It was the year 1980.
A
programer named Tim Paterson worked hard writing code for a new
operating system. Later that year in August 1980 Seattle Computer
Products, shipped the first version of the operating system.
One day, a young energetic guy with large eyeglasses walked into the company searching for the operating system named 86-DOS.
He
negotiated a non-exclusive license for $25,000 and took it to the
computer giant named IBM. He showed the demo, offered a few
modifications that they were requesting and closed a deal.
A
few weeks later, in May 1981, this bright guy named Bill Gates who
worked on a startup names Microsoft went back to Tim Paterson and hired
him to further develop the software.
On July 27, 1981 he paid another $50,000 for the full rights, totaling $75,000 and renamed it to MS-DOS.
A month later, Microsoft was shipping MS-DOS on IBM personal computers, and within a year Microsoft licensed
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