Bill Gates Is First Guest Editor In Time Magazine's 94-Year History (geekwire.com)
Long-time Slashdot reader theodp writes: Time invited Bill Gates to be the first guest editor in the 94-year history of the magazine. Among the news Bill deemed fit to print in Time's first augmented-reality-enhanced issue were articles by wife Melinda and pal Bono, both of whom graced the cover of Time with Bill as the 2005 Persons of the Year... Another article reveals that "the four learning hacks Bill Gates swears by" include Khan Academy (a $10+ million Gates Foundation partner), tech-backed Code.org (to which Bill, the Gates Foundation, Microsoft, and Steve Ballmer have given somewhere north of $17M), the Big History Project (to which Bill had contributed a "modest $10 million" as of 2014), and The Teaching Company (which got Bill stoked about Big History).
The issue also includes Gates' "four favorite ways to give back" and "six innovations that could change the world." In fact, the theme of the whole issue is "optimism," with 62-year-old Gates writing that "On the whole, the world is getting better. This is not some naively optimistic view; it's backed by data. Look at the number of children who die before their fifth birthday. Since 1990, that figure has been cut in half. That means 122 million children have been saved in a quarter-century, and countless families have been spared the heartbreak of losing a child."
Another optimistic essay came from Daily Show host Trever Noah, who writes, "Mock millennials all you want. Here's why they give me hope."
The issue also includes Gates' "four favorite ways to give back" and "six innovations that could change the world." In fact, the theme of the whole issue is "optimism," with 62-year-old Gates writing that "On the whole, the world is getting better. This is not some naively optimistic view; it's backed by data. Look at the number of children who die before their fifth birthday. Since 1990, that figure has been cut in half. That means 122 million children have been saved in a quarter-century, and countless families have been spared the heartbreak of losing a child."
Another optimistic essay came from Daily Show host Trever Noah, who writes, "Mock millennials all you want. Here's why they give me hope."
Give back to the people who worked for the corporations you drove out of business with illegally anticompetitive business practices, Bill. Give back to the people who had to clean up after your deliberate attempts to sabotage Linux. Give life back to the people that your investments have killed. Give back the tax revenues you've avoided paying even though you're one of the biggest beneficiaries of the system. Let us have back control of education. Please, Bill. Give Back.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
"Man last relevant in 2001 edits magazine last relevant in 1996! Details at 10!"
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
Time has given Windows 10 a 5 star review. "The perfect software," the news weekly says.
I can see two possible explanations for this level of ignorance, either you weren't around back when Microsoft was king of the hill and free to display all it's psychopathic traits in public without consequences; or you're somehow vested in Billy boy's reputation. He's an elitist asshole; always was, always will be; that he's now more into vaccinating children to death in lesser countries and indoctrinating the next generation to not think for themselves, while patting himself on the shoulder in public; doesn't change that, quite the opposite.
Its not so much hating him I just don't understand the pervasive worship of him among the media and gen Y. He was and is a ruthless industrialist. He's buying love rather than companies now. He earned his money ruthlessly but legally, more or less, and is now acting coldly and logically in his selfinterest. Thats alright...for the most part, but he's no saint for doing this.
"graced the cover of Time with Bill as the 2005 Persons of the Year."
Like Stalin and Hitler who also 'graced' the cover in their day?
It's not an honor.
That would be an interesting Time Article .. ref