Source Code, the Microsoft co-founder’s first of three memoirs, gives us a glimpse at the man behind the businessman - but there's one real shame
The Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist is taking a break from the future to examine his past — and mulling where the billionaires now fit in.
In his new memoir, Bill Gates doesn’t mention any study of William Wordsworth’s writings. But when I read Source Code: My Beginnings, I thought of the English poet’s famous line from 1802: “The child is father of the man.
Part of the trip was exhilarating,” Gates admits — but it was less fun the following day, when he was still “feeling its effects” during dental surgery
In an exclusive excerpt from his new memoir, the co-founder of Microsoft describes his ‘lucky’ adolescence and his parents’ support for what he now sees as his own neurodivergence.
Microsoft co-founder and billionaire Bill Gates recently revealed that his divorce from ex-wife Melinda French Gates was his biggest regret. In an interview with British newspaper The Times ...
Bill Gates recently offered his thoughts on the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). On the topic of President Donald Trump’s DOGE, the billionaire Microsoft co-founder told The Wall ...
Microsoft founder Bill Gates told the NYT which of his tech predictions didn't go as expected, and what he's worried about.
Bill Gates's biggest regret is his divorce from his ex-wife, Melinda. Divorce is strongly linked to poor mental health and physical health outcomes.
Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, reveals that if assessed today, he might be diagnosed with autism. Reflecting in his memoir 'Source Code,' Gates shares how traits linked to autism, like avoiding social interactions and repetitive behaviors,
Ian Allen/Gates Notes Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is telling his “origin story” in his own words with the memoir Source Code, being released on Feb. 4 "My parents and early friends put me ...
Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates, 69, tells his remarkable origin story, from childhood through the beginnings of Microsoft, which he cofounded with Paul Allen back in 1975 at age 19 (he's planning to write two more volumes,