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| + | ====== The Forgotten Genius of Gary Kildall ====== | ||
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| + | **Gary Kildall is the forgotten geek should be remembered for creating the first programming language and first compiler specifically for microprocessors and the first microprocessor disk operating system.** | ||
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| + | The mythology tells the story of Gary Kildall as a man who could have been the next Bill Gates, that was screwed over by IBM, cheated by Microsoft, and died in a fight in a biker bar. | ||
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| + | Gary Kildall is one of the founders of the personal computer industry, but you probably don’t know his name. Usually when someone talks about DOS referring to the microcomputer Disk Operating System they are usually talking about Microsoft DOS. | ||
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| + | Many geek history websites will tell you about Microsoft DOS being created in 1980, they often overlook CP/M developed in 1974 by Gary Kildall. | ||
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| + | I recently stumbled upon some videos from the mid 1980s and watched Gary Kildall explaining CP/M. Those 1980s videos brought back memories as I remembered the first desktop computers, I worked on used CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers). | ||
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| + | Gary Kildall' | ||
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| + | **Gary Kildall BIO** | ||
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| + | Gary Kildall grew up in Seattle, Washington, the son of a Norwegian‑heritage sea captain who ran a seamanship school. Maybe that’s where Gary got his love of adventure—because he spent his life chasing the things that made him feel alive: flying, sports cars, racing, boating, and anything that involved motion and risk. He loved the sea, but he also loved the sky. | ||
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| + | He earned a bachelor’s in mathematics in 1967 and a master’s in computer science in 1968, both from the University of Washington. When the Vietnam War draft came calling, he fulfilled his obligation by teaching at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. Afterward, he returned to UW and completed his doctorate in computer science in 1972. | ||
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| + | **Then came the moment that should have made him a household name.** | ||
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| + | In 1974, in Pacific Grove, California, Gary Kildall demonstrated the first working prototype of CP/M—the operating system that would dominate early microcomputers. And he didn’t stop there. He also created the BIOS, the Basic Input/ | ||
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| + | **Digital Research is born** | ||
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| + | In 1976, Gary and his wife Dorothy founded a company with a name only a true geek could love: Intergalactic Digital Research. Eventually they shortened it to Digital Research, Inc., but the spirit stayed the same. They marketed CP/M through hobbyist magazines, and for a while, CP/M was the operating system for microcomputers. | ||
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| + | **The IBM meeting that became mythology** | ||
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| + | In 1980, IBM approached Digital Research to license CP/M‑86 for their new IBM PC. Gary did what he often did—he left the initial business negotiations to Dorothy while he and colleague Tom Rolander flew Gary’s private plane to deliver software to a client. | ||
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| + | IBM insisted Dorothy sign a non‑disclosure agreement before even explaining why they were there. Dorothy refused without Gary’s approval. When Gary returned later that day, he tried to resume the conversation, | ||
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| + | What we do know is this: IBM walked away frustrated, Microsoft stepped in, and the world got MS‑DOS. | ||
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| + | **DRI vs. IBM and Microsoft** | ||
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| + | When Gary later saw an early copy of MS‑DOS, he was furious at the similarities to CP/M. At a meeting with IBM, he agreed not to sue for copyright infringement if IBM would market his version alongside theirs. | ||
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| + | IBM agreed—sort of. | ||
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| + | What they didn’t tell him was that PC‑DOS would sell for $40, while CP/M‑86 would sell for $240. A six‑to‑one price difference. A rigged game. A “let the market decide” setup where the market had already been told which answer was correct. | ||
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| + | In a 1995 episode of Computer Chronicles, Tom Rolander recalled how stunned they were when they learned about the pricing. They had no idea IBM planned to stack the deck that heavily. | ||
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| + | Gary believed IBM intentionally priced CP/M‑86 out of the market to marginalize Digital Research. And honestly, looking at the numbers, it’s hard to argue with him. | ||
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| + | This was the moment that changed him. The moment the creative technologist became a frustrated businessman. The moment the drinking began. His colleagues said the IBM experience haunted him. He spent years being asked, “Are you the guy who blew off IBM to go flying? | ||
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| + | In later years, he grew increasingly bitter about being overshadowed by Microsoft. And the alcoholism worsened. | ||
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| + | **Gary and Dorothy | ||
| + | ** | ||
| + | Gary and Dorothy were partners in every sense at the beginning—co‑founders, | ||
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| + | The ultimate insult | ||
| + | In 1992, the University of Washington held a 25th‑anniversary event for its computer science program. Gary, one of its most distinguished graduates, was invited—not to speak, but to sit in the audience. The keynote speaker? Bill Gates. A Harvard dropout who had never attended UW but had donated money. | ||
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| + | Gary took it as the insult it was. | ||
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| + | **The death of a pioneer** | ||
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| + | On July 8, 1994, at age 52, Gary Kildall sustained a head injury at the Franklin Street Bar & Grill, a biker bar in Monterey, California. The exact circumstances remain unclear. The autopsy found evidence of chronic alcoholism. Early reports considered the possibility of homicide. The coroner noted the injury may have resulted from foul play. Police investigated but never reached a definitive conclusion. | ||
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| + | Gary was cremated, and his remains were buried in Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park in north Seattle. | ||
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| + | **The final battle** | ||
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| + | The last chapter of Digital Research vs. Microsoft played out after Gary’s death. | ||
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| + | Years earlier, Gary had offered to sell Digital Research to Bill Gates for $26 million. Gates told him the company was worth no more than $10 million. | ||
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| + | In 1991, Gary sold Digital Research to Novell for $120 million. | ||
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| + | Five years later, in 1996, Caldera acquired the Digital Research assets from Novell and immediately filed an antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft—one of the few times the score was even partially settled. | ||
| + | Gary never wanted to file suit against Microsoft because he always believed that in the end excellence in programming would win in the marketplace. | ||
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| + | Gary wasn't alive to see it, the final battle of Digital Research versus Microsoft was a victory for Digital Research. | ||
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| + | **Closing thoughts** | ||
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| + | The article announcing Kildall' | ||
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| + | Writing this script renewed my appreciation of Gary Kildall, as a forgotten geek that deserves to be remember for his many accomplishments. | ||
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| + | Writing this script also reminded me of the ruthless nature of Bill Gates. | ||
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| + | Written in the months before his death in 1994, Kildall' | ||
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| + | I wrote this script from perspective of telling the story of Gary Kildall without getting too deep into the geek speak and buzzwords of the personal computer industry. | ||
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| + | Kildall had a very kind heart and never sued Microsoft or IBM for cheating him. Instead, he went on to host the show Computer Chronicles and later on died a mysterious death in a biker’s bar, where he sustained multiple head injuries. | ||
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| + | Gary Kildall, was one of the founders of the personal computer industry, but you probably don’t know his name. | ||
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| + | Gary viewed computers as learning tools rather than profit engines. | ||
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| + | He laid the ground work from which all personal computers evolved. | ||
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| + | #geek #history # | ||
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| + | ---- | ||
| + | #9 The Forgotten Genius of Gary Kildall | ||
| + | The Legacy of Forgotten Genius Gary Kildall | ||
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| + | Gary Kildall should have been one of the most famous names in computer history. Instead, he became a footnote. Gary Kildall was overshadowed by IBM, erased by Microsoft, and buried under decades of mythology. | ||
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| + | This video tells the real story of Gary Kildall: | ||
| + | the creator of CP/M, inventor of the BIOS, co‑founder of Digital Research, and one of the true architects of the personal computer revolution. | ||
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| + | He wasn’t the reckless guy who “blew off IBM to go flying.” | ||
| + | He wasn’t the myth. | ||
| + | He was a brilliant, adventurous, | ||
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| + | From the IBM negotiations to the MS‑DOS takeover, from the price‑rigging that crushed CP/M to the personal toll it took on him, this is the story of a pioneer who deserved better—and deserves to be remembered. | ||
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| + | Titles Fortnote Sabe Game 8 | ||
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| + | See the complete | ||
| + | video on YouTube | ||
| + | @CrankyCynic | ||
| + | https:// | ||
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| + | Learn about Gary Kildall. It's a Shakespearean tragedy set in the early 1980s. | ||
Sorry if some of the pages having missing graphics or a bookmarked page is missing. We are migrating our site over to DokuWiki from Drupal. The last major overhaul of our site was in 2016, and we were due for some freshening up.
The collection of material for the study of geek history dates back to my early days in technology as far back as the 1970s. You will find specific footnotes and references on many pages with links to current websites. Anytime a claim is made, or a fact is stated from a website or blog that does not appear to have firsthand knowledge of the subject I make a note to follow up on it. I can assure you that anything I have written is based on verification of facts from a source as close to the events and individuals as possible or multiple sources of information from leading publications or references.
