$ cat ./records/gates-clashes-with-the-one-laptop-per-child-initiative-2006.txt
Gates clashes with the One Laptop Per Child initiative
[RECORD.TXT] · cat --full
Bill Gates publicly clashed with the One Laptop Per Child initiative, the nonprofit led by MIT's Nicholas Negroponte that aimed to put rugged, sub-$100 laptops in the hands of children in poor countries. Gates derided the early machines — questioning their tiny screens and hand-crank power — while Microsoft promoted low-cost Windows options instead. The dispute highlighted a genuine debate over how technology could best serve global development, a question central to Gates's own later philanthropy.
Free forever · No ads · Solo developer
If this was worth a read, help make the next entry possible.
Every entry in this archive was researched, verified, and written by one person — for free. No corporate funding. No ad revenue. Just a developer who believes verified history should be accessible to everyone. Your donation directly funds new entries.
Crypto accepted · No subscription required
← Previous
Delivered the Harvard commencement address 32 years after dropping out
Next →
Microsoft's Zune fails to dethrone the iPod
[CROSS_REFERENCES] · grep --category='Personal'
Related Accomplishments
1990s
Gates keeps a collection of rare and classic cars
Despite his reputation for frugality in some areas, Bill Gates has long indulged a passion for cars, assembling a collection that has included several Porsches — among them the 911 he has owned for decades and the storied 959 — as well as other classics. His automotive tastes, and the saga of importing the then-illegal 959, are among the more colorful footnotes of his personal life.
1990s
Gates retreats for solitary, twice-yearly 'Think Weeks'
For years Bill Gates retreated twice a year to a secluded cabin for a solitary 'Think Week,' during which he read stacks of papers, books, and employee proposals with no interruptions, emerging with strategic memos that shaped Microsoft's direction. The ritual became famous as a model of deep, focused thinking by a busy executive, and was credited with helping spark major pivots — including Microsoft's embrace of the internet. Gates carried the habit of voracious, deliberate reading into his philanthropy.
[ARCHIVE_FUNDING] · INDEPENDENT · NO ADS
One developer. >300 verified entries. Zero ads. Forever free.
No sponsors, no paywall, no algorithm. If this archive has been useful to you, reader support is what keeps it running.