The Gates Foundation Kicks Ass
Say what you will about Bill Gates:
He’s loaded. (All rich people are bastards! They don’t even recycle! You know, probably!)
He’s bossy and may want to take over the world. (Gaaah! That was my plan!)
He’s too smart to be human. (That guy freaks me out and forces me to deal with feelings of inferiority!)
Yes, I totally understand how upset people get with regard to Mr. Gates. He lives a few lakes away, I pay attention to the media reports, and I know some Microsofties. This city is full of them. You can’t take your recycling bins out to the curb without elbowing one. They all complain about how working for him takes away their souls, one sliver at a time, but the benefits are too awesome to give up.
What was that entertaining factoid someone came up with a few years back? Something along the lines of: Gates makes so much money every moment of every day that if he sees a $100 bill lying on the ground it’s not worth his time to stop and pick it up.
I don’t work for him, and I don’t plan to. I’m also not someone he plans to crush someday. I don’t actually have any issue with the fact that he has enough money to go buy his own country. My view is therefore possibly more objective. Plus, I can’t not respect a guy who got where he is using grey matter and a blatant disregard for the opinions of others.
The two points that make it impossible for me to dislike Bill Gates are these: he gives a huge amount of time and money to good causes, including creating entire programs in order to actually find solutions; he has so much money he’ll never be able to spend it all and he still wears cubicle-geek chic and apparently refuses to wear cool glasses. How can you not be happy knowing a person like that is in the world?
Once again, Bill’s using his powers for good:
The Microsoft Corporation chairman says he’s a fan of the movement to publish course materials free online. He seems especially impressed with online systems that gauge students’ knowledge and give them specific feedback, a specialty of the Open Learning Initiative at Carnegie Mellon University. But while he acknowledges the work of open-content aggregators like Academic Earth, Mr. Gates wants to see better organization of the vast course materials on the Web.
“The foundation has made a few grants to drive online learning, but we are just at the start of this work,” Gates writes. “So far, technology has hardly changed formal education at all. But a lot of people, including me, think this is the next place where the Internet will surprise people in how it can improve things—especially in combination with face-to-face learning.”
Further Reading:
AcademicEarth.org
Carnegie Mellon University: Open Learning Initiative
2010 Annual Letter from Bill Gates: Online Learning
Grant Writers, Get Ready—Bill Gates Is Fired Up About Online Learning
Posted by Alexa Harrington

