· Leopold ·
As a child—and an adult as well—Bill was untidy. It has been said that in order to counteract this. Mary drew up weekly clothing plans for him. On Mondays he might go to school in blue,on Tuesdays in green,on Wednesdays in brown ,on Thursdays in black,and so on ,Weekend meal schedules might also be planned in detail. Everything time,at work or during his leisure time,Bill hated wasting time.
Dinner table discussions in the Gate’s family home were always lively and educational.“It was a rich environment in which to learn,”Bill remembered.
Bill’s contemporaries,even at that age,recognized that he was exceptional. Every year,he and his friends would go to summer camp. Bill especially liked swimming and other sports. One of his summer camp friends recalled,“He was never a nerd or a goof or the kind of kid you didn’t want on your team. We all knew Bill was smarter than us. Even back then,when he was nine or ten years old,he talked like an adult and could express himself in ways that none of us understood.”
Bill was also well ahead of his classmates in mathematics and science. He needed to go to a school that challenged him to Lakeside—an all boys’school for exceptional students. It was Seattle’s most exclusive school and was noted for its rigorous academic demands,a place where“even the dumb kids were smart.”
Lakeside allowed students to pursue their own interests,to whatever extent they wished. The school prided itself on making conditions and facilities available that would enable all its students to reach their full potential. It was the ideal environment for someone like Bill Gates.
In 1968,the school made a decision that would change thirteen-year-old Bill Gates’s life—and that of many of others,too.
Funds were raised,mainly by parents,that enabled the school to gain access to a computer—a Program Data processor(PDP)—through a teletype machine. Type in a few instructions on the teletype machine and a f