Examples of using Seattle computer in English and their translations into Hindi
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
July 27, 1981-Microsoft buys the rights for QDOS from SCP(Seattle Computer Products) for $25,000.
At the lakeside school a Seattle computer company offered computer time for its students.
On July 27 1981,Microsoft bought the rights for QDOS(Quick and Dirty Operating System) from Seattle Computer Products(SCP) for $25,000.
While at Lakeside School, a Seattle computer company offered to provide computer time for the students.
The first OS built by Microsoft wasn't called Windows, it was called MS-DOS andwas built in 1981 by purchasing the 86-DOS operating system from Seattle Computer Products and modifying it to meet IBM's requirements.
When he was in Eighth grade, a Seattle computer company offered to provide computer time for the students.
A few weeks later, Gates proposed using 86-DOS(QDOS),an operating system similar to CP/M that Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer Products(SCP) had made for hardware similar to the PC.
While at Lakeside School, a Seattle computer corporation offered to deliver computer time for the students.
The first operating system created by Microsoft was not called Windows, it was called MS-DOS and it was built in 1981when it bought the 86-DOS operating system from Seattle Computer Products and modified it to meet IBM requirements.
During his days at Lakeside School, a Seattle computer company offered to provide computer time for the students.
In 1980, after Microsoft had committed to deliver IBM a disk operating system(DOS) for the original IBM PC, although they had not yet developed one,Allen spearheaded a deal for Microsoft to purchase QDOS(Quick and Dirty Operating System), written by Tim Paterson, who, at the time, was employed at Seattle Computer Products.
Microsoft bought the rights for QDOS from Seattle Computer Products(SCP) for $25,000 on July 27, 1981.
In 1980, Tom Paterson of Seattle Computer Products developed QDOS(Quick and Dirty Operating System) for Intel's new 16-bit 8086 central processing unit(CPU).
They partnered with InvoiceGates who bought Disk Working System from Seattle Computer Product and had it distributed with IBM's new laptop.
In 1981 Microsoft purchased QDOS from Seattle Computer Products, renaming it MS-DOS 1.0 and offering it to IBM for use in their new personal computers. .
Overcoming many difficulties, Gates entered into an agreement with Seattle Computer Products which led to a unified licensing agent and later 86- DOS- to become fully official.
Born in Seattle, Gates used his first computer in 1967 while a kid in school.
Bill Gates and Paul Allen even ran their own small company called Traf-O-Data andsold a computer to the city of Seattle for counting city traffic.
While attending the Lakeside School outside Seattle, 14-year-old Allen met 12-year-old Bill Gates, a fellow student and computer enthusiast.
Born in 1953 in Seattle, Washington, Paul Allen met fellow Lakeside School student and computer enthusiast Bill Gates when Allen was 14 and Gates was 12.
Born in Seattle on 28 October 1955, the son of an attorney and a schoolteacher, Bill Gates had, by the age of 17, sold his first computer program- a timetabling system for the school- for $4,200.
Gates' first exposure to computers came while he was attending the prestigious Lakeside School in Seattle.
He grew up in Seattle, Washington, with an amazing and supportive family who encouraged his interest in computers at an early age.
Allen attended Lakeside School, a private school in Seattle, where he befriended the two-years-younger Bill Gates, with whom he shared an enthusiasm for computers.
Microsoft wrote software in different formats for other computer companies and, at the end of 1978, Gates moved the company's operations to Bellevue Washington, just east of Seattle. .
