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Bill Gates IAmA 3 Essentials

Jan 30th, 2015
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  1. • LBJsShlong [3688 points] :
  2. Can you still jump over a chair? http://m.imgur.com/r/gifs/lFU1t3A
  3. • BillGates [S | 4424 points] :
  4. A shorter chair every decade I am afraid.
  5. • kingoftheanthill [3246 points] :
  6. Hi Bill, my question: Is there anything in life that you regret doing or not doing?
  7. • BillGates [S | 4381 points] :
  8. I feel pretty stupid that I don't know any foreign languages. I took Latin and Greek in High School and got A's and I guess it helps my vocabulary but I wish I knew French or Arabic or Chinese. I keep hoping to get time to study one of these - probably French because it is the easiest. I did Duolingo for awhile but didn't keep it up. Mark Zuckerberg amazingly learned Mandarin and did a Q&A with Chinese students - incredible.
  9. • dirtbikerr450 [s | 3216] :
  10. What is your opinion on bitcoins or cyptocurency as a whole? Also do you own any yourself?
  11. • BillGates [s | 3983] :
  12. Bitcoin is an exciting new technology. For our Foundation work we are doing digital currency to help the poor get banking services. We don't use bitcoin specifically for two reasons. One is that the poor shouldn't have a currency whose value goes up and down a lot compared to their local currency. Second is that if a mistake is made in who you pay then you need to be able to reverse it so anonymity wouldn't work.
  13. Overall financial transactions will get cheaper using the work we do and Bitcoin related approaches.
  14. Making sure that it doesn't help terrorists is a challenge for all new technology.
  15. • hotshs [s | 3103] :
  16. What do you think about life-extending and immortality research?
  17. • BillGates [s | 4523 | 2] :
  18. It seems pretty egocentric while we still have malaria and TB for rich people to fund things so they can live longer. It would be nice to live longer though I admit.
  19. • itsamars [s | 3065] :
  20. Dear Mr Gates,
  21. Is it safe to choose a career in programming or will most coders below the expert level be replaced by automation solutions in the next decade?
  22. My deepest thanks for making the world a better place, in so many ways.
  23. • BillGates [s | 3344] :
  24. It is safe for now! It is also a lot of fun and helps shape your thinking on all issues to be more logical. There is a prospect for change in this area for the next generation but that is true for most fields and understanding how to program will always be useful.
  25. • seismicor [s | 2863]* :
  26. Hello, Bill. As for the Reddit 's Secret Santa we know what present you've given this year. But we don't know what gift YOU have received from your Secret Santa. Can you tell us?
  27. • BillGates [s | 3996]* :
  28. It is quite a coincidence but my gift arrived this morning. I got three cool things - a great quilt that a group of people did with a Snoo on it. A great jug of maple syrup and the book The Promise of a Pencil. All very thoughtful. Last year I waited and nothing came.
  29. EDIT: More to come soon: http://i.imgur.com/pg8ZbLQ.jpg
  30. EDIT 2: Reddit just let me know that I did get a gift last year: a generous donation to Heifer International, a great non-profit that helps fight poverty and hunger around the world. So, thank you /u/SailorKingCobra, my Secret Santa!
  31. • DrunkNASA [s | 2816] :
  32. What do you think has improved life the most in poor countries in the last 5 years?
  33. • BillGates [s | 4133] :
  34. Vaccines make the top of the list. Being able to grow up healthy is the most basic thing. So many kids get infectious diseases and don't develop mentally and physically. I was in Berlin yesterday helping raise $7.5B for vaccines for kids in poor countries. We barely made it but we did which is so exciting to me!
  35. • oscarveli [s | 2786] :
  36. Although you are a billionaire, do you sometimes buy generic products over brand-name ones? If so, what are the products you buy?
  37. • BillGates [s | 3999] :
  38. I am pretty basic when it comes to clothes and food. My big splurge is having a plane to fly around in.
  39. I play tennis so I invest in shoes and racquets to help but they don't make a big difference.
  40. • clockwork_jesus [s | 2431] :
  41. Hi, Bill. Dry rub or sauce on your BBQ?
  42. • BillGates [s | 3726] :
  43. Sauce. Lots of sauce. I always spill a bit so I avoid BBQ before TV appearances.
  44. • Future-Turtle [s | 2334]* :
  45. Hello Mr. Gates,
  46. 2015 will mark the 30th anniversary of Microsoft Windows. What do you think the next 30 years holds in terms of technology? What will personal computing will look like in 2045?
  47. • BillGates [s | 3094] :
  48. There will be more progress in the next 30 years than ever. Even in the next 10 problems like vision and speech understanding and translation will be very good. Mechanical robot tasks like picking fruit or moving a hospital patient will be solved. Once computers/robots get to a level of capability where seeing and moving is easy for them then they will be used very extensively.
  49. One project I am working on with Microsoft is the Personal Agent which will remember everything and help you go back and find things and help you pick what things to pay attention to. The idea that you have to find applications and pick them and they each are trying to tell you what is new is just not the efficient model - the agent will help solve this. It will work across all your devices.
  50. • BillGates [s | 1746] :
  51. I would probably be a researcher on AI. When I started Microsoft I was worried I would miss the chance to do basic work in that field.
  52. • beastcoin [s | 2003]* :
  53. How much of an existential threat do you think machine superintelligence will be and do you believe full end-to-end encryption for all internet acitivity can do anything to protect us from that threat (eg. the more the machines can't know, the better)??
  54. Edit: I would just like to point out that second part of my question went unanswered. That would be a great discussion for us all to have, especially given the myriad of other vulnerabilities presented by lack of encryption (eg. overzealous government, hackers, etc.).
  55. • BillGates [s | 3423] :
  56. I am in the camp that is concerned about super intelligence. First the machines will do a lot of jobs for us and not be super intelligent. That should be positive if we manage it well. A few decades after that though the intelligence is strong enough to be a concern. I agree with Elon Musk and some others on this and don't understand why some people are not concerned.
  57. • ryker888 [s | 1763] :
  58. Hello Mr. Gates, I admire the work you've done to eradicate diseases such as polio from the world. What can we do as citizens to help keep these diseases gone for good?
  59. • BillGates [s | 2846] :
  60. Polio eradication is a big focus for me. Our last case in Africa was 6 months ago and we are hoping no more show up. It takes over a year to be sure. We still have cases in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Until we get rid of it there it can spread back to other countries. Pakistan is starting to take this seriously including the army and the government. They need to do the same things that were done in Nigeria. The Taliban makes it very difficult. They have killed women going to vaccinate kids many times.
  61. • BillCosbysBalls [s | 1588] :
  62. Hi Bill,
  63. In your opinion, has technology made the masses less intelligent?
  64. • BillGates [s | 3372] :
  65. Technology is not making people less intelligent. If you just look at the complexity people like in Entertainment you can see a big change over my lifetime. Technology is letting people get their questions answered better so they stay more curious. It makes it easier to know a lot of topics which turns out to be pretty important to contribute to solving complex problems.
  66. • rowmac89 [s | 1479] :
  67. Hi Bill, what is a life lesson you learned the hard way?
  68. • BillGates [s | 3722] :
  69. Don't stay up too late even if the book is really exciting. You will regret it in the morning. I am still working on this problem.
  70. • xianoth [s | 1114] :
  71. Hi Bill!
  72. I was watching a video last night on Thorium reactors and saw that you were also in the video discussing this topic as well. This is a technology that I have been following because it makes so much sense. My question is, how feasible is the technology at this point in your view and how long before we will see that technology in practice here in the US?
  73. Side note, thanks for being there. You are an inspiration to all of us geeks and nerds from the 70s and 80s. :)
  74. • BillGates [s | 1796] :
  75. Right now there isn't enough R&D going into safe and cheap nuclear energy. I am supporting Terrapower which has a 4th generation design that looks good. It doesn't use Thorium - it uses the 97% of Uranium that normally can't be used for a reactor by breeding and burning. This means fuel will always be cheap. There are a lot of innovations but the key one is that it is far far safer than anything today - not relying on human operators.
  76. • Opiboble [s | 1004] :
  77. Hi bill!
  78. First off, thanks for being an awesome human being!!! But onto my question:
  79. What innovation has been brought to you but sadly never worked out for what ever reason, but you really wanted it to work?
  80. Thanks! And keep being awesome!
  81. • BillGates [s | 1672] :
  82. So far we have not being able to use technology to connect people to the needs of the poorest in countries that are far away to tap into their empathy. I think this can be done but it needs some missing creativity.
  83. • pulsar95 [s | 970] :
  84. Hello Mr. Gates, what is in your opinion the main obstacle to the success to poop water machine? and how can we overcome that obstacle? thank you
  85. • BillGates [s | 1878]* :
  86. Sewage is a problem. Since it costs money to process it just gets dumped in slums in poor countries. The system the rich world uses of pumping in clean water and pumping it to a processing plant is too expensive. I challenged engineers to create a processor of sewage where the costs could be covered by the energy and water (clean water) that it outputs. We have made progress on that. One team, Janicki, which was written up in Wired, is send a prototype machine to Senegal later this year. Getting rid of sewage helps a lot to reduce disease and improve living conditions.
  87. EDIT: Speaking of the OmniProcessor. You inspired me to post a photo over in /r/photoshopbattles. Have a look: http://www.reddit.com/r/photoshopbattles/comments/2tzqlh/psbattle_drinking_poop_water/
  88. • Kbdenz [s | 856] :
  89. Who are you rooting for in the Super Bowl?
  90. • BillGates [s | 2610] :
  91. This is an easy question. I am good friends with Paul Allen who owns the Seahawks and I live in Seattle. The playoff game was amazing to watch. Go Seahawks!
  92. • castmemberzack [s | 589]* :
  93. Hello Mr. Gates!
  94. Thank you for doing this AMA! I really look up and admire you in many different ways. It’s quite an honor just to be able to ask you a few questions.
  95. So, here are my questions
  96. What do YOU think about the new Hololens? Have you tried them out yet?
  97. What fields do you see really opening up to big potential in the computer industry? I really love computer programming. I’ve done it since I was 12. I’m 17 now and find myself worrying about what to declare as my major in college. I’m afraid that whatever my major is will become obsolete within 5 years.
  98. What are some awesome books you’ve read lately?
  99. Do you think this new poop water machine will make its way into first world countries? I think California could greatly benefit from it since we always seem to be in a drought.
  100. Do you ever talk to Steve Wozniak?
  101. How are you? What’s new? Have anything fun planned?
  102. • BillGates [s | 1001] :
  103. I won't have time for all of these. My book reports show up on www.gatesnotes.com
  104. The Hololens is pretty amazing. Microsoft has put a lot into the chips and the software. It is the start of virtual reality. Making the device so you don't get dizzy or nauseous is really hard - the speed of the alignment has to be super super fast. It will take a few years of software applications being built to realize the full promise of this.
  105. If you study programming and biology and see how the programming can help biology you will stay out on front!
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