake.
by srb24 on 4/4/25, 6:11 AM
i thought they started by writing traffic control software, where's that source code? :)
by youheard on 4/5/25, 11:50 AM
the design of this website is insane
by nxpnsv on 4/4/25, 8:01 AM
Nice design
by amai on 4/4/25, 4:24 PM
Source code published as PDF? Come on, this should be published on Github.
by enigma101 on 4/4/25, 3:22 PM
pretty slick
by davidblue on 4/3/25, 11:54 PM
Love how absolutely engorged and broken this web page is to dramatically depict a style that - were the article actually just published in plain text - would be what... a millionth the size? Should have known better than to be surprised that the "source code" one can "download" and "look through" is in a goddamned PDF.
I do truly wonder if the fact that he was publishing a PDF as downloadable "code" even caused him any pause lol.
by billforsternz on 4/3/25, 10:44 PM
There's something rather cringeworthy about the heavy and painful animations etc. on this website trying to create a 1970s computer technology vibe but instead just giving me a headache. I'd much prefer the same information, and the same vibe, with some much less fancy, lightweight easy to read web tech that actually simulates an authentic 1970s experience (I remember that era well! I'm an 8080 programmer myself from way way back).
by jonathanlydall on 4/4/25, 8:49 PM
[flagged]
by winrid on 4/4/25, 2:10 AM
This website is the biggest missed opportunity to use win98.css ever
by switch007 on 4/4/25, 12:35 AM
Guys, even reading this article could land you in jail!! Reading the code will forever taint your knowledge and cause every line you write to be subject to a lawsuit !! Stay safe !11
(Anyone else remember 2004, how scared everyone was when the Windows 2000 source was leaked?)
by gloosx on 4/4/25, 7:15 AM
[flagged]
by firefax on 4/4/25, 1:46 PM
Why do I need to enable JS to view this website?
by Seanambers on 4/4/25, 12:32 AM
Its written for people who know nothing about computers but most people who will read it knows loads.
by ok123456 on 4/4/25, 6:31 PM
Gates pivoting back to being a "computer genius" reflects how badly his philanthropic reputation laundering operation is going.
by hulitu on 4/4/25, 5:37 AM
> Celebrate 50 years of Microsoft
Maybe vomit.
So many days lost trying to use Windows, Office and other "apps"[1] from Mictosoft.
[1] They were never able to write programs.
by whatever1 on 4/4/25, 2:46 AM
Cool Bill. But do you have what it takes to fix the onedrive shared folder bug that has been open for more than a year?
by breadwinner on 4/3/25, 10:14 PM