05 Unleashing Your Creativity

——Bill Gates

I’ve always been an optimistoptimist n. 乐观主义者 and I supposed that is rooted in my belief that the power of creativity and intelligence can make the world a better place.

For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved learning new things and solving problems. So when I sat down at a computer for the first time in seventh grade, I was hookedhook v. 钩住. It’s was a clunkyclunky adj. 笨重的 old teletypeteletype n. 电传打字机;电报交换机 machine that barely do anything compared to the computer we have today. But it changed my life.

When my friend Paul Allen and I started Microsoft 30 years ago, we had a vision of “a computer on every desk and in every home”, which probably sounded a little too optimistic at a time when most computers were the size of refrigerators. But we believe that personal computer would change the world. And they have.

And after 30 years, I’m still as inspired by computers as I was back in seventh grade.

I believe that computers are the most incredible tool we can use to feed our curiosity and inventiveness to help us solve problems that even the smartest people couldn’t solve on their own.Computer have transformed how we learn, giving kids everywhere a window into all of the world’s knowledge. They’re helping us build communicates around the things we care about and to stay close to the people who are important to us, no matter where they are.

Like my friend Warren Buffett, I feel particularly lucky to do something every day I love to do. He calls it “tap-dancing to work”. My job at Microsoft is as challenging as ever, but what makes me“tap-dancing to the work” is when we show people something new, like a computer that can recognize your handwriting or your speech, or one that can store a lifetime’s worth of photos, and he say:“I didn’t know you can do that with a PC!”

But for all the cool things that a person can do with a PC, there are lots of other ways we can put our creativitycreativity n. 创造力 and intelligence to work to improve our world. There are still far too many people in the world whose most basic needs go unmetunmet adj. 未满足的. Every year, for example, millions of people die from diseases that are easy to prevent or treat in the developed world.

I believe that my own good fortune brings with it a responsibility to give back to the world. My wife, Melinda, and I have committed to improving health and education in a way that can help as many people as possible.

As a father, I believe that the death of a child in Africa is no less poignantpoignant adj. 令人痛苦的;辛酸的 or tragic than the death of a child anywhere else. And that doesn’t take much to make an immense difference in these children’s lives.

I’m still very optimist, and I believe that progress on even the world’s toughest problems is possible and it’s happening every day. We’re seeing new drugs for deadly diseases, new diagnosticdiagnostic adj. 诊断的;特征的 tools, and new attention paid to the health problems in the developing world.

I’m excited by the possibilities I see for medicine, for education and, of course, for technology. And I believe that through our natural inventiveness, creativity and willingness to solve tough problems, we’re going to make some amazing achievements in all these areas in my lifetime.