HomeBooksBook review: Source Code by Bill Gates is also the story of a computer revolution

Book review: Source Code by Bill Gates is also the story of a computer revolution

Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Rick, and many others developed software that made computers intelligible to the common man. Bill Gates' Source Code is the story of that revolution, and that moment in tech history.

September 09, 2025 / 09:00 IST
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Paul Allen (left) and Bill Gates at Lakeside School in Seattle Washington (Photo credit: Bruce Burgess via Wikimedia Commons); and Bill Gates during the Munich Security Conference in 2017 (Photo credit: Kuhlmann / MSC via Wikimedia Commons 3.0).
Paul Allen (left) and Bill Gates at Lakeside School in Seattle Washington (Photo credit: Bruce Burgess via Wikimedia Commons); and Bill Gates during the Munich Security Conference in 2017 (Photo credit: Kuhlmann / MSC via Wikimedia Commons 3.0).

'Source Code' by Bill Gates is not only the memoir of an extraordinary individual, but the story of the advent of the age of the personal computer. Mainframe computers were around for a long time, but they were confined to the realm of space flights, the military, and corporate headquarters. The development of the PC brought computers into homes and made them accessible to a wider population. This could not have been possible without the development of microprocessors and software. Bill Gates, Paul Allen, Rick, and many others developed software that made computers intelligible to the common man. It is also the story of an America that provided opportunities and openness without which the computer revolution could not have taken place.

Source code by Bill Gates; Allen Lane; Rs 1,499

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His grandmother taught Bill and his sister Kristi to play cards. The children called her Gammy. After the death of her husband, she devoted herself entirely to bringing up the grandchildren. The card game taught him pattern matching - how a card that comes up on the table fits into what you hold in your hand. He learned that it is not only a game of chance. One can improve one’s chances of winning if you could train your mind. He compares it with what is called a state machine in computer science. This involves finding an optimal solution based on an input and a set of given conditions. He also discovered his love for numbers.

The Gates were a well-knit family. Father was a lawyer, and mother devoted herself to social causes. She was ambitious about her children. But young Bill Gates did not quite fit in the mould. He was ill at ease at school and rebellious at home. He took an interest in maths. To keep the young boy engaged, the class teacher took him to the school library. The librarian told Bill Gates to find and arrange the missing books on the shelf. This involved arranging books according to serial numbers. The young boy liked the job. But his parents soon moved house to a new locality and a new school for the children.