I don't know how many of you who have followed the link where offered the reader survey as you visited the link. I found that interesting, in that it asked a few of the same questions before reading the page, with my consent, and then again after I read it. I suppose the questions are designed to track attitudinal change from reading the page. I had read some of the page content earlier as the New York Times op-ed, which I think was also submitted here to HN.
I will always rail at Microsoft products, although I still use them. (Two of my four children have already switched to Linux for their PCs, but I'm still an old Windoze fuddy-duddy.) I do like Bill Gates's approach to philanthropy a lot. I particularly like the Gates Foundation research on effective teaching, some of which I apply to my own work as a mathematics teacher in private practice. Helping charities become more effective would indeed be a great contribution to society.
I will always rail at Microsoft products, although I still use them. (Two of my four children have already switched to Linux for their PCs, but I'm still an old Windoze fuddy-duddy.) I do like Bill Gates's approach to philanthropy a lot. I particularly like the Gates Foundation research on effective teaching, some of which I apply to my own work as a mathematics teacher in private practice. Helping charities become more effective would indeed be a great contribution to society.