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Microsoft's Famous 1978 Albuquerque Staff Photo Captures an 11-Person Startup
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A now-iconic photograph from December 1978 captures Microsoft as an 11-person startup in Albuquerque, New Mexico — a shaggy young Bill Gates seated front-left among the scruffy crew — taken just before the company moved to the Seattle area. Often shared with the caption 'would you have invested?', the picture became a symbol of unassuming beginnings: nearly everyone in it grew wealthy as Microsoft conquered the software world. It marked the end of Microsoft's Albuquerque era, where the company was founded to write software for the Altair.
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Related Accomplishments
2026
Gates Foundation Trust Sells Off the Last of Its Microsoft Stock
In the first quarter of 2026, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust sold its remaining Microsoft shares, fully exiting a position in the very company that created Gates's fortune — capping a long, deliberate diversification away from the stock. The endowment that funds Gates's philanthropy, managed separately from its grant-making through Cascade, is now anchored instead by Berkshire Hathaway, Waste Management, railroads, and heavy-equipment makers. The sale underscored how thoroughly Gates's giving had decoupled from Microsoft's day-to-day fortunes.
2026
Gates's Charitable Endowment Is Now Led by Berkshire, Not Microsoft
By 2026, the publicly disclosed stock portfolio of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Trust — the endowment that funds Gates's philanthropy — was led not by Microsoft but by Berkshire Hathaway, Waste Management, Canadian National Railway, Caterpillar, and Deere. Decades of diversification, plus Warren Buffett's stock gifts, left it concentrated in railroads, waste, heavy equipment, and Buffett's conglomerate, while Microsoft — the source of the original fortune — had largely been sold down. The unglamorous, value-oriented mix reflects the long stewardship of Gates's money manager, Michael Larson, through Cascade Investment.
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