2017马克扎克伯格-哈佛毕业演讲
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马克扎克伯格清华演讲稿全文为大家整理facebook创始人马克扎克伯格在清华大学的一场访谈演讲,在演讲中,他全程用中文回答以下问题,并且谈论对中国创新的想法,马克扎克伯格可谓是第二盖茨,毕业于哈佛大学的他,在计算机上有着惊人的天赋,下面是整理的马克扎克伯格清华演讲稿全文马克扎克伯格清华演讲稿全文扎克伯格:大家好,我是扎克伯格。
我的中文很糟糕,但是我天天都会用。
我觉得自己还需要练习。
主持人:大家对于你能说中文非常吃惊,你为什么要学习中文?扎克伯格:第一,我太太是中国人。
她在家说中文,她的奶奶只说中文。
我想要跟她们说话。
几年前我和太太决定结婚。
我要求她教我中文,她非常吃惊。
第二,中国是伟大的国家,所以我想学。
第三,普通话很难,我一直说英文,但我喜欢挑战。
主持人:那要不今晚我们就挑战一下吧。
您来了中国几次?扎克伯格:四次。
我去过北京、上海、杭州和天津。
我在北京的时候,我要坐很快的火车(即高铁),我想去天津看看霍元甲的家乡。
我喜欢这个电影,所以我要去看看。
主持人:原来你是霍元甲的大粉丝,所以要去霍元甲的家乡看看。
那你最喜欢哪个城市?扎克伯格:我最喜欢北京。
主持人:那你来中国有什么计划?扎克伯格:这星期我参加了清华经管顾问委员会,我来参加委员会的会议。
我觉得清华的学生很好。
明年我们将在中国展开招聘。
我们上个月招聘了20位中国学生。
主持人:为什么你要参加清华经管顾问委员会?扎克伯格:首先我要感谢钱院长。
我非常关心教育,我在美国做了很多支持教育的事情。
我希望参加清华经管委员会能为我提供一个好机会,学习和支持中国的教育。
主持人:这个月你去了好几个国家,您的行程是怎么安排的?扎克伯格:这个月我去了印度、印尼、韩国和日本。
我们想要更多人用互联网。
主持人:你强调了要联系世界。
从什么时候有这个想法的?扎克伯格:20XX年的时候,我想要联系整个哈佛的人。
其实我一直想要联系整个世界的人。
当我创立了FACEBOOK后,我们很高兴帮助学生联系世界。
I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech, it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!I'm an unlikely speaker, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different paths to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today I want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're building together.But first, the last couple of days have brought back a lot of good memories.How many of you remember exactly what you were doing when you got that email telling you that you got into Harvard? I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs, got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction was to video me opening the email. That could have been a really sad video. I swear getting into Harvard is still the thing my parents are most proud of me for.What about your first lecture at Harvard? Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible Harry Lewis. I was late so I threw on a t-shirt and didn't realize until afterwards it was inside out and backwards with my tag sticking out the front. I couldn't figure out why no one would talk to me -- except one guy, KX Jin, he just went with it. We ended up doing our problem sets together, and now he runs a big part of Facebook. And that, Class of 2017, is why you should be nice to people.But my best memory from Harvard was meeting Priscilla. I had just launched this prank website Facemash, and the ad board wanted to "see me". Everyone thought I was going to get kicked out. My parents came to help me pack. My friends threw me a going away party. As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that party with her friend. We met in line for the bathroom in the Phoho Belltower, and in what must be one of the all time romantic lines, I said: "I'm going to get kicked out in three days, so we need to go on a date quickly."Actually, any of you graduating can use that line.I didn't end up getting kicked out -- I did that to myself. Priscilla and I started dating. And, you know, that movie made it seem like Facemash was so important to creating Facebook. It wasn't. But without Facemash I wouldn't have met Priscilla, and she's the most important person in my life, so you could say it was the most important thing I built in my time here.We've all started lifelong friendships here, and some of us even families. That'swhy I'm so grateful to this place. Thanks, Harvard.Today I want to talk about purpose. But I'm not here to give you the standard commencement about finding your purpose. We're millennials. We'll try to do that instinctively. Instead, I'm here to tell you finding your purpose isn't enough. The challenge for our generation is creating a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.One of my favorite stories is when John F Kennedy visited the NASA space center, he saw a janitor carrying a broom and he walked over and asked what he was doing. The janitor responded: "Mr. President, I'm helping put a man on the moon".Purpose is that sense that we are part of something bigger than ourselves, that we are needed, that we have something better ahead to work for. Purpose is what creates true happiness.You're graduating at a time when this is especially important. When our parents graduated, purpose reliably came from your job, your church, your community. But today, technology and automation are eliminating many jobs. Membership in communities is declining. Many people feel disconnected and depressed, and are trying to fill a void.As I've traveled around, I've sat with children in juvenile detention and opioid addicts, who told me their lives could have turned out differently if they just had something to do, an after school program or somewhere to go. I've met factory workers who know their old jobs aren't coming back and are trying to find their place.To keep our society moving forward, we have a generational challenge -- to not only create new jobs, but create a renewed sense of purpose.I remember the night I launched Facebook from my little dorm in Kirkland House.I went to Noch's with my friend KX. I remember telling him I was excited to connect the Harvard community, but one day someone would connect the whole world.The thing is, it never even occurred to me that someone might be us. We were just college kids. We didn't know anything about that. There were all these big technology companies with resources. I just assumed one of them would do it. But this idea was so clear to us -- that all people want to connect. So we just kept moving forward, day by day.I know a lot of you will have your own stories just like this. A change in the world that seems so clear you're sure someone else will do it. But they won't. You will.But it's not enough to have purpose yourself. You have to create a sense of purpose for others.I found that out the hard way. You see, my hope was never to build a company, but to make an impact. And as all these people started joining us, I just assumed that's what they cared about too, so I never explained what I hoped we'd build.A couple years in, some big companies wanted to buy us. I didn't want to sell. I wanted to see if we could connect more people. We were building the first News Feed, and I thought if we could just launch this, it could change how we learn about the world.Nearly everyone else wanted to sell. Without a sense of higher purpose, this was the startup dream come true. It tore our company apart. After one tense argument, an advisor told me if I didn't agree to sell, I would regret the decision for the rest of my life. Relationships were so frayed that within a year or so every single person on the management team was gone.That was my hardest time leading Facebook. I believed in what we were doing, but I felt alone. And worse, it was my fault. I wondered if I was just wrong, an imposter, a 22 year-old kid who had no idea how the world worked.Now, years later, I understand that *is* how things work with no sense of higher purpose. It's up to us to create it so we can all keep moving forward together.Today I want to talk about three ways to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose: by taking on big meaningful projects together, by redefining equality so everyone has the freedom to pursue purpose, and by building community across the world.First, let's take on big meaningful projects.Our generation will have to deal with tens of millions of jobs replaced by automation like self-driving cars and trucks. But we have the potential to do so much more together.Every generation has its defining works. More than 300,000 people worked to put a man on the moon – including that janitor. Millions of volunteers immunized children around the world against polio. Millions of more people built the Hoover dam and other great projects.These projects didn't just provide purpose for the people doing those jobs, theygave our whole country a sense of pride that we could do great things.Now it's our turn to do great things. I know, you're probably thinking: I don't know how to build a dam, or get a million people involved in anything.But let me tell you a secret: no one does when they begin. Ideas don't come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started.If I had to understand everything about connecting people before I began, I never would have started Facebook.Movies and pop culture get this all wrong. The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie. It makes us feel inadequate since we haven't had ours. It prevents people with seeds of good ideas from getting started. Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about innovation? No one writes math formulas on glass. That's not a thing.It's good to be idealistic. But be prepared to be misunderstood. Anyone working on a big vision will get called crazy, even if you end up right. Anyone working on a complex problem will get blamed for not fully understanding the challenge, even though it's impossible to know everything upfront. Anyone taking initiative will get criticized for moving too fast, because there's always someone who wants to slow you down.In our society, we often don't do big things because we're so afraid of making mistakes that we ignore all the things wrong today if we do nothing. The reality is, anything we do will have issues in the future. But that can't keep us from starting.So what are we waiting for? It's time for our generation-defining public works. How about stopping climate change before we destroy the planet and getting millions of people involved manufacturing and installing solar panels? How about curing all diseases and asking volunteers to track their health data and share their genomes? Today we spend 50x more treating people who are sick than we spend finding cures so people don’t get sick in the first place. That makes no sense. We can fix this. How about modernizing democracy so everyone can vote online, and personalizing education so everyone can learn?These achievements are within our reach. Let's do them all in a way that gives everyone in our society a role. Let's do big things, not only to create progress, but to create purpose.。
尊敬的各位来宾,亲爱的同学们:大家好!今天,我站在这里,非常荣幸能与大家分享一些我个人的经历和感悟。
我的名字是马克·扎克伯格,Facebook的创始人兼CEO。
我想通过我的故事,给大家带来一些启发和动力,让我们一起追求梦想,创造未来。
首先,我想谈谈我的成长经历。
我出生在一个普通的家庭,父母都是勤奋工作的人。
从小,我就对计算机有着浓厚的兴趣。
在我上小学的时候,我就开始学习编程,那是我第一次感受到编程带来的乐趣。
我相信,每个人都有自己热爱的事物,只要我们找到它,并为之努力,我们就能找到属于自己的成功之路。
我记得,在我上高中的时候,我遇到了一个巨大的挑战。
那时候,我正面临着是否应该继续学习计算机科学的抉择。
我的家人和朋友都认为我应该选择一个“更稳妥”的专业,比如医学或法律。
但我知道,我的内心深处对计算机有着无法割舍的热爱。
于是,我坚定地选择了计算机科学,并最终取得了优异的成绩。
当然,在追求梦想的道路上,不可能一帆风顺。
我也曾遇到过很多困难和挫折。
我记得,在我创建Facebook之初,我们面临着巨大的质疑和压力。
有些人认为我们的产品不安全,甚至有人威胁要起诉我们。
但正是这些挑战,让我更加坚定了我们的信念。
我相信,只要我们坚持自己的理念,努力创新,我们就能克服一切困难。
那么,是什么让我在创业的道路上始终保持热情和动力呢?我想,这主要源于以下几个方面的原因:第一,对技术的热爱。
我相信,技术是推动社会进步的重要力量。
计算机技术不仅改变了我们的生活方式,也创造了无数的机会。
我一直以来都对技术充满热情,这种热情让我在面对困难时,始终保持积极向上的态度。
第二,对团队的信任。
一个优秀的团队是成功的关键。
在Facebook,我们有一支充满激情、才华横溢的团队。
我们彼此信任,共同面对挑战,这种信任和团结让我们在困难面前更加坚强。
第三,对未来的憧憬。
我始终相信,未来充满了无限可能。
我们正处在科技飞速发展的时代,每一天都有新的突破和发现。
哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞在平平淡淡的学习、工作、生活中,大家都写过致辞吧,致辞具有语言准确、形象生动的特点。
那什么样的致辞才具有启发意义呢?下面是小编为大家整理的哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞,供大家参考借鉴,希望可以帮助到有需要的朋友。
哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞1尊敬的各位领导、老师、亲爱的同学们:大家好!非常荣幸能作为毕业生代表,站在这里发言。
首先请允许我代表xx级全体同学感谢我们的母校和老师,感谢你们这四年来的悉心教导和精心栽培!现在我站在这里,很荣幸,也很忐忑。
作为即将离开xx大学的年轻一员,我一直在思考:我们新一代x大人,在社会浪潮中该如何传承我们的文化,又该如何在此基础上有所超越?孔子曰:“大道之行,天下为公。
”x大给我们的最大财富,不是权威的理论,不是枯燥的课本,而是一种对真善美的执着信仰和由衷热爱。
当白发苍苍、德高望重的老教授们给我们如数家珍般地诠释深奥的学术概念时,我们领悟到了什么是大师的睿智;当锐意进取、开拓创新的中青年学者挥洒自如地展现他们恢弘的风采时,我们体会到了什么是专家的敏锐。
在x大,每一次讲授都是一次教育,每一堂讨论都是一次提高,每一次体验都是一次升华。
庄子曰:“吾生也有涯,而知也无涯。
”x大,用对理性的思辨和对人文的关注教出了一群善于思考,勤于钻研,理论和实践同样出色的学生。
弱者权利保护中心里的知行合一;辩论赛场上的理性与睿智;支援西部建设无私奉献;风云学子的成长舞台;学术科研,你我争占鳌头;综合竞赛,人人欲领风骚。
这一切,是我作为xx级毕业生的普通一员,对自己成长在x大的总结,更是每一位从x大走出的学子丰富的四年生活,多彩成长足迹的缩影。
因为这里自由的氛围,好学的风气,悠久的传承,厚重的积淀,已经在我们身上深深烙下了印记。
每一位x大人拥有的三分信仰,三分思辩,三分历练,还有一分兼容并包,让我们不管将来从事什么行业,都会时刻秉承自强的品性,弘毅的精神,求是的理念和拓新的勇气。
扎克伯格2017哈佛毕业演讲稿大家好,今天我很荣幸能够站在这里,与哈佛大学的毕业生们分享一些我的人生经验和看法。
首先,我想谈谈关于找到自己的使命和目标的问题。
在我年轻的时候,我并没有想过自己会成为今天的样子。
我只是一个对编程和计算机着迷的学生,我从未想过自己会成为一名企业家,更不用说成为一名全球知名的企业家。
但是,我找到了我的使命和目标,那就是让世界更加开放和联系。
在我创立Facebook的过程中,我一直坚信着这个使命。
我相信,通过连接全世界的人,我们可以让世界变得更加开放,让人们更加理解彼此,促进世界的和平与发展。
这个使命一直激励着我,让我不断努力,不断创新,不断改变世界。
当然,实现这个使命并不是一帆风顺的。
我们经历了无数的挑战和困难,但是我们从未放弃。
因为我们知道,只有坚持不懈,才能实现我们的目标,才能让世界变得更好。
在这里,我想对所有的毕业生们说,找到自己的使命和目标非常重要。
不要被外界的声音和压力左右,要相信自己的选择,坚定自己的信念,不断努力,不断追求自己的目标。
同时,我也想强调人与人之间的联系和理解的重要性。
在这个信息爆炸的时代,我们有着前所未有的机会和条件去连接全世界的人,去理解彼此。
我们要珍惜这个机会,要用心去倾听他人的声音,用心去理解他人的想法,用心去建立更加紧密的联系。
最后,我想说,不要害怕失败。
每个人都会面临失败,但是失败并不可怕。
重要的是,我们要从失败中汲取经验和教训,不断成长,不断进步。
只有在面对失败时,我们才能更加坚定地走向成功的道路。
哈佛的毕业生们,你们是未来的希望,你们拥有无限的可能性。
相信自己,坚持自己的使命和目标,不断努力,你们一定能够创造属于自己的精彩人生。
谢谢大家!祝愿大家前程似锦!。
2024年哈佛毕业典礼扎克伯格致辞尊敬的校长、教职员工、亲爱的毕业生们:大家好!非常感谢哈佛大学邀请我来发表演讲。
在这个特别的时刻,我感到非常荣幸能与你们共同庆祝毕业,并与你们分享一些我在人生和职业道路上的思考和经验。
首先,我要向毕业生们表示最真心的祝贺。
你们已经经历了四年的充实学习和成长,成功地完成了学业,并即将踏入新的人生阶段。
在这个过程中,你们付出了许多努力和汗水,终于迈向了成功的起点。
这是你们奋斗的结果,更是你们坚持不懈的品质的体现。
毕业是一个新的开始,一个机会去追求你们的梦想和目标。
我衷心希望每一位毕业生都能找到自己热爱的事业,并在其中大展宏图。
在这个充满机遇和挑战的世界里,什么会使你与众不同?我相信,正确的思维和积极的心态是你们在未来的道路中取得成功的关键。
首先,你们应该保持对知识的渴望和学习的热情。
在多变和竞争激烈的现代社会中,只有不断学习和适应,才能不被时代所淘汰。
哈佛大学为你们提供了丰富的知识资源和学习机会,但毕业只是一个起点,学习应该成为你们终身的追求。
不论从事何种职业,都要注重持续学习和不断自我提升,以适应未来的挑战和变革。
其次,你们应该具备创新思维和勇于尝试的勇气。
目前的世界正在飞速发展,每天都有新技术和新思维不断涌现。
要想在这个竞争激烈的时代中脱颖而出,你们需要有独立思考和创新能力。
不要惧怕失败,只有不断尝试和学会从失败中汲取经验教训,才能真正找到成功的方向。
正如史蒂夫·乔布斯所说:“创新是区别优秀和卓越的必要条件。
”相信自己的能力,敢于冒险和突破,去寻找新的机会和可能性。
此外,你们也应该培养良好的沟通和合作能力。
在现代社会中,没有一个人可以独自完成伟大的事业。
要想实现自己的目标,你们需要与他人合作,建立强大的团队,共同面对挑战并取得成功。
与人相处需要开放和谦卑的态度,要善于倾听和尊重他人的意见。
只有通过良好的沟通和合作,你们才能够互相支持和激发彼此的潜力,共同实现更大的成就。
I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech, it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!I'm an unlikely speaker, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different paths to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today I want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're building together.But first, the last couple of days have brought back a lot of good memories.How many of you remember exactly what you were doing when you got that email telling you that you got into Harvard? I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs, got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction was to video me opening the email. That could have been a really sad video. I swear getting into Harvard is still the thing my parents are most proud of me for.What about your first lecture at Harvard? Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible Harry Lewis. I was late so I threw on a t-shirt and didn't realize until afterwards it was inside out and backwards with my tag sticking out the front. I couldn't figure out why no one would talk to me -- except one guy, KX Jin, he just went with it. We ended up doing our problem sets together, and now he runs a big part of Facebook. And that, Class of 2017, is why you should be nice to people.But my best memory from Harvard was meeting Priscilla. I had just launched this prank website Facemash, and the ad board wanted to "see me". Everyone thought I was going to get kicked out. My parents came to help me pack. My friends threw me a going away party. As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that party with her friend. We met in line for the bathroom in the Phoho Belltower, and in what must be one of the all time romantic lines, I said: "I'm going to get kicked out in three days, so we need to go on a date quickly."Actually, any of you graduating can use that line.I didn't end up getting kicked out -- I did that to myself. Priscilla and I started dating. And, you know, that movie made it seem like Facemash was so important to creating Facebook. It wasn't. But without Facemash I wouldn't have met Priscilla, and she's the most important person in my life, so you could say it was the most important thing I built in my time here.We've all started lifelong friendships here, and some of us even families. That'swhy I'm so grateful to this place. Thanks, Harvard.Today I want to talk about purpose. But I'm not here to give you the standard commencement about finding your purpose. We're millennials. We'll try to do that instinctively. Instead, I'm here to tell you finding your purpose isn't enough. The challenge for our generation is creating a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.One of my favorite stories is when John F Kennedy visited the NASA space center, he saw a janitor carrying a broom and he walked over and asked what he was doing. The janitor responded: "Mr. President, I'm helping put a man on the moon".Purpose is that sense that we are part of something bigger than ourselves, that we are needed, that we have something better ahead to work for. Purpose is what creates true happiness.You're graduating at a time when this is especially important. When our parents graduated, purpose reliably came from your job, your church, your community. But today, technology and automation are eliminating many jobs. Membership in communities is declining. Many people feel disconnected and depressed, and are trying to fill a void.As I've traveled around, I've sat with children in juvenile detention and opioid addicts, who told me their lives could have turned out differently if they just had something to do, an after school program or somewhere to go. I've met factory workers who know their old jobs aren't coming back and are trying to find their place.To keep our society moving forward, we have a generational challenge -- to not only create new jobs, but create a renewed sense of purpose.I remember the night I launched Facebook from my little dorm in Kirkland House.I went to Noch's with my friend KX. I remember telling him I was excited to connect the Harvard community, but one day someone would connect the whole world.The thing is, it never even occurred to me that someone might be us. We were just college kids. We didn't know anything about that. There were all these big technology companies with resources. I just assumed one of them would do it. But this idea was so clear to us -- that all people want to connect. So we just kept moving forward, day by day.I know a lot of you will have your own stories just like this. A change in the world that seems so clear you're sure someone else will do it. But they won't. You will.But it's not enough to have purpose yourself. You have to create a sense of purpose for others.I found that out the hard way. You see, my hope was never to build a company, but to make an impact. And as all these people started joining us, I just assumed that's what they cared about too, so I never explained what I hoped we'd build.A couple years in, some big companies wanted to buy us. I didn't want to sell. I wanted to see if we could connect more people. We were building the first News Feed, and I thought if we could just launch this, it could change how we learn about the world.Nearly everyone else wanted to sell. Without a sense of higher purpose, this was the startup dream come true. It tore our company apart. After one tense argument, an advisor told me if I didn't agree to sell, I would regret the decision for the rest of my life. Relationships were so frayed that within a year or so every single person on the management team was gone.That was my hardest time leading Facebook. I believed in what we were doing, but I felt alone. And worse, it was my fault. I wondered if I was just wrong, an imposter, a 22 year-old kid who had no idea how the world worked.Now, years later, I understand that *is* how things work with no sense of higher purpose. It's up to us to create it so we can all keep moving forward together.Today I want to talk about three ways to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose: by taking on big meaningful projects together, by redefining equality so everyone has the freedom to pursue purpose, and by building community across the world.First, let's take on big meaningful projects.Our generation will have to deal with tens of millions of jobs replaced by automation like self-driving cars and trucks. But we have the potential to do so much more together.Every generation has its defining works. More than 300,000 people worked to put a man on the moon – including that janitor. Millions of volunteers immunized children around the world against polio. Millions of more people built the Hoover dam and other great projects.These projects didn't just provide purpose for the people doing those jobs, theygave our whole country a sense of pride that we could do great things.Now it's our turn to do great things. I know, you're probably thinking: I don't know how to build a dam, or get a million people involved in anything.But let me tell you a secret: no one does when they begin. Ideas don't come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started.If I had to understand everything about connecting people before I began, I never would have started Facebook.Movies and pop culture get this all wrong. The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie. It makes us feel inadequate since we haven't had ours. It prevents people with seeds of good ideas from getting started. Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about innovation? No one writes math formulas on glass. That's not a thing.It's good to be idealistic. But be prepared to be misunderstood. Anyone working on a big vision will get called crazy, even if you end up right. Anyone working on a complex problem will get blamed for not fully understanding the challenge, even though it's impossible to know everything upfront. Anyone taking initiative will get criticized for moving too fast, because there's always someone who wants to slow you down.In our society, we often don't do big things because we're so afraid of making mistakes that we ignore all the things wrong today if we do nothing. The reality is, anything we do will have issues in the future. But that can't keep us from starting.So what are we waiting for? It's time for our generation-defining public works. How about stopping climate change before we destroy the planet and getting millions of people involved manufacturing and installing solar panels? How about curing all diseases and asking volunteers to track their health data and share their genomes? Today we spend 50x more treating people who are sick than we spend finding cures so people don’t get sic k in the first place. That makes no sense. We can fix this. How about modernizing democracy so everyone can vote online, and personalizing education so everyone can learn?These achievements are within our reach. Let's do them all in a way that gives everyone in our society a role. Let's do big things, not only to create progress, but to create purpose.。
不容错过的扎克伯格哈佛大学演讲稿:为什么它能影响万千青年?:非常感谢你们给我这个机会,让我来分享自己的人生故事和对未来的看法。
哈佛大学是我人生中非常重要的一个阶段,也是我人生中最重要的一个阶段之一。
在这里,我学到了很多东西,认识了很多人,也懂得了成功的真正含义。
今天,我想跟大家分享一下我的人生经验和我的想法,希望能对你们有所启发和帮助。
让我从我的人生故事开始说起。
我来自一个普通家庭,从小就喜欢电脑和编程。
11岁的时候,我开始学习编写计算程序,并在自己家中编写了第一款电脑游戏。
这一经历对我产生的影响非常深远,让我相信只要有梦想和努力,所有的困难都可以被克服。
后来,我来到哈佛大学学习。
在这里,我遇到了很多优秀的同学和教授,见识了不同的文化和思想,这些都对我的人生产生了非常大的影响。
在哈佛,我开始思考如何利用互联网的力量为人们带来更多的便利和机会,于是我创立了Facebook社交网络。
这个社交网络迅速走红,成为了全球最受欢迎的社交网络之一,影响了亿万人的生活。
今天,我想谈谈的是关于你们未来的事情。
在这个数字化的时代,每个人都可以通过互联网,找到更多的机会和资源。
随着科技的不断发展,你们的未来将有更多的选择和机会。
但是,在这个世界上,除了机会和成功,还有很多困难和挑战。
我们所面临的挑战之一就是社会的分裂和冲突。
在这个时代,信息变得越来越多,但真相也变得越来越难以辨别。
我们的意见和信仰被不同的声音和利益所影响,这导致社会出现分裂和对立。
在这种情况下,我们需要更多像哈佛大学这样的教育机构,培养出更多独立思考、明辨是非、关注社会问题的人才。
我们需要更多像Facebook这样的社交网络,让人们能够更好地连接和沟通,理解不同文化和观点,从而拓展视野,增强智慧。
同时,我们也需要更多的人才和科技,应对全球面临的挑战和重大问题。
气候变化、动乱冲突、医疗卫生等问题都需要更多的人才和科技,去寻找解决办法。
我想鼓励你们,要有勇气和决心,去追求自己的梦想和目标。
扎克伯格2017哈佛毕业演讲(全)欧阳家百(2021.03.07)Part 1I love this place .Thank you all for coming out in the rain. We gonna(会)make it worth for you.我爱这个地方。
感谢大家冒着倾盆大雨过来。
我们会让你觉得不虚此行。
President Faust,Board of Overseers,faculty , alumni, friends, proud parents, members of the ad board, and graduates of the greatest university in the world,Faust校长,校监委员会成员们,老师、校友、朋友、自豪的家长们、管理委员会的委员们,以及全世界最伟大学校的毕业生们!I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech,it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!今天和你们待在一起我备感荣幸,因为说实话,你们完成了一个我永远无法办到的成就。
等我做完这个演讲,这将是我第一次在哈佛大学完成的某件事。
2017的毕业班同学,祝贺你们!I'm an unlikely speaker today, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different roads to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today i want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're all building together.我本不可能是站在这里发表演讲的人,不仅仅因为我是一名辍学生,还因为其实我们是同一代人。
马克·扎克伯格2017哈佛毕业演讲美国波士顿时间5月25日,哈佛大学举办了2017届学生毕业典礼。
Facebook创始人马克·扎克伯格(Mark Zuckerberg)回到母校,做了毕业典礼演讲。
英文全文:President Faust, Board of Overseers, faculty, alumni, friends, proud parents, members of the ad board, and graduates of the greatest university in the world,I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech, it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!I'm an unlikely speaker, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different paths to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today I want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're building together.But first, the last couple of days have brought back a lot of good memories.How many of you remember exactly what you were doing when yougot that email telling you that you got into Harvard? I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs, got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction was to video me opening the email. That could have been a really sad video. I swear getting into Harvard is still the thing my parents are most proud of me for.What about your first lecture at Harvard? Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible Harry Lewis. I was late so I threw on a t-shirt and didn't realize until afterwards it was inside out and backwards with my tag sticking out the front. I couldn't figure out why no one would talk to me -- except one guy, KX Jin, he just went with it. We ended up doing our problem sets together, and now he runs a big part of Facebook. And that, Class of 2017, is why you should be nice to people.But my best memory from Harvard was meeting Priscilla. I had just launched this prank website Facemash, and the ad board wanted to "see me". Everyone thought I was going to get kicked out. My parents came to help me pack. My friends threw me a going away party. As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that party with her friend. We met in line for the bathroom in the Pfoho Belltower, and in what must be one of the all time romantic lines, I said: "I'm going to get kicked out in three days, so we need to go on a date quickly."Actually, any of you graduating can use that line.I didn't end up getting kicked out -- I did that to myself. Priscilla andI started dating. And, you know, that movie made it seem like Facemash was so important to creating Facebook. It wasn't. But without Facemash I wouldn't have met Priscilla, and she's the most important person in my life, so you could say it was the most important thing I built in my time here.We've all started lifelong friendships here, and some of us even families. That's why I'm so grateful to this place. Thanks, Harvard.Today I want to talk about purpose. But I'm not here to give you the standard commencement about finding your purpose. We're millennials. We'll try to do that instinctively. Instead, I'm here to tell you finding your purpose isn't enough. The challenge for our generation is creating a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.One of my favorite stories is when John F Kennedy visited the NASA space center, he saw a janitor carrying a broom and he walked over and asked what he was doing. The janitor responded: "Mr. President, I'm helping put a man on the moon".Purpose is that sense that we are part of something bigger than ourselves, that we are needed, that we have something better ahead to work for. Purpose is what creates true happiness.You're graduating at a time when this is especially important. When our parents graduated, purpose reliably came from your job, your church, your community. But today, technology and automation are eliminatingmany jobs. Membership in communities is declining. Many people feel disconnected and depressed, and are trying to fill a void.As I've traveled around, I've sat with children in juvenile detention and opioid addicts, who told me their lives could have turned out differently if they just had something to do, an after school program or somewhere to go. I've met factory workers who know their old jobs aren't coming back and are trying to find their place.To keep our society moving forward, we have a generational challenge -- to not only create new jobs, but create a renewed sense of purpose.I remember the night I launched Facebook from my little dorm in Kirkland House. I went to Noch's with my friend KX. I remember telling him I was excited to connect the Harvard community, but one day someone would connect the whole world.The thing is, it never even occurred to me that someone might be us. We were just college kids. We didn't know anything about that. There were all these big technology companies with resources. I just assumed one of them would do it. But this idea was so clear to us -- that all people want to connect. So we just kept moving forward, day by day.I know a lot of you will have your own stories just like this. A change in the world that seems so clear you're sure someone else will do it. But they won't. You will.But it's not enough to have purpose yourself. You have to create a sense of purpose for others.I found that out the hard way. You see, my hope was never to build a company, but to make an impact. And as all these people started joining us, I just assumed that's what they cared about too, so I never explained what I hoped we'd build.A couple years in, some big companies wanted to buy us. I didn't want to sell. I wanted to see if we could connect more people. We were building the first News Feed, and I thought if we could just launch this, it could change how we learn about the world.Nearly everyone else wanted to sell. Without a sense of higher purpose, this was the startup dream come true. It tore our company apart. After one tense argument, an advisor told me if I didn't agree to sell, I would regret the decision for the rest of my life. Relationships were so frayed that within a year or so every single person on the management team was gone.That was my hardest time leading Facebook. I believed in what we were doing, but I felt alone. And worse, it was my fault. I wondered if I was just wrong, an imposter, a 22 year-old kid who had no idea how the world worked.Now, years later, I understand that *is* how things work with no sense of higher purpose. It's up to us to create it so we can all keepmoving forward together.Today I want to talk about three ways to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose: by taking on big meaningful projects together, by redefining equality so everyone has the freedom to pursue purpose, and by building community across the world.First, let's take on big meaningful projects.Our generation will have to deal with tens of millions of jobs replaced by automation like self-driving cars and trucks. But we have the potential to do so much more together.Every generation has its defining works. More than 300,000 people worked to put a man on the moon –including that janitor. Millions of volunteers immunized children around the world against polio. Millions of more people built the Hoover dam and other great projects.These projects didn't just provide purpose for the people doing those jobs, they gave our whole country a sense of pride that we could do great things.Now it's our turn to do great things. I know, you're probably thinking: I don't know how to build a dam, or get a million people involved in anything.But let me tell you a secret: no one does when they begin. Ideas don't come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started.If I had to understand everything about connecting people before I began, I never would have started Facebook.Movies and pop culture get this all wrong. The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie. It makes us feel inadequate since we haven't had ours. It prevents people with seeds of good ideas from getting started. Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about innovation? No one writes math formulas on glass. That's not a thing.It's good to be idealistic. But be prepared to be misunderstood. Anyone working on a big vision will get called crazy, even if you end up right. Anyone working on a complex problem will get blamed for not fully understanding the challenge, even though it's impossible to know everything upfront. Anyone taking initiative will get criticized for moving too fast, because there's always someone who wants to slow you down.In our society, we often don't do big things because we're so afraid of making mistakes that we ignore all the things wrong today if we do nothing. The reality is, anything we do will have issues in the future. But that can't keep us from starting.So what are we waiting for? It's time for our generation-defining public works. How about stopping climate change before we destroy the planet and getting millions of people involved manufacturing and installing solar panels? How about curing all diseases and asking volunteers to track their health data and share their genomes? Today wespend 50x more treating people who are sick than we spend finding cures so people don’t get sick in the first place. That makes no sense. We can fix this. How about modernizing democracy so everyone can vote online, and personalizing education so everyone can learn?These achievements are within our reach. Let's do them all in a way that gives everyone in our society a role. Let's do big things, not only to create progress, but to create purpose.So taking on big meaningful projects is the first thing we can do to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.The second is redefining equality to give everyone the freedom they need to pursue purpose.Many of our parents had stable jobs throughout their careers. Now we're all entrepreneurial, whether we're starting projects or finding or role. And that's great. Our culture of entrepreneurship is how we create so much progress.Now, an entrepreneurial culture thrives when it's easy to try lots of new ideas. Facebook wasn't the first thing I built. I also built games, chat systems, study tools and music players. I'm not alone. JK Rowling got rejected 12 times before publishing Harry Potter. Even Beyonce had to make hundreds of songs to get Halo. The greatest successes come from having the freedom to fail.But today, we have a level of wealth inequality that hurts everyone.When you don't have the freedom to take your idea and turn it into a historic enterprise, we all lose. Right now our society is way over-indexed on rewarding success and we don't do nearly enough to make it easy for everyone to take lots of shots.Let's face it. There is something wrong with our system when I can leave here and make billions of dollars in 10 years while millions of students can't afford to pay off their loans, let alone start a business.Look, I know a lot of entrepreneurs, and I don't know a single person who gave up on starting a business because they might not make enough money. But I know lots of people who haven't pursued dreams because they didn't have a cushion to fall back on if they failed.We all know we don't succeed just by having a good idea or working hard. We succeed by being lucky too. If I had to support my family growing up instead of having time to code, if I didn't know I'd be fine if Facebook didn't work out, I wouldn't be standing here today. If we're honest, we all know how much luck we've had.Every generation expands its definition of equality. Previous generations fought for the vote and civil rights. They had the New Deal and Great Society. Now it's our time to define a new social contract for our generation.We should have a society that measures progress not just by economic metrics like GDP, but by how many of us have a role we findmeaningful. We should explore ideas like universal basic income to give everyone a cushion to try new things. We’re going to change jobs many times, so we need affordable childcare to get to work and healthcare that aren't tied to one company. We're all going to make mistakes, so we need a society that focuses less on locking us up or stigmatizing us. And as technology keeps changing, we need to focus more on continuous education throughout our lives.And yes, giving everyone the freedom to pursue purpose isn't free. People like me should pay for it. Many of you will do well and you should too.That's why Priscilla and I started the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and committed our wealth to promoting equal opportunity. These are the values of our generation. It was never a question of if we were going to do this. The only question was when.Millennials are already one of the most charitable generations in history. In one year, three of four US millennials made a donation and seven out of ten raised money for charity.But it's not just about money. You can also give time. I promise you, if you take an hour or two a week -- that's all it takes to give someone a hand, to help them reach their potential.Maybe you think that's too much time. I used to. When Priscilla graduated from Harvard she became a teacher, and before she'd doeducation work with me, she told me I needed to teach a class. I complained: "Well, I'm kind of busy. I'm running this company." But she insisted, so I taught a middle school program on entrepreneurship at the local Boys and Girls Club.I taught them lessons on product development and marketing, and they taught me what it's like feeling targeted for your race and having a family member in prison. I shared stories from my time in school, and they shared their hope of one day going to college too. For five years now, I’ve been having dinner with those kids every month. One of them threw me and Priscilla our first baby shower. And next year they’re going to college. Every one of them. First in their families.We can all make time to give someone a hand. Let's give everyone the freedom to pursue their purpose -- not only because it's the right thing to do, but because when more people can turn their dreams into something great, we're all better for it.Purpose doesn't only come from work. The third way we can create a sense of purpose for everyone is by building community. And when our generation says "everyone", we mean everyone in the world.Quick show of hands: how many of you are from another country? Now, how many of you are friends with one of these folks? Now we're talking. We have grown up connected.In a survey asking millennials around the world what defines ouridentity, the most popular answer wasn't nationality, religion or ethnicity, it was "citizen of the world". That's a big deal.Every generation expands the circle of people we consider "one of us". For us, it now encompasses the entire world.We understand the great arc of human history bends towards people coming together in ever greater numbers -- from tribes to cities to nations -- to achieve things we couldn't on our own.We get that our greatest opportunities are now global -- we can be the generation that ends poverty, that ends disease. We get that our greatest challenges need global responses too -- no country can fight climate change alone or prevent pandemics. Progress now requires coming together not just as cities or nations, but also as a global community.But we live in an unstable time. There are people left behind by globalization across the world. It's hard to care about people in other places if we don’t feel good about our lives here at home. There’s pressure to turn inwards.This is the struggle of our time. The forces of freedom, openness and global community against the forces of authoritarianism, isolationism and nationalism. Forces for the flow of knowledge, trade and immigration against those who would slow them down. This is not a battle of nations, it's a battle of ideas. There are people in every countryfor global connection and good people against it.This isn't going to be decided at the UN either. It's going to happen at the local level, when enough of us feel a sense of purpose and stability in our own lives that we can open up and start caring about everyone. The best way to do that is to start building local communities right now.We all get meaning from our communities. Whether our communities are houses or sports teams, churches or music groups, they give us that sense we are part of something bigger, that we are not alone; they give us the strength to expand our horizons.That's why it's so striking that for decades, membership in all kinds of groups has declined as much as one-quarter. That's a lot of people who now need to find purpose somewhere else.But I know we can rebuild our communities and start new ones because many of you already are.I met Agnes Igoye, who's graduating today. Where are you, Agnes? She spent her childhood navigating conflict zones in Uganda, and now she trains thousands of law enforcement officers to keep communities safe.I met Kayla Oakley and Niha Jain, graduating today, too. Stand up. Kayla and Niha started a non-profit that connects people suffering from illnesses with people in their communities willing to help.I met David Razu Aznar, graduating from the Kennedy School today.David, stand up. He’s a former city councilor who successfully led the battle to make Mexico City the first Latin American city to pass marriage equality -- even before San Francisco.This is my story too. A student in a dorm room, connecting one community at a time, and keeping at it until one day we connect the whole world.Change starts local. Even global changes start small -- with people like us. In our generation, the struggle of whether we connect more, whether we achieve our biggest opportunities, comes down to this -- your ability to build communities and create a world where every single person has a sense of purpose.Class of 2017, you are graduating into a world that needs purpose. It's up to you to create it.Now, you may be thinking: can I really do this?Remember when I told you about that class I taught at the Boys and Girls Club? One day after class I was talking to them about college, and one of my top students raised his hand and said he wasn't sure he could go because he's undocumented. He didn't know if they'd let him in.Last year I took him out to breakfast for his birthday. I wanted to get him a present, so I asked him and he started talking about students he saw struggling and said "You know, I'd really just like a book on social justice."I was blown away. Here's a young guy who has every reason to be cynical. He didn't know if the country he calls home -- the only one he's known -- would deny him his dream of going to college. But he wasn't feeling sorry for himself. He wasn't even thinking of himself. He has a greater sense of purpose, and he's going to bring people along with him.It says something about our current situation that I can't even say his name because I don't want to put him at risk. But if a high school senior who doesn't know what the future holds can do his part to move the world forward, then we owe it to the world to do our part too.Before you walk out those gates one last time, as we sit in front of Memorial Church, I am reminded of a prayer, Mi Shebeirach, that I say whenever I face a challenge, that I sing to my daughter thinking about her future when I tuck her into bed. It goes:"May the source of strength, who blessed the ones before us, help us *find the courage* to make our lives a blessing."I hope you find the courage to make your life a blessing.Congratulations, Class of '17! Good luck out there.中文翻译:浮士德主席、监察委员会、老师、校友、朋友们、自豪的父母们、广告委员会成员以及世界上最大的大学毕业生们,我很荣幸今天能与你们共聚这里,因为你们完成了我当年没有完成的事。
2017马克扎克伯格-哈佛毕业演讲I'm honored to be with you today because, let's face it, you accomplished something I never could. If I get through this speech, it'll be the first time I actually finish something at Harvard. Class of 2017, congratulations!I'm an unlikely speaker, not just because I dropped out, but because we're technically in the same generation. We walked this yard less than a decade apart, studied the same ideas and slept through the same Ec10 lectures. We may have taken different paths to get here, especially if you came all the way from the Quad, but today I want to share what I've learned about our generation and the world we're building together.But first, the last couple of days have brought back a lot of good memories.How many of you remember exactly what you were doing when you got that email telling you that you got into Harvard? I was playing Civilization and I ran downstairs, got my dad, and for some reason, his reaction was to video me opening the email. That could have been a really sad video. I swear getting into Harvard is still the thing my parents are most proud of me for.What about your first lecture at Harvard? Mine was Computer Science 121 with the incredible Harry Lewis. I was late so I threw on a t-shirt and didn't realize until afterwards it was inside out and backwards with my tag sticking out the front. I couldn't figure out why no one would talk to me -- except one guy, KX Jin, he just went with it. We ended up doing our problem sets together, and now he runs a big part of Facebook. And that, Class of 2017, is why you should be nice to people.But my best memory from Harvard was meeting Priscilla. I had just launched this prank website Facemash, and the ad board wanted to "see me". Everyone thought I was going to get kicked out. My parents came to help me pack. My friends threw me a going away party. As luck would have it, Priscilla was at that party with her friend. We met in line for the bathroom in the Phoho Belltower, and in what must be one of the all time romantic lines, I said: "I'm going to get kicked out in three days, so we need to go on a date quickly."Actually, any of you graduating can use that line.I didn't end up getting kicked out -- I did that to myself. Priscilla and I started dating. And, you know, that movie made it seem like Facemash was so important to creating Facebook. It wasn't. But without Facemash I wouldn't have met Priscilla, and she's the most important person in my life, so you could say it was the most important thing I built in my time here.We've all started lifelong friendships here, and some of us even families. That's why I'm so grateful to this place. Thanks, Harvard.Today I want to talk about purpose. But I'm not here to give you the standard commencement about finding your purpose. We're millennials. We'll try to do that instinctively. Instead, I'm here to tell you finding your purpose isn't enough. The challenge for our generation is creating a world where everyone has a sense of purpose.One of my favorite stories is when John F Kennedy visited the NASA space center, he saw a janitor carrying a broom and he walked over and asked what he was doing. The janitor responded: "Mr. President, I'm helping put a man on the moon".Purpose is that sense that we are part of something bigger than ourselves, that we are needed, that we have something better ahead to work for. Purpose is what creates true happiness.You're graduating at a time when this is especially important. When our parents graduated, purpose reliably came from your job, your church, your community. But today, technology and automation are eliminating many jobs. Membership in communities is declining. Many people feel disconnected and depressed, and are trying to fill a void.As I've traveled around, I've sat with children in juvenile detention and opioid addicts, who told me their lives could have turned out differently if they just had something to do, an after school program or somewhere to go. I've met factory workers who know their old jobs aren't coming back and are trying to find their place.To keep our society moving forward, we have a generational challenge -- to not only create new jobs, but create a renewed sense of purpose.I remember the night I launched Facebook from my little dorm in Kirkland House. I went to Noch's with my friend KX. I remember telling him I was excited to connect the Harvard community, but one day someone would connect the whole world.The thing is, it never even occurred to me that someone might be us. We were just college kids. We didn't know anything about that. There were all these big technology companies with resources. I just assumed one of them would do it. But this idea was so clear to us -- that all people want toconnect. So we just kept moving forward, day by day.I know a lot of you will have your own stories just like this. A change in the world that seems so clear you're sure someone else will do it. But they won't. You will.But it's not enough to have purpose yourself. You have to create a sense of purpose for others.I found that out the hard way. You see, my hope was never to build a company, but to make an impact. And as all these people started joining us, I just assumed that's what they cared about too, so I never explained what I hoped we'd build.A couple years in, some big companies wanted to buy us. I didn't want to sell.I wanted to see if we could connect more people. We were building the first News Feed, and I thought if we could just launch this, it could change how we learn about the world.Nearly everyone else wanted to sell. Without a sense of higher purpose, this was the startup dream come true. It tore our company apart. After one tense argument, an advisor told me if I didn't agree to sell, I would regret the decision for the rest of my life. Relationships were so frayed that within a year or so every single person on the management team was gone.That was my hardest time leading Facebook. I believed in what we were doing, but I felt alone. And worse, it was my fault. I wondered if I was just wrong, an imposter, a 22 year-old kid who had no idea how the world worked.Now, years later, I understand that *is* how things work with no sense of higher purpose. It's up to us to create it so we can all keep moving forward together.Today I want to talk about three ways to create a world where everyone has a sense of purpose: by taking on big meaningful projects together, by redefining equality so everyone has the freedom to pursue purpose, and by building community across the world.First, let's take on big meaningful projects.Our generation will have to deal with tens of millions of jobs replaced by automation like self-driving cars and trucks. But we have the potential to doso much more together.Every generation has its defining works. More than 300,000 people worked to put a man on the moon –including that janitor. Millions of volunteers immunized children around the world against polio. Millions of more people built the Hoover dam and other great projects.These projects didn't just provide purpose for the people doing those jobs, they gave our whole country a sense of pride that we could do great things.Now it's our turn to do great things. I know, you're probably thinking: I don't know how to build a dam, or get a million people involved in anything.But let me tell you a secret: no one does when they begin. Ideas don't come out fully formed. They only become clear as you work on them. You just have to get started.If I had to understand everything about connecting people before I began, I never would have started Facebook.Movies and pop culture get this all wrong. The idea of a single eureka moment is a dangerous lie. It makes us feel inadequate since we haven't had ours. It prevents people with seeds of good ideas from getting started. Oh, you know what else movies get wrong about innovation? No one writes math formulas on glass. That's not a thing.It's good to be idealistic. But be prepared to be misunderstood. Anyone working on a big vision will get called crazy, even if you end up right. Anyone working on a complex problem will get blamed for not fully understanding the challenge, even though it's impossible to know everything upfront. Anyone taking initiative will get criticized for moving too fast, because there's always someone who wants to slow you down.In our society, we often don't do big things because we're so afraid of making mistakes that we ignore all the things wrong today if we do nothing. The reality is, anything we do will have issues in the future. But that can't keep us from starting.So what are we waiting for? It's time for our generation-defining public works. How about stopping climate change before we destroy the planet and getting millions of people involved manufacturing and installing solar panels? How about curing all diseases and asking volunteers to track their health data and share their genomes? Today we spend 50x more treatingpeople who are sick than we spend fi nding cures so people don’t get sick in the first place. That makes no sense. We can fix this. How about modernizing democracy so everyone can vote online, and personalizing education so everyone can learn?These achievements are within our reach. Let's do them all in a way that gives everyone in our society a role. Let's do big things, not only to create progress, but to create purpose.。