…Alternative energy also
Bill Gates in his characteristic public-spiritedness has urged college graduates to channel their energies in finding solutions to society’s pressing problems.
The billionaire Microsoft co-founder turned philanthropist said artificial intelligence, energy and biosciences are “promising” fields where new graduates can make “a huge impact.”
“It’s what I would do if starting out today,” Gates said in a series of tweets on Monday.
Gates, who dropped out of Harvard in 1975, shared on Twitter and via a post on Mic lessons he wished he had known when leaving college. For example: Intelligence takes many different forms and isn’t as important as Gates previously had thought.
“When I left school, I knew little about the world’s worst inequities. Took me decades to learn,” he also tweeted.
Gates said he didn’t see true inequality until his late 30s, when he and wife Melinda Gates took their first trip to Africa. “We were shocked by what we saw. When we came back, we began learning more. It blew our minds that millions of children there were dying from diseases that no one in rich countries even worried about,” he said in the Mic post.
College grads know more than Gates did when he was their age, he added. “You can start fighting inequity, whether down the street or around the world, sooner,” Gates tweeted.
Gates advised graduates to surround themselves with people who challenge, teach and push them “to be your best self,” saying his wife Melinda does that for him.