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Source Code: My Beginnings

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Original price was: $30.00.Current price is: $14.93.

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#1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • The origin story of one of the most influential and transformative business leaders and philanthropists of the modern age
“A surprisingly candid memoir of the Microsoft mogul’s early years…Reading this book feels like watching someone take a well-known black-and-white sketch, fill in the details, and paint it in vivid color.” —GeekWire
Everyone is programmed a little differently, and Bill Gates’ unique insight led to business triumphs that are now widely known: the twenty-year-old who dropped out of Harvard to start a software company that became an industry giant and changed the way the world works and lives; the billionaire many times over who turned his attention to philanthropic pursuits to address climate change, global health, and U.S. education.
Source Code is not about Microsoft or the Gates Foundation or the future of technology. It’s the human, personal story of how Bill Gates became who he is today: his childhood, his early passions and pursuits. It’s the story of his principled grandmother and ambitious parents, his first deep friendships and the sudden death of his best friend; of his struggles to fit in and his discovery of a world of coding and computers in the dawn of a new era; of embarking in his early teens on a path that took him from midnight escapades at a nearby computer center to his college dorm room, where he sparked a revolution that would change the world.
Bill Gates tells this, his own story, for the first time: wise, warm, revealing, it’s a fascinating portrait of an American life.

From the Publisher

Everyone is programmed a little differentlyEveryone is programmed a little differently

unflaggingly congenial writes New York Times Book Reviewunflaggingly congenial writes New York Times Book Review

Painted in vivid color writes GeekwirePainted in vivid color writes Geekwire

Unusually personal writes Financial TimesUnusually personal writes Financial Times

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf
Publication date ‏ : ‎ February 4, 2025
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Print length ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 059380158X
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0593801581
Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.4 pounds
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.44 x 1.2 x 9.55 inches
Best Sellers Rank: #13,714 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) #15 in Scientist Biographies #16 in Biographies of Business & Industrial Professionals #197 in Memoirs (Books)
Customer Reviews: 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (3,452) var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });

12 reviews for Source Code: My Beginnings

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  1. Marianne

    A great read
    The first of a planned trilogy, this book was very well-written and a fascinating story. I think what I admired the most was Gates’s ability to capture the voices of his mother’s “precocious brat” (approximately 7 years old), the socially insecure and very rebellious teenager, and the cocky but secretly unsure college student. The book ends with the founding of the startup Micro-Soft. More to come, the author promises, and I can hardly wait.In today’s world, Gates would have been been instantly diagnosed as being “somewhere on the spectrum.” But he was blessed with extraordinary parents and a therapist (a very interesting part of the book) who helped the family negotiate a peace, and let Gates become who he is. Lots of good life lessons in this one.

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  2. Jerrel Baxter

    Fascinating view of childhood and early adulthood for a well-known individual.
    Fascinating book which offered an engaging view of early life for this well-known impactful individual. It was very interesting seeing the family, school, and friendships which formed the background and provided the environment which nurtured a signature individual. Strangely we have an amazing number of similarities with both being born in 1955, having an only son born in 1999, marrying a wife born in 1964, working on Basic interpreters in the same year, and sometimes being quite out of step in our educational path.

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  3. A. Menon

    Nice book that brings Bill Gates’s life to the interested reader
    Source Code is a really nice autobiography on the formative years of Bill Gates. He focuses on his childhood and the characteristics of his family and takes the reader on the journey through his life as the world moving into the electronic age. One gets a picture of the world changing in real time and one of the most important innovators of that age through his own experiences. It comes across as honest and earnest and though I typically don’t read autobiographies I am glad I read this to understand better the climate of the time in the early computer age.Bill Gates is obviously an icon of a monumental era and though he will inevitably have people who like and dislike him the perspective from his own words should be something of interest to a wide audience. The book does not focus on Microsoft in its later life nor anything regarding the company in the last 25 years but as the title suggests focuses on Bill Gates’s personal story that led to the founding of Microsoft. One does see that he came from a hardworking and honest family that increased in its privilege through the fathers career progression as a lawyer, he was to benefit from having a father of such stature at times when Bill was under the microscope later. One gets an understanding of his fortune in having a school with early access to compute power and how he and his closest friends including Paul Allen took unique advantage of this to become experts in an immensely growing space by perseverance and passion. Bill tells his story as a kid who was talented with raw intelligence for whom maturity grew with time, but his drive in high school becomes very clear to the reader as his passion was not only for programming and computers but also for the commercial enterprise that was growing on the back of it.The book goes into how he and his close knit group were writing software for enterprises while still in high school and how their managing to get access to computer time was critical to their growth. He talks about his experience in high school and his access to great and supportive teachers that led to his acceptance to Harvard. One gets the first hand story of Harvard and why he eventually left which really brings the reader in to the way driven entrepreneurs saw the world at critical junctures. The whole book makes on sympathetic to the life choices of Bill Gates and brings him rightful admiration for being excellent and driven at a critical juncture. Many parts of Microsoft’s story will be there on Wikipedia but the first hand account of how Bill met some critical early joiners, why they joined, what were their talents, how did the group get along, what drove each of their interests is all very helpful in making sense of the story of Microsoft.Having read two different biography type books recently of tech moguls, one a biography (of Jensen Huang and Nvidia) and this autobiography of Bill’s formative years, I am glad I read both. It is enjoyable to read and brings Bill Gates down to earth and shows his honesty, early intelligence and brings the reader to sympathize with the path taken and experiences that drove the decision making. Definitely a nice book to check out if one has some spare time

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  4. Amazon Customer

    Fast read great story!
    Surprisingly good! I’ve read a few of his other technical books that were OK but nothing to write home about. This one was a quick and fun read. Bill Gates as a child, then teen and young adult made me admire him that much more. A nerdy, precocious brilliant child makes one heck of an entrepreneur.

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  5. Jose Antonio La Rosa

    Fascinating!
    This book, along with Idea Man by Paul Allen, are must read books for investors and business people.Brilliant minds for sure.Thank you very much!!!

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  6. Erick Manteuffel

    A nice origins story
    To those of us who have followed Microsoft and Bill Gates since the dawn of the personal computer age (and unto its death) most of this story is already known. Still, its nice to get the story from the “source”. Mr. Gates writes in a simple forthright style that makes for pleasant listening, and I found myself enjoying the entire tale. For those of us born in the fifties, it is also a nostalgic glance at a world that has largely disappeared. A few of the reviews have criticized the detailed accounts of the card games with his family (especially his grandmother) but if you are looking for clues to the secret of his success, the keen competitive spirit that was instilled in him at an early age explains a lot. I appreciated Gate’s acknowledging the fortuitous time (post WWII) , place (the United States) and genes (white male) that played into his life, but while many others (including myself) had the same advantages, the results were hardly the same.I give this book 5 stars because it has been some time since I have had such a pleasant read. The narrator also did a nice job, and it was easy to lapse into believing I was listening to Gate’s himself (he did narrate the prologue and epilogue, which made nice bookends).

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  7. Kcor

    Very good! One of the best biographies this year so far
    This was a wonderful book. More than I expected. Easy read, but hit all emotions. I looked forward to reading every page. Plus, so much I didn’t know, even though much has been written about B. Gates (I’d never been a huge fan). The childhood he describes makes you yearn both for that magical time before adulthood and before the technological boom he was about to experience. So many experiences kids don’t have today. But, it goes beyond his childhood. This book makes you realize how deep childhood and young adult friendships can influence what you become. Written with humor, sensitivity, and insight learned from his past, he makes you feel the laughs, tears, and excitement. Excitement for a computer boom these young kids felt was coming, but really had no idea how big it would become. I highly recommend.

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  8. MG00000000

    Gates’s recollections of his early years and the bizarre cast of micro computing pioneers make for a fascinating read. He is refreshingly honest about his own weaknesses and does not use this memoir to settle any scores or tear down his rivals.

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  9. tamano

    The book is readable, inspiring, thought-provoking, and presumably heartwarming. If you are a programmer of around 50 and have children, this book will hit you on the sweet spot because you can enjoy the advent of BASIC and personal computers. Bill and his friends’ hard work is impressive. Reflective reading is recommended.

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  10. Spiros Kagadis

    I highly recommend the purchase of this outstanding autobiographical book by my teenage role model Bill Gates! In his new book Bill Gates truthfully shares the enlightening story of his productive youth that transformed our modern technological computer era! Finally, I am so happy to say that I had hoped for so long that Bill Gates would write such a book and that reading it was a unique joy of my life!

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  11. Antonio

    Tutto ok

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  12. sheeeesh

    Insightful and Interesting ! ◡̈

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    Source Code: My Beginnings
    Source Code: My Beginnings

    Original price was: $30.00.Current price is: $14.93.

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