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何雅月In Seattle in the late '60s, a group of teenagers met every afternoon outside Lakeside High School, all students at the suburban private high school. When they met, they would pedal their bikes and head to a local company called Computer Cener Corporation (CCubed, as the kids mischievously called it). Although the office is closed, the children are just beginning to go to work. They felt like a bunch of night shift workers, working late every night, tapping away at the company's DEC computers while eating pizza and drinking Coke. The leaders of the group were two unusual students. They were more obsessed with computers than any of their peers. In fact, their classmates called them "computer maniacs." Paul Allen, 15, and Bill Gates, 13, are both good at math and especially love programming. Allen, Gates and other children were hired by the company to find errors in computer programs. It might be better to say that the company "allows" them to use the computer because the kids don't get paid, it's just for fun. CCubed was willing to do this because it had a contract with DEC to not have to pay for the use of DEC computers as long as CCubed could identify "bugs" in DEC software.
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胖猪的喵
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刘骞睿
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许静静Very early in his learning of computers, Bill Gates suddenly found himself involved with a group that solved computing problems for his high school in the late 1960s, when very few organizations had computers and even fewer had the technical capability to actually use computers—programming expertise was essential.
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许家璐