When young Gates was born, although nobody shall be able to foresee this child shall be a great businessman at that time, everybody liked him very much. Gates likes studying extremely. When the other children watch cartoon, he likes a master who reads books alone in the room. He spends much time on books. Sometimes he can read the thick "Encyclopedia" motionlessly for several hours.
The young Gates has the same ambition as his peers. He wants to be a hero. Teachers give him homework, both playing the instrument and writing the essay, he completes earnestly. The homework usually takes him a long time, he is always the first one in his class. Once, his teacher lets each person write a story which is less than 20 pages, but he writes 100 pages actually. Gates is good at pondering and he likes creating. He thinks everybody should have own invention.
In America today, 2 out of every 3 homes have a computer. Gates' foresight and vision regarding personal computing have been central to the success of Microsoft and the software industry as we know it today. In the dozen years since Microsoft went public, Gates has donated more than $800 million to charities, including $200 million to the Gates Library Foundation to help libraries in North America take advantage of new technologies and the Information Age.
I admire Bill Gates in several ways. First, I admire his vision. Bill Gates knew that the computer would revolutionize the world at time when society's complex computer was as powerful as today's simple calculator. I also admire his dedication. Gates did not stop at the desktop PC. He fought through court battles and antitrust hearings over his product, Microsoft's Internet Explorer. He never once quit or backed down over anything.
I have wondered