Bill Gates asked a question on LinkedIn that generated ~2800 answers in 3 days: “How can we do more to encourage young people to pursue careers in science and technology?”
Understandably, with four (4!) connections in his LinkedIn Profile, Mr. Gates isn’t really keeping track of his connections via LinkedIn, though I’m excited that he’s only three degrees away from me… However, three days ago he asked a question in LinkedIn that got up to now roughly 2,850 responses:
How can we do more to encourage young people to pursue careers in science and technology?
Of course I wanted to give my 2cents here, I surely don’t want to miss my shot here ;) So here’s my answer as it appears on page 95 (!):
I find the question too broad: does the “and” between science and technology mean in both the fields, or “and” as in “at the intersection of”? A broad and short answer to your broad question:
- Define career, science, and technology in a way for young people that shows a perspective and perception that matches their experienced reality of the world: I don’t know per se of many “careers” in science, just of many struggles; and technology is so much more than computing.
- Enthusiastic mentors always captivated me at school and university. More so when they lived and showed me the values based on the three simple moral principles rationality, independence, integrity: honesty, justice, productiveness, pride, reason, purpose, self-esteem. “A is A”.
No more invites to social networks or job hunter / review sites, please!
In recently helped out at plotting the future of a company after being acquired. On a side note, I had an almost philosophical discussion with friend that studies psychology whether or not marriages are easier divorced than jobs quit. My argument was that marriages are much more emotional, and failure will hurt much more
Android will also pull video onto mobile platforms such as the iPhone SDK or Google’s Android, but first successful commercialization of services will more likely come from hardware vendors than from current Web2.0 applications.
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