He left for eternity Paul G. Allen (21/1 / 1953-15 / 10/2018) at age 65 in Seattle, Washington, United States, was co-founder with Bill Gates, Microsoft company. The cause of death was a non-Hodgkin lymphoma, complications of a cancer that was detected in 1983. He was known to be an inventor, theoretical computer scientist, film producer, engineer, musician, entrepreneur
In the year 2000 it had 40,000 million dollars, it was dedicated to the philanthropy to sustain institutes for the benefit of the needy and to invest in risk to spend on human capital that can produce or not produce if they fail. Before dying I leave fortune of 17,500 million dollars. In 2000 Bill Gates his partner reached the sum of 85,000 million dollars. Non-Hodgkin lymphoma detected in year 1983. For its end cancer became aggressive, ended his life at 65 years. He had time for rock and roll music, composer and guitarist and electric bass.
With lifetime giving totaling more than $1.5 billion, Allen is included among the world’s leading philanthropists who have pledged to donate the majority of their fortunes to charity. His giving is channeled through The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, which works to catalyze change, transform lives and strengthen communities by supporting arts and culture, youth engagement, community development, social change and scientific and technological advancement. He also gives directly, including $281.8 million to Washington since 1990. In addition to his business and philanthropic efforts, Allen has a true love of science.
He created the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle in 2003 to accelerate understanding of the human brain in health and disease. The Institute has generated groundbreaking online public resources, including interactive atlases of the mouse and human brain that have become indispensable research tools for scientists worldwide. In 2012, Allen pledged $300 million to significantly expand the Institute’s scientific programs. In 2013, he launched the Allen Institute for the Artificial Intelligence to explore critical questions in AI.
His love of science reaches to the far ends of the universe. In 2004, Allen funded SpaceShipOne, the first privately-backed effort to successfully put a civilian in suborbital space. And in 2011, he got back into the space business with the formation of Stratolaunch Systems, which is developing a revolutionary airborne launch system.