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Together Each Achieves
More Success
While it takes an individual to dream up an
idea, it takes a team of dedicated people with the same goals in mind to make it
a reality. And in no business does this ring more true than in the
high-flying computer industry.
Bill Gates is and always will be associated with Microsoft and the success of
the software colossus. And to a certain extent this is true--the company
embraces his take-no-prisoners attitude. But the fact is it took a team of about
two dozen developers to get the original Windows operating system out the door.
The summer of 1985 before the launch is fondly known as the "the lost summer" by
the team of 20-something-year-olds because of the insane hours they spent on the
product that would forever change the landscape of the computer industry.
The 386 microprocessor design team at Intel didn't have it any easier. Andy
Grove may have been the driving force behind the chip giant, but he wasn't the
one who had to give "birth to an elephant." That is how one member of the 386
design team referred to the massive effort it took to bring together every phase
of the design process.
The idea that started Compaq began with three guys, a restaurant and a napkin.
This team of former Texas Instruments engineers was hell-bent on getting into
the exploding PC arena and they did it together and built the world's largest PC
company. They were early to market with a portable computer and first to open it
up to a wide range of compatible components and software applications.
And the first killer app, aka Lotus 1-2-3, was the brainchild of a few
programmers who leveraged each other's expertise to bring an electronic
spreadsheet to the masses.
These products brought the computer industry up one level at a time, and no one
individual can take full credit. Read on and be part of the inside circle that
brought these products from conception to market.
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