Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen Dies of Cancer At Age 65 (cnbc.com) 201
CNBC is reporting that Microsoft Co-Founder Paul Allen has died from complications of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Vulcan Inc. said in a statement Monday that Allen passed this afternoon in Seattle at the age of 65. From the report: "While most knew Paul Allen as a technologist and philanthropist, for us he was a much-loved brother and uncle, and an exceptional friend. Paul's family and friends were blessed to experience his wit, warmth, his generosity and deep concern," [Paul Allen's sister, Jody Allen] said in a statement. "For all the demands on his schedule, there was always time for family and friends. At this time of loss and grief for us -- and so many others -- we are profoundly grateful for the care and concern he demonstrated every day."
Earlier this month, Allen revealed that he had started treatment for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the same type of cancer he overcame nine years earlier. The longtime CEO left Microsoft when he was first diagnosed with the disease. Allen also ranked among the world's wealthiest individuals. As of Monday afternoon, he ranked 21st on Forbes' list of billionaires with an estimated net worth of $20.3 billion. UPDATE: Added a link to a statement from Vulcan Inc. on behalf of the Allen Family and Paul G. Allen network.
Earlier this month, Allen revealed that he had started treatment for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, the same type of cancer he overcame nine years earlier. The longtime CEO left Microsoft when he was first diagnosed with the disease. Allen also ranked among the world's wealthiest individuals. As of Monday afternoon, he ranked 21st on Forbes' list of billionaires with an estimated net worth of $20.3 billion. UPDATE: Added a link to a statement from Vulcan Inc. on behalf of the Allen Family and Paul G. Allen network.
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Why is it that the best guys always die first? Ah no wait, in Apple's case that didn't happen.
Why are you turning a Tribute page into a platform for your Apple Hatred?
I despise MIcrosoft; but I would never say something like that, even upon Ballmer's demise!
And from what I have heard about Paul Allen, he was never a corporate shill for Microsoft, and in fact, reportedly even used Macs in his yacht-based private Recording Studio.
RIP, Mr. Allen. Your philanthropy and contributions to the Seattle Music and Art scene will be long remembered.
Re:RIP Paul! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:RIP Paul! (Score:5, Interesting)
I worked for Paul from '85 through '90. Occasionally, at random, he'd just invite a bunch of us to his house. As far as I could ever tell, not a mean bone in his body.
Re: Not a mean bone, just greedy monopolist bones. (Score:2)
Re: RIP Paul! (Score:2)
Was that the Dickâ(TM)s in Queen Anne? If so that really humanizes him, I remember eating there all the time after jamming at the Jambox with band nearby when I lived in Seattle. You picture these world shaping ubermenschen with guys like that, but I guess death and Dickâ(TM)s special sauce unite us all.
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That sucks big time. (Score:5, Interesting)
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âoeYou can be a king or a street sweeper, but everyone dances with the grim reaper.â -Robert Alton Harris
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You can be a king or a street sweeper, but everyone dances with the grim reaper. -Robert Alton Harris
But not at the same time. People in the top income quintile live an average of 12 years longer than people at the bottom.
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"i want a telescope..." "is this big enough" "no you fool, i want it to cover a noticeable percentage of a desert..."... pretty fun way to spend money
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Re: were (Score:2)
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That's not how an economy works; the yacht business provided jobs, not burned the cash in a bonfire.
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It was crewed entirely by qualified cancer researchers!
Because rich people are evil that way.
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Keep it up.
You must have gotten Trump 20+ additional votes in 2020 already.
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I'm still with Vermin, but my vote can be had.
Put Hillary in prison and I'm for Trump.
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That's not how an economy works; the yacht business provided jobs
This is the Broken Window Fallacy [investopedia.com].
Yes, building yachts creates jobs, but so does cancer research. The difference is that the research also finds a cure for cancer.
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Cancer researcher supply is inelastic in the short term.
In the medium term, it will draw research effort from other diseases. e.g. AIDS research, when given 'moonshot' funding, slowed cancer research.
Only in the long term is there any chance to draw smart people into medical research.
Re:That sucks big time. (Score:5, Funny)
I know, we'll force shipwrights to go into cancer research. It's basically the same type of job for the same type of personality with very similar training requirements.
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Maybe if he had spent $250m on cancer research rather than his "Octopus" megayacht
Hang on just a second. The notorious Elon Musk fangrrrrrrl is passing judgment on a mega-wealthy person flinging around big piles of money on stupid ego-driven stuff?
(which spent several weeks a couple years ago ruining the views in our harbour)
Ah, stupid ego-driven stuff that briefly clutters up your backyard. Got it.
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What exactly does a private megayacht contribute to the world? I care about things that contribute to making the world a better place. This includes electrifying transport, cheaper access to space, grid storage, advancements in AI, and many other things. "Sailing the seas to indulge in your pastimes on a megayacht" is not among them.
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What exactly does a private megayacht contribute to the world?
About as much as flinging a vanity car into space. Or selling overpriced flamethrowers. I'm sure you yourself could make that list a lot longer with a modicum of intellectual honesty. It's cute how you want to cherry-pick Allen's sillier stuff but focus only on the supposedly meaningful contributions from your god.
Re:That sucks big time. (Score:5, Insightful)
Like his computer museum and WWII air museum in the Seattle area. It's still sad he was forced out of Microsoft in 1982. The world would be a much different place if he had gotten his way of fixing problems with existing products instead of adding new features, or worse, Gate's style vaporware.
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Well, he never said much whilst wallowing in the profits, nor invested any of those ill gotten gains in FOSS. So torn between bad taste and an empty fear of censure, likely captain cabana boy screams in the hell of infinite BSODs. Contribute more than you consume else energy will balance out and alone in that dark you will be, you nature expressing itself in quantum energy form, concern for the present should not eliminate you concern for your future and the future of those around you. Sing in the choir or
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I personally liked his actions in the end, where he had a ship going in search of all the old WW2 wrecks in the Pacific. So much history that he found, ranging from major ships like IJN Musashi, HMS Hood's bell and both Fuso class battleships to smaller unique ships like Shimakaze. Though the crowning achievement was probably when they found the Lady Lex herself earlier this year.
Re:It is easier for a camel to pass thru a needle (Score:5, Informative)
He ran a monopoly
Hey Anonymous Coward, which monopoly did he "run?"
He was co-founder of Microsoft, but he left there over 36 years ago.
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He was in remission from Hodgkin’s lymphomas for a long time. The story online is that he left Microsoft after he overheard Gates and Steve Ballmer discussing what to do regarding his shares after he died. ref [nytimes.com]
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It's comments like this which is why I browse at -1. Seriously entertaining stuff. The only thing funnier than an internet toughguy is an internet toughguy with a grudge and the mentality of a 5 year old whose favourite toy just got broken.
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We are all part African because that is were we originated. Yet if I claim to be an African American the liberals would be very offended. Elizabeth Warren has Native American Blood in the same way Aldolf Hitler has Jewish ancestry.
Why don't Americans worry about substantial shit like the fact China is kicking you ass six ways to Sunday, and you can't even control your own border
You DO realize, of course, that Adolf Hitler DOES have Jewish Ancestry. A fact that he jealously (and understandably) guarded.
https://www.history.com/news/s... [history.com]
You ? (Score:1)
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Is that why her claim pissed off Indians so much that several of them went on TV to denounce her attempt to pretend she's not one of the whitest people on the planet?
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That is not at all true. I graduated from high school in 1973 in Seattle and have had many friends that have worked for Microsoft. Allen argued against lying to IBM that they had an operating system and argued for fixing bugs rather than adding features before he was forced out of Microsoft in 1982. Paul Allen was on the side of users.
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Allen argued against lying to IBM that they had an operating system and argued for fixing bugs rather than adding features before he was forced out of Microsoft in 1982.
So he opposed all the things that made Microsoft successful. Bill must be glad he pushed him out.
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Rather than what, MCP? That phrase means nothing, unless your "user" includes software developers.
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Exactly. Why people fawn over people just because they died is mystifying. There are plenty of heros in the computing industry, but he wasn't one of them.
What is amazing is the stupidity and bullshit attitudes that are rampant on this site.
Meanwhile, over at Macrumors.com (which arguably shouldn't even give a care about Allen's life or death), the comments are universally those of heartfelt condolences.
https://forums.macrumors.com/t... [macrumors.com]
You small-minded, entitled Slashtards all should be fucking ashamed of yourselves.
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repeatedly screwed his users
With an Allen wrench, I presume?
Re: It is easier for a camel to pass thru a needle (Score:5, Insightful)
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Honestly Microsoft was never a decent company. They rose to prominence with vendor lock-in and exclusivity contracts on both BASIC and DOS, stealing a certain amount from CP/M, blocking DR DOS....come on you can say Paul Allen became a good guy but you can never say Microsoft was anything in the early days other than a manipulative company offering vendor lockin to PC OEMs.
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the open source community doesn't want to make Linux adoption easy
You appear to be terribly misinformed and/or malicious.
The open source community is broad and multifaceted but very definitely includes people that want to make Linux adoption easy.
It's well over a decade since installing Linux was anything other than a doddle, and it's also used every month on their own personal computing device by around 2 billion people.
Cloud Computing (Score:4, Funny)
Now he's living In The Cloud.
Re:Cloud Computing (Score:4, Funny)
The great Azure, even.
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My guess: He spread his estate out among several people and a number of charities. Enough so that all of the beneficiaries end up below Trump.
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If true, good. The politicians whose worth goes up while in office are the _dirty_ ones. You know who those are.
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He's 70+. He doesn't care.
Everything you write is true, but Trump was still the better choice of the electable ones. But I'm in CA, so vote was wasted no matter, hence Vermin Supreme, the best candidate.
The only thing that mattered was the Supreme Court. Which is done now, will be double done when Ginsburg kicks.
Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (Score:2)
I thought that was one of the Cancers we had beaten?
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Does not appear so - per Wikipedia, five-year survival rate is 71%, lower than that for Hodgkin's Lymphoma, 86%. The "beaten" cancers are prostate and thyroid, both above 98% five-year survival.
Re: Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (Score:2, Informative)
Re: Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (Score:1)
Did you, uh, take notice of the five year survival rate? Or do you have terminal cancer of the attention span?
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If the person dies of something else, that counts as beating the cancer.
That's more or less the goal of all cancer treatment: that the patient lives long enough to die of something else.
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Let's generalize that to "all medicine".
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No, Hodgkin's is a subset of lymphoma with a relatively significant level of research when compared to non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
Non-Hodgkin's is generally viewed as worse than Hodgkin's, but may still be beaten. But, of course, it's cancer, which is virtually always an ordeal.
Re:Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma (Score:5, Informative)
Since Non-Hodgkin's is by definition any cancer of lymphocytes that is not Hodgkin's, it's unlikely to be "beaten" any time soon because it's not just one thing. Collectively, though, 10 year survival rates for Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas run from 36% to 71% depending on your risk factors (age, how early the cancer is diagnosed). There's been a lot of progress on Hodgkins' too: 10 year survival is up to around 80%.
Bill Gates was so angry, Allen left the company. (Score:5, Interesting)
Quotes from the book, Idea Man [amazon.com] by Paul Allen.
Page 49:
THREE DECADES AFTER teaching Bill and me at Lakeside, Fred Wright was asked what he'd thought about our success with Microsoft. His reply: "It was neat that they got along well enough that the company didn't explode in the first year or two."
Page 96:
When Bill pushed on licensing terms or bad-mouthed the flaky Signetics cards, Ed thought he was insubordinate. You could hear them yelling throughout the plant, and it was quite a spectacle-the burly ex-military officer standing toe to toe with the owlish prodigy about half his weight, neither giving an inch.
Page 177:
Bill was sarcastic, combative, defensive, and contemptuous.
Page 180:
"For Bill, the ground had already begun shifting. At product review meetings, his scathing critiques became a perverse badge of honor. One game was to count how many times Bill confronted a given manager; whoever got tagged for the most "stupidest things " won the contest. "I give my feedback," he grumbled to me, "and it doesn't go anywhere."
He will be missed (Score:5, Interesting)
I never knew him, but I know the effects he had on my world.
I'm a IT professional who cut his teeth on Windows 3.11. Everyone has their issues with how windows work, but you have to admit he along with Bill Gates had a huge influence on the tech industry.
As a sports fan in Washington, he was a person who brought a SuperBowl win to the Seattle Seahawks. The Seahawks have been run very well and you can see it in the product. You never needed to worry about the franchise in his hands.
I know these might seem like simple statements, but this is how I knew him. And he will be missed.
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you have to admit he along with Bill Gates had a huge influence on the tech industry.
You also have to admit that Adolf Hitler had a big influence on European history.
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Not making the point you think you are.
The Nazis brought permanent discredit onto Eugenics, after all the hard work of people like Margaret Sanger.
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The Nazis brought permanent discredit onto Eugenics
How much did Microsoft set back the tech industry?
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At least 27 years.
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Patent Troll (Score:1, Troll)
RIP Dr. Netvorkian (Score:2)
Rest well, Mr. Allen.
He used to have the nickname "Doctor NetVorkian" because many of the things he invested in promptly tanked in one way or another after his investment. He had a lot of bad luck with his investments.
For those who don't understand the joke, a certain Dr. Kervorkian became notorious for helping ill patients commit suicide.
Dreamworks (Score:1)
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Microsoft a huge influence on the tech industry? (Score:1)
I'm a IT professional who cut his teeth on VAX/VMX, DECwindows, Novell Netware and the original Mac and in my professional opinion Win3.11 was a toy. It may be news to you but computing didn't start with Windows 3.11 and the huge influence you speak of is that everyone thinks it's normal for your c
Is that a rain coat? Yes, Paul! (Score:3, Funny)
Try getting a reservation at Dorsia now you fucking stupid bastard!
First thing I thought of when I saw this headline.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:karma (Score:5, Funny)
What a ray of sunshine you are.
Re:Now burning in hell (Score:5, Informative)
He is now burning in hell for Microsoft and Windows
Windows, Anonymous Coward? Allen left Microsoft in 1982. Windows 1.0 launched in 1985.
("The" Windows - Windows 3.1 - Didn't launch until 1992, a decade after Allen had left.)
Re:Now burning in hell (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft created Windows and Allen co-founded Microsoft - he cannot wipe that blood off his hands!
But you can wipe Windows off your hard drive, so I don't get your point. Paul Allen was a great guy in many, many ways.
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But you can wipe Windows off your hard drive, so I don't get your point. Paul Allen was a great guy in many, many ways.
Agreed. Even if you could "blame" him for all or part of Windows, he did start the Museum of Pop Culture [wikipedia.org]. If you are ever in Seattle, it is a must see. I mean, they have what is probably the best Star Trek museum display anywhere (which is saying a lot since the Smithsonian has a very nice one as well), including most of the original series set pieces and I believe one of the only actual Enterprise models used for filming. In my mind, that gives him a great deal of geek cred. Plus, as I under
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But you can wipe Windows off your hard drive
Not that I blame Paul Allen for it, but that's what "secure boot" is meant to "fix".
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My favorite story about Allen is how, while flying to Albuquerque to demonstrate their BASIC interpreter to MITS, he realized they had not written a loader, and he had no way to load the interpreter onto the machine.
He wrote a loader in assembly language on napkins during the flight, and when he arrived at MITS, keyed it in by hand using front-panel switches. It ran correctly the first time.
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he could have shaped a whole different Microsoft ecosystem if he'd had his way and Xenix had become the base of Microsoft's post-DOS operating system
Hey Anonymous Coward, MS-DOS booted off a 720K floppy disk, with the second 720K drive for your "programs and data." My first "IBM Compatible" PC had something like a 7 MHz processor and an 8086 chip. No way I could've run Xenix on that thing.
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If only the market forces were strong enough, they'd turn me into a cancer research biochemist overnight! / sarc
Re: 20 Billion! (Score:3)
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You can't take it with you.
But you can leave a legacy behind.
The man who dies rich, dies disgraced. -- philanthropist Andrew Carnegie
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Did he ever have a chance to collect his Social Security?
Good question. If he thought he was going to live into his 70s and beyond, he would have delayed his benefits to increase his monthly payments. On the other hand, if he didn't think he was going to live long, he may have started his benefits at the minimum age of 62, or earlier if he qualified for them on a disability basis.
He never married, so there is no survivor who can receive benefits. He also has no children. According to his wikipedia page, his only family is his sister Jody.
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Is she single?
I've always wanted to meet a rich older woman too proud to let me work.
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"My thanks for that, probably wouldn't have happened minus Mr. Allen."
So, aside from being a Patent Troll, Allen was also responsible for APK?
Oh, the shame...
Captcha: unclean
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I also thought the way he had a vanity band where he paid famous guys to hang out with him and play in a pretend band was just the saddest "rich guy" stuff I've ever seen.
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