Totally agree with you. I started to program back in 1983 just when I started to study physics, but professionally since 1988, and I has been witness many times, even until today, exactly of what you are saying regarding good guys swimming among sharks in the ocean of the computer world.
@@GabrielMartinezValois I'm a retired programmer myself, I suspect most are that known of Gary. Show me an industry where you don't have to swim with the sharks and I'll show you an industry that's in decline. I have noticed, over the many intervening years, that the waters of technology do seem to be abundantly populated with sharks, perhaps more so than other industries but I've my doubts on that point.
eh, CP/M was a dead end really. MS-DOS just prolonged the misery a decade or so for PC users, but Mac folk had moved into what we have now by the late 80s.
Everyone should have just populated the world with $3,000 tiny-screened Macs to populate the world with computers instead of hackable, upgradable Z80 and Intel clones. What was wrong with their thinking?
There’s nothing like Computer Chronicles. I live in the PNW and was lucky to have stumbled onto the show through Internet Archive. I wish we had a show like that today. RIP GK
So Gates basically showed he wasn't above using someone else's sweat to deal himself into the game. This is why the world doesn't need that type making decisions for it.
Every time I hear the IBM story it strikes me how weird it is to for them to just show up unannounced to make an industry-changing deal and then be peeved that a busy guy isn't there. Something not straight, there.
I knew one of the many VPs for IBM, that dealt with the OS negotiations, and he said that Kildall could have sued IBM and won over MS-DOS being a basic clone of CPM. He said that they chose Microsoft because they felt that Microsoft would do anything that IBM needed to get the system done, and they were right, they obviously underestimated Gates business savvy and ruthlessness. That being said, Gary Kildall was an extremely wealthy man, and ridiculously intelligent. If he had lived, he would be better remembered, because he would have definitely done many more things in the computer industry.
Whats not mentioned here is Bill Gates's father was a well known and respected investor in Seattle (he helped Starbucks get going) and had many connections. Bill Gates mother had a personal connection with the chairman of IBM through her non-profit.
Bill gates father also helped spear head planned parenthood and has many quotes stating his support for eugenics. Now we see his son and his lot decades into their depopulation plans.
Fascinating and tragic story. I grew up in Monterey, and I remember Digital Research. I didn't know this whole backstory, however. I feel like there are still questions I need to ask my parents while they're around.
Used to live in that neighborhood in PG and must have driven or walked pass the house hundreds of times. Thank you for sharing a fascinating piece of history.
A wonderful person who should (unfortunately is) never be forgotten. Nowhere Gates and his ilk. Gary was amazing just like the real computer was amazing. All honor and respect to truly valuable people ❤❤❤
The text on the plaque reads: IEEE MILESTONE IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTING The CP/M Microcomputer Operating System, 1974 Dr. Gary A. Kildall demonstrated the first working prototype of CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers) in Pacific Grove in 1974. Together with his invention of the BIOS (Basic Input Output System), Kildall's operating system allowed a microprocessor- based computer to communicate with a disk drive storage unit and provided an important foundation for the personal computer revolution. April 2014
“Bill is basically unimaginative and has never invented anything, which is why I think he's more comfortable now in philanthropy than technology. He just shamelessly ripped off other people's ideas.” ~ Steve Jobs
Indeed, Gates did rip off other people's ideas, but Steve Jobs wasn't the model example of original ideas. Just ask the people at Xerox Park in Palo Alto about that/
@@dmac7128 Know your history (and spelling of PARC). Jobs (and lots of people) already knew of the mouse and GUI. The visits to PARC were about technology and commercialization not invention.
@@dmac7128 The correct spelling is PARC. Jobs and other Apple employees already knew of the mouse and GUI. The visits to PARC were about technology and commercialization not invention.
I’ve become fascinated with this story of Gary Kildall, after listening in person to the playwright Steve Hauk tell me of his research and personal experiences referenced in this news piece, replaying on RUclips. He has written an amazing play on this that somehow should be produced!!!
Gates stole the serial mouse from Xerox, GUI from Apple and OS from Digital Research. There's also the kid who 'fell' to his death on a trip with Gates before MS took off.
In the 1980s I was a mainframe COBOL programmer dabbling with home computers (reading Byte Magazine, really). I bought a Radio Shack Model 16 because it could run COBOL and had dual 8-inch floppies. Cost me $5,000. I scorned the IBM PC because all the components were priced separately and COBOL cost twice as much. Little did I think that IBM would take over the non-Apple home computer market and become the popular choice. I had read about CP/M quite a bit. The problem back then was that every maker had their own hardware, but only CP/M could be a cross-platform OS. Maybe the Pick operating system also. MS-DOS limited you to the IBM PC, but it turned out that that was good enough when all the attention went to IBM. In hindsight the path looks obvious. But back then IBM seemed like a Johnny-come-lately to the home computer market. It wasn't called a PC until IBM named it the Personal Computer. Perhaps that word choice of "personal" made a difference. Either way, the PC took off unexpectedly and Microsoft did too.
Wow I guess I’ve heard his name before but never knew this story! I started working in software in 1990 after deploying the first PC-based Flight Records system for our Army pilots in 1988. Gary Kildall remember that name.
Obviously it's just a guess, but the three things I picked up here from this vignette - regret, withdrawal from his close friends and connections, and the bar, the alcohol - are in conjunction with each other.
thanks for the informative video. It's amazing that you accurately recounted that much History in under 10 minutes. I can't believe how efficiently this was shot/edited. More youtubers should take notice and try to do the same. I knew nothing about Gary Killdall or the IBM deal prior to seeing this; and I feel like I just watched a full length documentary. Bravo 👏
Did Kildall write the text of the Grolier's CD-Rom Encyclopedia or just the coding? It was a brilliant. Subjects condensed so much, to fit on a disk, that they became extremely easy to understand. It was a marvel.
It has been generally known Gary Kildall made CP/M the first OS for personal computers but was outsmarted by Bill Gates. This presentation sheds some new light on Kildall's story, and from a local TV station where news reporters drive a short distance to interview people. First PC I had used CP/M, later got another with MS-DOS. Looking back, I see Gary Kildall extremely brilliant considering he had to create something completely new. But it is a common tale throughout history where really smart people get outsmarted by business oriented people.
Did Bill Gates outsmart or trick Gary Kildall???? BG seems like a calculating schemer that will do anything to be on top. They aren't so much anymore IBM never played or plays fair when wanting to buy a business. There are no boundaries that the C-suite guys will do to get their hands on something that is selling better and made better. Buy it or do what needs to done in shutting business down, "whatever it takes". Or they will, harass business/company owners to buy their business lowballing and when not accepted they will also do "whatever it takes" to get it. The funny this that I though IBM went out of business years and years ago. I don't even see anything with IBM.
I know how he feels. I've had things like this done to me more than once. The regret and anger. Sometimes i break out into a drenching sweat thinking about what should have been mine and how evil some ppl are. It comes and goes several times a day. Sometimes, that's just the timeline that's meant to be. Maybe in a parallel universe, he did get that deal and didn't go flying.
He surrounded himself with capable people, directed them towards opportunities he saw, & made sure those opportunities saw fruition. Captain of the ship steers it to glory or into a reef. He chose glory. Sadly for Gary he did not.
Well let's see. Bill Gates had an early contract with Apple Computer to write a program in the computer language BASIC but Bill never delivered. IBM had lost an Antitrust case and so, was not going to be allowed to dominate the Desktop Computer market with Computer AND Operatimg System. IBM therefore helped found Microsoft and gave Bill Gates the Operating System (to guarantee a Market for IBM Computers). Later, the protection that IBM enjoyed from its BIOS was reverse engineered and Compaq Computer became the first of many PC Clone companies. There is nothing different about Windows 95, 98, NT, SE, ME, Vista, XP, etc., they were all the same Operating Systems (proven to me when I asked). Bill Gates used a trick with making sure the on-board applications were not backward compatibile so that anyone convinced to "upgrade" was now no longer able to share files electronically with anyone who hadn't. Bill Gates made money selling the same Operating System (on a new computer) with a new name every year. Computer makers kept their mouths shut because they made huge profits as well. The look may have been slightly better and yes it used more memory and disk space but all of it was to entice people to "upgrade". When you hear about a shortage of raw materials for smartphones, batteries or whatever, remember what Bill did. He is talentless and unable to understand what he was told in meetings so he would just pretend to get angry, demand results and leave. Bill Gates has been evil his whole life. Some recent claims about him are not true BUT there is so much about him that is little known and very evil that I am frankly, quite glad that people have stopped thinking he is or ever was "special".
leverage the MS-DOS monopoly on PCs to the Office suite monopoly then the Windows monopoly. Fortunately in the 2020s nobody has to use that stuff any more.
Imagine being a multi-millionaire, living in pacific grove, having good friends and being successful, but being so obsessed over one deal gone wrong that you let it drive you to depression. That's a fragile soul.
How the Story has Changed over the Years this is far different from how the story was told right after it happened it has bin cleaned up and is not the same as told Unfortunately they have tried to make Bill look Good
Gary Kildall is not forgotten if you’re a computer history buff. If you look hard enough, you’ll actually find a lot more people who made greater contributions to the industry that don’t ever get any media attention The story of him and Bill Gates and IBM has been told a bunch of times. It’s sad that he died so young, but I don’t think his contributions have been downplayed.
An unrecognized genious, that’s how it always goes. What a sad end. I’m glad people are getting to know his work through pieces like this one. Thank you.
His concept and code shaped everyones devices, from the cheerleader to the goth. Anyone's device. He made software for everyone. His death is like the disgrace of Alan Turing, tragic and should never have happened.
It's incredibly annoying when you upload an edit that obviously had a long commercial break and a huge amount of restating in the middle to youtube, we don't need to hear the same stuff twice.
On the next episode of DRAGON BALL Z!!!! A mysterious businessman is searching for the Z fighters but will anybody be there to defend against this menace?! GOKU WHY ARE YOU ON A PLANE? FRIEZA IS GOING TO FIGHT MICROSOFT! ON THE LAST EPISODE OF DRAGON BALL Z! GOKU WENT FOR A PLANE RIDE INSTEAD OF FIGHTING FRIEZA!
Kildall's wife screwed this up when she was nonchalant about a deliberately cryptic call from IBM. Gates had cautioned IBM not to let on what they were about to discuss with Kildall.
Didn't know that about BG, because public image was and just some ordinary wiz kid and boyish face just added to the truth. We need to know the whole story, because I sure it's really interesting. I miss the good old days of 60 Minutes (the entertainment/soft ball one presently.). Watching Mike Wallace chasing (he must have been on the track team.) some unscrupulous lying disgusting theif, or doctor, charity, etc.. There needs to journalist's and ones who investigate with true unbiased reporting. Now we have soft ball news reporters and news.
I think the problem was they wanted her to sign a NDA on the spot, she didnt know what to do. Something a lawyer should handle. I think that was the problem with Gary having his wife as a manager instead of hiring a professional with a degree in business. The late 70s and early 80s were simply a brutal time to be in the computer business. Its hard to market a product that does nothing but run a BASIC prompt.
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 hmm sounds like you have some inner troubles you need to work through. Please don't insult the beautiful cosmos ever again. Good luck to you
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 What is hard to understand? There's nothing remotely negative about appreciating the beauty of the universe and cosmos. Are you doing alright? Need some help?
It was dumb luck on two counts. 1) Miffed IBM 2) the Pacific Rim manufactures made a clone of the IBM and sold it half price, all they had to do was run the OS, they of course bought the cheaper one. Then it could run any program written for the IBM. The cash flow to Gates was hard to fathom because the low price of the cheap computer brought into every household like a TV. That's what made Bill Gates rich and powerful, not smarts.
A news station everybody. A news station making a documentary on computers was not able to figure out how to setup a stereo audio track, and gave you this abomination.
Yep, some little tech goof. But the basic story is true, Gary was a genius and good guy, Gates was pretty much the opposite. You would know this if you were involved and knew them.
Gary was good, but I too was around back then and I am afraid this story is full of errors. No mention of Ed Roberts, really? Beat Gary by a few years. CPM was used in several IBM products. like their original disk writer. I know as I have a rather large floppy on my desk, next to my THINK sign, that can verify it. Gary did get ripped off, but he was not the writer of the 1st "PC" OS. Commercially successful, but not 1st and definitely not the last victim of IBM and MS. Depression took the guy out, and that is a shame. Dying like that with no one knowing the truth is just sad.
Does anyone else here remember GEM? It came as the operating system on Samsung or Sony PC's. It was a graphical operating system in 1980! It had write, draw, and presentation. I had friends using Apple that couldn't believe I was using a PC. Gary Kildall was a creator, Gates just a thief.
GEM came out on 28 February 1985, not 1980. And DRI got sued by apple, because the "Look and Feel" of the GUI was almost a direct copy of the LISA GUI. The first GUI OS for PC was the "Visi On" of the VisiCorp (the guys of VisiCalc) that came out on December 1983, but was unsuccesful because il was too heavy for the PC hardware of the time.
Strange soundmix (music only from the right speaker, commentator voice only in the left) but the video was very interesting and enjoyable nonetheless. And yes, I would like to know more about Gary Kildall because he does sound like a real prodigy.
The author Merrill R. Chapman in it's 2003 book "In Search of Stupidity" (ISBN 1590591046, 9781590591048) in chapter 2 writes that at "CP/M East" fair of autumn 1983 he, that at the time was product manager at MicroPro (the producer of WordStar) and oher people fron other companies that was lauching the CP/M-86 versions of their softwares, chased Kildall to beg him to re evaulate the price of the CP/M-86 to make it competitive against PC-DOS. In this situation Kildall stated that : "The CP/M-86 has the right price, market will understand the difference between a toy-OS and a professional product." And then going away. So I think that Kildall was personally responsable for this failure.
IBM went to Bill Gates for an operating system, even though he did not have one. As I recall, his mother was on the board of IBM and suggested they go to him.
_A name, a destiny!_ so they say, here in Italy. With one high-flying oversight, *Kildall KILLeD it ALL off.* Greek tragedy, in the age of intelligent machines.
drafted during the Vietnam War to serve as an instructor at the Naval Post-Graduate School in Monterey . . . now that was a cushy gig. SCP did rip off CP/M lock, stock & barrel, MS was dealing hot goods to IBM with that deal.
Something doesn't add up about the 'IBM charged more for CP/M' story. Why couldn't the owners of the operating system sell it separately for $40, or even less? Why just accept what IBM was doing? I suspect there is a lot of 'hindsight is 20/20' going on here and regret for missed opportunities.
He did. Gary and his company provided the operating systems for Commodore computers which was the main competitor to IBM and Apple in the late 70s and early 80s. This documentary should have mentioned that. Apple almost went out of business because they could not make graphical interfaces on their OS work efficiently enough to compete with Commodore.
There's an interview in Triumph of the Nerds where the IBM exec who visited Kildall said it was because Kildall's wife wouldn't sign the NDA and had them waiting a whole day while their lawyers talked, so IBM went back to Gates.
You know if IBM hadn't considered the personal computer just a toy and decided to write their own operating system for it, they might still be top of the heap in the tech world. They had thousands of programmers working for them and had their own operating system for their mainframes. All they had to do was edit it down for the desk top machine's capacity. But then again most corporate giants can't abandon what got them to the top in favor of some new trend. Think - Kodak, Xerox, GE, and even Apple if it hadn't pivoted to the iphone.
I do think too many are making too much of "poor Gary". Gary was still motivated and excited about opportunities and all kinds of tech. He had made his fortune and was happy with that and his new projects. Surely he was tired of trying to correct the same story of the airplane & IBM. While Gates used a clone to make his fortune from one of Gary's inventions, that saddened him yes, but it certainly didn't kill him. In his last two years, I knew him pretty well (we both liked and had exotic cars and tech) He used to call me at work (I worked for his company DRI) and excitedly say "Come on down to the garage, I'm thinking of buying this Pantera." I had a Pantera and he liked collaboration. But, I kind of had to sneak out to go do that, pretty funny really. He had gained a lot of weight, he was drinking too much, but that's not uncommon as people come into middle age. What about you, how well are you holding up?
No mention was made of the fact that Gary and his company made the operating systems for Commodore computer which was the main competitor to IBM and Apple in the late 70s and early 80s. Gary made very efficient graphical interfaces for his OS that almost put Apple out of business due to their bloated graphical interface on the Macintosh
Wasn't the real issue IBM mistakenly thought CP/M was made by Microsoft and Dorothy Kildall was reasonably concerned with IBM's unilateral non-disclosure agreement? For the meeting to take place, this would have allowed IBM's communications to be protected information that could not be disclosed, while anything Digital Research conveyed would be public domain.
So glad to see a news outlet cover this commemoration. Gary deserves to be remembered.
Gary was a nice guy in an industry that often doesn't reward nice guys.
Totally agree with you. I started to program back in 1983 just when I started to study physics, but professionally since 1988, and I has been witness many times, even until today, exactly of what you are saying regarding good guys swimming among sharks in the ocean of the computer world.
@@GabrielMartinezValois I'm a retired programmer myself, I suspect most are that known of Gary. Show me an industry where you don't have to swim with the sharks and I'll show you an industry that's in decline. I have noticed, over the many intervening years, that the waters of technology do seem to be abundantly populated with sharks, perhaps more so than other industries but I've my doubts on that point.
What industry rewards nice guys?
@@DaveAlexKD I've actually given that some thought as of late. There isn't one that I'm aware of.
@@STR82DVD then what are you talking about?
There should be a Netflix show on him so people would know who he was and how he helped shape the world we live in now...
eh, CP/M was a dead end really. MS-DOS just prolonged the misery a decade or so for PC users, but Mac folk had moved into what we have now by the late 80s.
Everyone should have just populated the world with $3,000 tiny-screened Macs to populate the world with computers instead of hackable, upgradable Z80 and Intel clones. What was wrong with their thinking?
Netflix is criminal ops and not humanities friend
There should be a Netflix show about you.
/// gates ///
There’s nothing like Computer Chronicles. I live in the PNW and was lucky to have stumbled onto the show through Internet Archive. I wish we had a show like that today. RIP GK
So Gates basically showed he wasn't above using someone else's sweat to deal himself into the game. This is why the world doesn't need that type making decisions for it.
Ditto Zuckerberg.
@@martinbisschoff988 ditto Jobs.
The world is ran by the ruthless
Every time I hear the IBM story it strikes me how weird it is to for them to just show up unannounced to make an industry-changing deal and then be peeved that a busy guy isn't there. Something not straight, there.
I knew one of the many VPs for IBM, that dealt with the OS negotiations, and he said that Kildall could have sued IBM and won over MS-DOS being a basic clone of CPM. He said that they chose Microsoft because they felt that Microsoft would do anything that IBM needed to get the system done, and they were right, they obviously underestimated Gates business savvy and ruthlessness. That being said, Gary Kildall was an extremely wealthy man, and ridiculously intelligent. If he had lived, he would be better remembered, because he would have definitely done many more things in the computer industry.
Man, this brings back a lot of memories. I remember being in college studying DOS. Rest In Peace, Mr. Kildall.
Whats not mentioned here is Bill Gates's father was a well known and respected investor in Seattle (he helped Starbucks get going) and had many connections. Bill Gates mother had a personal connection with the chairman of IBM through her non-profit.
And they had an evil globalist for a son
Wasn't Gates mother, who lobbied in Washington for them to use Windows in gov't contracts?
They’re blood related, gates and schumer mayorkas etc.
Bill gates father also helped spear head planned parenthood and has many quotes stating his support for eugenics. Now we see his son and his lot decades into their depopulation plans.
Gary is certainly not forgotten by many of us....
The way people talk about Gary, he came off as a good person, who deserved more than he got.
It's too bad Gates and Jobs get all the recognition.
Fascinating and tragic story. I grew up in Monterey, and I remember Digital Research. I didn't know this whole backstory, however. I feel like there are still questions I need to ask my parents while they're around.
Used to live in that neighborhood in PG and must have driven or walked pass the house hundreds of times. Thank you for sharing a fascinating piece of history.
Gary was a great host on the Computer Chronicles. A wonderful, unassuming guy.
Whoever did the soundtrack to this deserves a raise. So perfect.
A wonderful person who should (unfortunately is) never be forgotten. Nowhere Gates and his ilk. Gary was amazing just like the real computer was amazing. All honor and respect to truly valuable people ❤❤❤
The text on the plaque reads:
IEEE MILESTONE IN ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
AND COMPUTING
The CP/M Microcomputer Operating System, 1974
Dr. Gary A. Kildall demonstrated the first working prototype of
CP/M (Control Program for Microcomputers) in Pacific Grove in
1974. Together with his invention of the BIOS (Basic Input Output
System), Kildall's operating system allowed a microprocessor-
based computer to communicate with a disk drive storage unit and
provided an important foundation for the personal computer
revolution.
April 2014
“Bill is basically unimaginative and has never invented anything, which is why I think he's more comfortable now in philanthropy than technology. He just shamelessly ripped off other people's ideas.” ~ Steve Jobs
Well, Bill did invent the backslash file separator ensuring countless millions of hours of wasted time.
Indeed, Gates did rip off other people's ideas, but Steve Jobs wasn't the model example of original ideas. Just ask the people at Xerox Park in Palo Alto about that/
@@dmac7128 Know your history (and spelling of PARC). Jobs (and lots of people) already knew of the mouse and GUI. The visits to PARC were about technology and commercialization not invention.
@@DemPilafian Yes, but Jobs was handed said technology to make the first Mac. Or, I should say he convinced PARC to sell it to him.
@@dmac7128 The correct spelling is PARC. Jobs and other Apple employees already knew of the mouse and GUI. The visits to PARC were about technology and commercialization not invention.
I’ve become fascinated with this story of Gary Kildall, after listening in person to the playwright Steve Hauk tell me of his research and personal experiences referenced in this news piece, replaying on RUclips. He has written an amazing play on this that somehow should be produced!!!
Thanks for covering Gary. Fallen asleep to chronicles more times than i can count (of course he was way more than just that - also a fly pilot)
Great report on a true American genius. Hello from Brazil.
Computer Chronicles did a feature on him after his passing.
He was a host on that show for a long time as well
@@jwr2904 free of charge, that has to be said.
Gates stole the serial mouse from Xerox, GUI from Apple and OS from Digital Research. There's also the kid who 'fell' to his death on a trip with Gates before MS took off.
Is there a name for this individual?
My left ear thanks you.
😂
@@eternaldoorman5228 I started to check my earphones😂
Bruh 😂
The audio is glitched with the main audio on the left and the soundtrack and base on the left
I learned about him when I stumbled upon Computer Chronicles here on RUclips, what a shame
In the 1980s I was a mainframe COBOL programmer dabbling with home computers (reading Byte Magazine, really). I bought a Radio Shack Model 16 because it could run COBOL and had dual 8-inch floppies. Cost me $5,000. I scorned the IBM PC because all the components were priced separately and COBOL cost twice as much. Little did I think that IBM would take over the non-Apple home computer market and become the popular choice.
I had read about CP/M quite a bit. The problem back then was that every maker had their own hardware, but only CP/M could be a cross-platform OS. Maybe the Pick operating system also. MS-DOS limited you to the IBM PC, but it turned out that that was good enough when all the attention went to IBM. In hindsight the path looks obvious. But back then IBM seemed like a Johnny-come-lately to the home computer market. It wasn't called a PC until IBM named it the Personal Computer. Perhaps that word choice of "personal" made a difference. Either way, the PC took off unexpectedly and Microsoft did too.
no, the term PC or Personal Computer was not made public by IBM, it was CBM name used for their computer line way before IBM PC.
"PC Software pioneer", come on he was a computing pioneer, not mentioned here that he had a suitcase PC before this. Guys a legend.
Wow I guess I’ve heard his name before but never knew this story!
I started working in software in 1990 after deploying the first PC-based Flight Records system for our Army pilots in 1988.
Gary Kildall remember that name.
Obviously it's just a guess, but the three things I picked up here from this vignette - regret, withdrawal from his close friends and connections, and the bar, the alcohol - are in conjunction with each other.
well, one thing missing in this video is a departure of his wife, I think that was the begin of the end...
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 ah....yeah, I never knew about that. And that's a big one.
Love that Gary is finally being remembered!
thanks for the informative video. It's amazing that you accurately recounted that much History in under 10 minutes. I can't believe how efficiently this was shot/edited. More youtubers should take notice and try to do the same. I knew nothing about Gary Killdall or the IBM deal prior to seeing this; and I feel like I just watched a full length documentary. Bravo 👏
Wow I certainly hope they make a documentary in this man. He deserves to have his name and his legacy more widely known. RIP
Did Kildall write the text of the Grolier's CD-Rom Encyclopedia or just the coding? It was a brilliant. Subjects condensed so much, to fit on a disk, that they became extremely easy to understand. It was a marvel.
It has been generally known Gary Kildall made CP/M the first OS for personal computers but was outsmarted by Bill Gates. This presentation sheds some new light on Kildall's story, and from a local TV station where news reporters drive a short distance to interview people. First PC I had used CP/M, later got another with MS-DOS. Looking back, I see Gary Kildall extremely brilliant considering he had to create something completely new. But it is a common tale throughout history where really smart people get outsmarted by business oriented people.
Yup. Gates had a killer instinct. Gary didn’t. That simple.
Did Bill Gates outsmart or trick Gary Kildall???? BG seems like a calculating schemer that will do anything to be on top. They aren't so much anymore
IBM never played or plays fair when wanting to buy a business.
There are no boundaries that the C-suite guys will do to get their hands on something that is selling better and made better. Buy it or do what needs to done in shutting business down, "whatever it takes". Or they will, harass business/company owners to buy their business lowballing and when not accepted they will also do "whatever it takes" to get it.
The funny this that I though IBM went out of business years and years ago. I don't even see anything with IBM.
Gary is one of those legendary men you hear about only so often. Side note: the right audio channel is messed up. Im listening on headphones
Thank you for sharing this story.
I won’t forget him..RIP Gary Kildall..🧑🏻💻🔥♾️.
I know how he feels. I've had things like this done to me more than once. The regret and anger. Sometimes i break out into a drenching sweat thinking about what should have been mine and how evil some ppl are. It comes and goes several times a day.
Sometimes, that's just the timeline that's meant to be. Maybe in a parallel universe, he did get that deal and didn't go flying.
Is it you Walter? Walter White?
No point in living in the past, it’s useless or worse.
@@haggeoromero Easier said than done.
This story needs to be told!
I didn’t know until now
Moral of the story: " Don't fight at bars."
The more I learn about Bill Gates the less I see of his actual contribution to computing. What did that guy actually do himself?
He ran microsoft and found opportunities to bring windows to the masses which changed the world. Running a company is not easy.
He surrounded himself with capable people, directed them towards opportunities he saw, & made sure those opportunities saw fruition. Captain of the ship steers it to glory or into a reef. He chose glory. Sadly for Gary he did not.
Well let's see. Bill Gates had an early contract with Apple Computer to write a program in the computer language BASIC but Bill never delivered.
IBM had lost an Antitrust case and so, was not going to be allowed to dominate the Desktop Computer market with Computer AND Operatimg System. IBM therefore helped found Microsoft and gave Bill Gates the Operating System (to guarantee a Market for IBM Computers). Later, the protection that IBM enjoyed from its BIOS was reverse engineered and Compaq Computer became the first of many PC Clone companies.
There is nothing different about Windows 95, 98, NT, SE, ME, Vista, XP, etc., they were all the same Operating Systems (proven to me when I asked). Bill Gates used a trick with making sure the on-board applications were not backward compatibile so that anyone convinced to "upgrade" was now no longer able to share files electronically with anyone who hadn't. Bill Gates made money selling the same Operating System (on a new computer) with a new name every year. Computer makers kept their mouths shut because they made huge profits as well. The look may have been slightly better and yes it used more memory and disk space but all of it was to entice people to "upgrade".
When you hear about a shortage of raw materials for smartphones, batteries or whatever, remember what Bill did. He is talentless and unable to understand what he was told in meetings so he would just pretend to get angry, demand results and leave. Bill Gates has been evil his whole life. Some recent claims about him are not true BUT there is so much about him that is little known and very evil that I am frankly, quite glad that people have stopped thinking he is or ever was "special".
leverage the MS-DOS monopoly on PCs to the Office suite monopoly then the Windows monopoly. Fortunately in the 2020s nobody has to use that stuff any more.
Microsoft has a long history of stealing other peoples software.
LOL Great job on the audio mix guys
Audio Production: William H. Gates
Lol ??! 😮😮😮👎👎
Imagine being a multi-millionaire, living in pacific grove, having good friends and being successful, but being so obsessed over one deal gone wrong that you let it drive you to depression. That's a fragile soul.
He sounds like an innovative hero. Us technocrats will revere and mourn him.
Digital VT180 ran CP/M. That was a personal computer but at corporate prices.
How the Story has Changed over the Years this is far different from how the story was told right after it happened it has bin cleaned up and is not the same as told
Unfortunately they have tried to make Bill look Good
How was the story told initially?
Gary Kildall is not forgotten if you’re a computer history buff. If you look hard enough, you’ll actually find a lot more people who made greater contributions to the industry that don’t ever get any media attention The story of him and Bill Gates and IBM has been told a bunch of times. It’s sad that he died so young, but I don’t think his contributions have been downplayed.
gates a horrible person
Why are you using Windows then?
Who stole your fore $ keen?
Thank you Gary!
@KSBW hey kid please turn on the subtitles, I want to watch while eating loud food.
This guy was an absolute legend in his time! Still is today!!🎂
great reporting thank u ksbw
An unrecognized genious, that’s how it always goes. What a sad end. I’m glad people are getting to know his work through pieces like this one. Thank you.
His concept and code shaped everyones devices, from the cheerleader to the goth. Anyone's device. He made software for everyone. His death is like the disgrace of Alan Turing, tragic and should never have happened.
Why is the dialog only in one channel? Pretty amateur production quality for broadcast television.
You should write to your congressman about this.
It's incredibly annoying when you upload an edit that obviously had a long commercial break and a huge amount of restating in the middle to youtube, we don't need to hear the same stuff twice.
On the next episode of DRAGON BALL Z!!!! A mysterious businessman is searching for the Z fighters but will anybody be there to defend against this menace?!
GOKU WHY ARE YOU ON A PLANE? FRIEZA IS GOING TO FIGHT MICROSOFT!
ON THE LAST EPISODE OF DRAGON BALL Z! GOKU WENT FOR A PLANE RIDE INSTEAD OF FIGHTING FRIEZA!
Seems like every story of "success" is really a story of someone getting screwed over or people being exploited.
CP/M had PIP (Peripheral Interchange Program), what's now called Copy.
Probably because Gary was familiar with DEC PDP computers. Where it was created.
Kildall's wife screwed this up when she was nonchalant about a deliberately cryptic call from IBM. Gates had cautioned IBM not to let on what they were about to discuss with Kildall.
Didn't know that about BG, because public image was and just some ordinary wiz kid and boyish face just added to the truth.
We need to know the whole story, because I sure it's really interesting.
I miss the good old days of 60 Minutes (the entertainment/soft ball one presently.). Watching Mike Wallace chasing (he must have been on the track team.) some unscrupulous lying disgusting theif, or doctor, charity, etc..
There needs to journalist's and ones who investigate with true unbiased reporting. Now we have soft ball news reporters and news.
I think the problem was they wanted her to sign a NDA on the spot, she didnt know what to do. Something a lawyer should handle. I think that was the problem with Gary having his wife as a manager instead of hiring a professional with a degree in business. The late 70s and early 80s were simply a brutal time to be in the computer business. Its hard to market a product that does nothing but run a BASIC prompt.
@@monkeyrater no that is nonsense, the meeting was upheld later that day, IBM simply screwed Gary, simple as that.
His company was originally called Intergalactic Digital Research, but he wisely dropped the hippie bit
what does the word intergalactic do with hippies exactly?
@@kevinsedwards well how should I explain it to you... LSD?
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 hmm sounds like you have some inner troubles you need to work through. Please don't insult the beautiful cosmos ever again. Good luck to you
@@kevinsedwards what? Are you crazy?
@@madigorfkgoogle9349 What is hard to understand? There's nothing remotely negative about appreciating the beauty of the universe and cosmos. Are you doing alright? Need some help?
I am so stoked to see that I Love Pacific Grove Skatepark sign.
Bill gates took his opportunity and ran with it.
It was dumb luck on two counts. 1) Miffed IBM 2) the Pacific Rim manufactures made a clone of the IBM and sold it half price, all they had to do was run the OS, they of course bought the cheaper one. Then it could run any program written for the IBM. The cash flow to Gates was hard to fathom because the low price of the cheap computer brought into every household like a TV. That's what made Bill Gates rich and powerful, not smarts.
Everyone who watches this must hit the like button. Out of respect for his legacy
Wow! Never heard of him till now.
A news station everybody. A news station making a documentary on computers was not able to figure out how to setup a stereo audio track, and gave you this abomination.
Yep, some little tech goof. But the basic story is true, Gary was a genius and good guy, Gates was pretty much the opposite. You would know this if you were involved and knew them.
Gary was good, but I too was around back then and I am afraid this story is full of errors. No mention of Ed Roberts, really? Beat Gary by a few years. CPM was used in several IBM products. like their original disk writer. I know as I have a rather large floppy on my desk, next to my THINK sign, that can verify it. Gary did get ripped off, but he was not the writer of the 1st "PC" OS. Commercially successful, but not 1st and definitely not the last victim of IBM and MS. Depression took the guy out, and that is a shame. Dying like that with no one knowing the truth is just sad.
Gatez & Muzk are the Edizon of modern times
Where's the dialog track and why is no one else mentioning this glaring audio problem?
Why does the volume drop when I turn my phone horizontal ??
Does anyone else here remember GEM? It came as the operating system on Samsung or Sony PC's. It was a graphical operating system in 1980! It had write, draw, and presentation. I had friends using Apple that couldn't believe I was using a PC. Gary Kildall was a creator, Gates just a thief.
GEM came out on 28 February 1985, not 1980. And DRI got sued by apple, because the "Look and Feel" of the GUI was almost a direct copy of the LISA GUI.
The first GUI OS for PC was the "Visi On" of the VisiCorp (the guys of VisiCalc) that came out on December 1983, but was unsuccesful because il was too heavy for the PC hardware of the time.
Strange soundmix (music only from the right speaker, commentator voice only in the left) but the video was very interesting and enjoyable nonetheless. And yes, I would like to know more about Gary Kildall because he does sound like a real prodigy.
is this the same high school friend that went mountain climbing and fell ?
Does this mean that IBM set the price for CP/M?
Yes, because the hardware was theirs, so any third party software going into their machines had to comply with anything they say, price included.
The author Merrill R. Chapman in it's 2003 book "In Search of Stupidity" (ISBN 1590591046, 9781590591048) in chapter 2 writes that at "CP/M East" fair of autumn 1983 he, that at the time was product manager at MicroPro (the producer of WordStar) and oher people fron other companies that was lauching the CP/M-86 versions of their softwares, chased Kildall to beg him to re evaulate the price of the CP/M-86 to make it competitive against PC-DOS. In this situation Kildall stated that : "The CP/M-86 has the right price, market will understand the difference between a toy-OS and a professional product." And then going away.
So I think that Kildall was personally responsable for this failure.
What's with the weird low audio
That is an interesting surname ... Kil'd all ... great podcast!!
Yall gotta fix the audio omg why is the stereo set to left
the audio on this is f**ked
What a B.S. Story. It was always gonna be Bill Gates no matter what. I.B.M. didn't need Bill Gates or Gary?
Respect
Fire video editor
Never forget that Bill Gate's father was a lawyer....
IBM went to Bill Gates for an operating system, even though he did not have one. As I recall, his mother was on the board of IBM and suggested they go to him.
@@EinsteinsHair You are right. She was at IBM and surprisingly IBM took the Bill Gates OS
If Gary were around today, he'd Kildall the competition.
_A name, a destiny!_ so they say, here in Italy. With one high-flying oversight, *Kildall KILLeD it ALL off.* Greek tragedy, in the age of intelligent machines.
drafted during the Vietnam War to serve as an instructor at the Naval Post-Graduate School in Monterey . . . now that was a cushy gig. SCP did rip off CP/M lock, stock & barrel, MS was dealing hot goods to IBM with that deal.
Poor kid should have asked for MSFT equity instead of cash.
Good video. However to say he hosted Computer Chronicles is to slight the show's creator Stewart Cheifet. Co-host would be a better description.
I still have my DR DOS diskettes.
Something doesn't add up about the 'IBM charged more for CP/M' story. Why couldn't the owners of the operating system sell it separately for $40, or even less? Why just accept what IBM was doing? I suspect there is a lot of 'hindsight is 20/20' going on here and regret for missed opportunities.
He did. Gary and his company provided the operating systems for Commodore computers which was the main competitor to IBM and Apple in the late 70s and early 80s. This documentary should have mentioned that. Apple almost went out of business because they could not make graphical interfaces on their OS work efficiently enough to compete with Commodore.
Walk into a biker bar while just an owner how well was that going to work out I've been there
There's an interview in Triumph of the Nerds where the IBM exec who visited Kildall said it was because Kildall's wife wouldn't sign the NDA and had them waiting a whole day while their lawyers talked, so IBM went back to Gates.
You know if IBM hadn't considered the personal computer just a toy and decided to write their own operating system for it, they might still be top of the heap in the tech world. They had thousands of programmers working for them and had their own operating system for their mainframes. All they had to do was edit it down for the desk top machine's capacity. But then again most corporate giants can't abandon what got them to the top in favor of some new trend. Think - Kodak, Xerox, GE, and even Apple if it hadn't pivoted to the iphone.
Gary Kildall should have simply responded, "Why weren't YOU the next Bill Gates?"
the guy had $100+ bux back in the 1970s -- leave the bars and silicon valley hassles alone and move to tahiti.
I do think too many are making too much of "poor Gary". Gary was still motivated and excited about opportunities and all kinds of tech. He had made his fortune and was happy with that and his new projects. Surely he was tired of trying to correct the same story of the airplane & IBM. While Gates used a clone to make his fortune from one of Gary's inventions, that saddened him yes, but it certainly didn't kill him. In his last two years, I knew him pretty well (we both liked and had exotic cars and tech) He used to call me at work (I worked for his company DRI) and excitedly say "Come on down to the garage, I'm thinking of buying this Pantera." I had a Pantera and he liked collaboration. But, I kind of had to sneak out to go do that, pretty funny really. He had gained a lot of weight, he was drinking too much, but that's not uncommon as people come into middle age. What about you, how well are you holding up?
They killed him and stole his stuff!
No mention was made of the fact that Gary and his company made the operating systems for Commodore computer which was the main competitor to IBM and Apple in the late 70s and early 80s. Gary made very efficient graphical interfaces for his OS that almost put Apple out of business due to their bloated graphical interface on the Macintosh
Don't go to bars.
Wasn't the real issue IBM mistakenly thought CP/M was made by Microsoft and Dorothy Kildall was reasonably concerned with IBM's unilateral non-disclosure agreement? For the meeting to take place, this would have allowed IBM's communications to be protected information that could not be disclosed, while anything Digital Research conveyed would be public domain.
So many tech ceos end up dead, cashapp, and so many others.