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What was Mark Zuckerberg like at 19?

I will copy and paste an interview I have saved on my Dropbox that I once came across on the interest. I wish I could give first hand experience to beef up the answer but I'm in South Africa (at the time I was still in Zimbabwe) so let's go with the interview from the days of thefacebook.com. Here:Exclusive Interview With Mark Zuckerberg The Face Behind thefacebook.comCURRENT MAGAZINEUpdated: 7:07 p.m. ET Nov. 30, 2004Winter 2004 - Current Magazine recently spoke with Mark Zuckerberg, the creator of thefacebook.com— now at almost 300 schools and attracting one million users. Zuckerberg, currently on leave from Harvard, talked about the popularity of thefacebook, his latest project and his favorite Greek hero.Current Magazine: What time do you wake up in the morning?Mark Zuckerberg: That depends. There are two modes. I keep programmer time sometimes. When you’re at your computer you can get distracted by other people, so programmers tend to stay up really late and work when everyone else is asleep. So it’s not really uncommon for me to stay up until 6 or 8 in the morning. The other mode is when I have a meeting. The business world does not operate between 5 pm and 8 am, so that requires some waking up for. The two kind of go together well because sometimes I’m waking up at 8 am and sometimes I’m going to bed at 8 am. So I’ll go for three days without sleeping, which is really sweet.CM: What about breakfast?MZ: I haven’t eaten breakfast in a long time. The only time I eat breakfast is when I have meetings that early in the morning. Usually it’s a late lunch and then a late dinner and then a second dinner at Jack in the Box.CM: Tell me about how thefacebook got started.MZ: The idea for the website was motivated by a social need at Harvard to be able to identify people in other residential houses—Harvard is a fairly unfriendly place. While each residential house listed directories of their residents, I wanted one online directory where all students could be listed. And I’ve always enjoyed building things and puttering around with computer code, so I sat down and in about a week I had produced the basic workings of the site.CM:And from there you spread the website to other top schools—MIT, Yale, Stanford.MZ: Yeah, but the goal was never to be elitist. We had a launch plan to enter into other colleges based on where friends would be most likely to overlap, so the site spread organically based upon that model and now we operate on a broad spectrum of campuses. It doesn’t make sense to exclude anybody or any college from the resources that thefacebook offers. This is a product that should be fun and useful for all college students.CM: Your website was one of the first social networking sites to explicitly ground its online community on a physical one.MZ: That’s why I think the website has been such a success. We don’t view the site as an online community—we bill it as a directory that is reinforcing a physical community. What exists on the site is a mirror image of what exists in real life.CM: But at the same time, can’t thefacebook distort people’s perceptions of the real world? MZ: To a certain extent, the website is unfortunate because it oversimplifies things. Everybody’s concept of having a friend is different. It can definitely blur the relationships that exist between people. But in the end, I think that thefacebook can only reinforce preexisting communities. We think we have been particularly successful in strengthening those relationships that exist between people who are only “fringe friends.”CM: So in your view, are there any negative aspects to the website?MZ: Oh sure, there are. It’s not unusual for us to receive an email from somebody saying, “I spend all of my time on your website and now I have less of a social life than I had before.” We would much rather have people meet people through the website and go out and party than stay at home on a Friday night reading other people’s profiles. And it’s surprising, but we have actually received far less complaints about stalking than we otherwise would have expected.CM: So we hear you're taking the semester off and renting a house. How do you afford it? MZ: We hate banner ads so we don’t want to inundate the site with tons of them because we think they’re ugly and distracting. So lately we’ve been putting thought into other advertising systems that would be less offensive. Right now we put up what we need to keep the site running, pay for servers and equipment and keep a house for ourselves. It’s not that cheap—we have to make $40,000 a month or something, but it works. The advertising revenue that we bring in changes because the size of the site doubles each month.CM: Has Bill Gates called you yet?MZ: No. I don’t think Bill Gates makes phone calls. I’m not sure that he’d be the one to call me if Microsoft got in touch with us, but it’d be sweet if he did.CM: What’s your favorite gadget?MZ: I have a minicomputer that I carry around, it’s a mini Sony VAIO. We named it Tinkerbell.CM: Tell us about your latest project, Wirehog.MZ: Wirehog is a social application for transferring files between friends. You can connect to a friend’s computer and browse the files, like photos, videos and music that they have, and transfer the files to your own computer.CM: So are you a beer guy or a mixed-drink kind of guy?MZ: Beer. [Laughing] But I’m underage. I don’t drink. And my friends all make fun of me because I don’t have a fake ID. They’re like, "You can make websites but you can’t make a fake ID?"CM: Why haven’t you gotten into the ID business?MZ: Because it’s... illegal. I really have never had a reason to have a fake ID. It’s good to get into bars, but my whole take on that is that I like college parties. And I live right next to Stanford, so I go to parties there.CM: Speaking of legal issues, what’s the deal with this lawsuit against you, in 15 words or less?MZ: Well, a waste of time and money. It’s not going anywhere, they have no chance.CM: If you could have dinner with someone, dead or alive, who would it be?MZ: Achilles. I could reach across the table and say, “Now you know who you are fighting.”CM: How did gym class in middle school work out for you?MZ: Gym was sweet. I actually used to be athletic. Before I went to Exeter at the end of high school, I went to public school and actually played three varsity sports. Then I got to Exeter and I was like, uhh, now I’m gonna program. I did crew, and tennis—preppy sports.CM: Have you benefitted socially from the website?MZ: I get more out of making the site and hearing from people who have benefitted from the site than actually using it. But the other weekend some friends and I were down in L.A. and we were able to throw an impromptu party after messaging some random people we didn't know at UCLA. That was pretty cool.CM: Does thefacebook help you pick up girls? MZ: It helps my friends pick up girls.Cornell student Matt Nagowski contributed to the reporting of this article.I hope that was helpful :)

If you are Hispanic and during a police stop a (non Hispanic) white officer speaks to you in Spanish without even asking if you are OK with it, would you expect to receive the same treatment as a (non Hispanic) white person in the same situation?

I have had this situation occur to me. I was stopped for an equipment violation—a burned-out license plate bulb as I remember—in LA’s San Fernando Valley. As it turned out, I had forgotten to clear up another violation for failing to have renewed my car’s registration on time. It had gone to warrant and the LAPD officer who stopped me took me to the local police station holding cell. He had spoken English to me the whole time.When I arrived at the station, I was fingerprinted and photographed. My prints went in for clearance and a thumb print matched, sort of, the thumbprint of another woman. I was taken up to be questioned in an interrogation room. Two Anglo detectives came into the room and immediately began speaking really poor Spanish. I wondered why but was polite and compliant—and very, very frightened—and answered their questions.They told me that my real name was something else and that I was wanted for several burglaries. I explained to them that no, that couldn’t be. Not only did I seldom go to the Valley, I was an Honors program student at UCLA. They said they didn’t believe me so I told them to look in my wallet for my UCLA student ID card. The conversation was in Spanish but I could tell that they had just about used up every word they knew in Spanish. They asked me if I spoke English and I said yes.I felt seriously annoyed over being arrested for a warrant for a vehicle violation but not terribly afraid. When they began to accuse me of being the burglar and showed me her photo, I began to be afraid. In my opinion, the other woman and I looked nothing alike. Basically our only similarity was that we were Latinas.At that point, I realized that, had I been white, it is extremely unlikely that I would have been mistaken for another woman because of my ethnicity. Somehow my accomplishments at UCLA, my grades, nothing mattered. They simply didn’t want to listen to me. I was specifically *just* a Latina and a criminal suspect.The detectives did check my wallet and found my student ID. They did more fingerprints and mine did not come back a match to the other woman the second time. But that took several hours during which I had to wait in the holding cell. I was eventually given a court date and told to pay the fine. I was released more than eight hours after I was taken into custody.Going into it, I really didn’t expect to be treated differently. But when the detectives came in, speaking Spanish and insisting that I was the suspect in a string of burglaries, the situation went south quickly. At that point, it was made clear to me that I was not only a suspect, I was a Latina suspect. And never did I receive an apology from the detectives. In either Spanish or English.

What did Mark Zuckerberg eat when he made Facebook?

He says he used to eat cereal. Let me get the link to the interview he did (i'll edit this question. Answering now to keep it in my feed)EDIT:This my be considered cheating but I will copy and paste an answer I put to a rather similar question asking what Mark Zuckerberg was like at 19. It is an interview from way back in the days of thefacebook.com when it was still that and only at universities. You can read the whole interview, somewhere in there, he is asked what he eats.Exclusive Interview With Mark Zuckerberg The Face Behind thefacebook.comCURRENT MAGAZINEUpdated: 7:07 p.m. ET Nov. 30, 2004Winter 2004 - Current Magazine recently spoke with Mark Zuckerberg, the creator of thefacebook.com — now at almost 300 schools and attracting one million users. Zuckerberg, currently on leave from Harvard, talked about the popularity of thefacebook, his latest project and his favorite Greek hero.Current Magazine: What time do you wake up in the morning?Mark Zuckerberg: That depends. There are two modes. I keep programmer time sometimes. When you’re at your computer you can get distracted by other people, so programmers tend to stay up really late and work when everyone else is asleep. So it’s not really uncommon for me to stay up until 6 or 8 in the morning. The other mode is when I have a meeting. The business world does not operate between 5 pm and 8 am, so that requires some waking up for. The two kind of go together well because sometimes I’m waking up at 8 am and sometimes I’m going to bed at 8 am. So I’ll go for three days without sleeping, which is really sweet.CM: What about breakfast?MZ: I haven’t eaten breakfast in a long time. The only time I eat breakfast is when I have meetings that early in the morning. Usually it’s a late lunch and then a late dinner and then a second dinner at Jack in the Box.CM: Tell me about how thefacebook got started.MZ: The idea for the website was motivated by a social need at Harvard to be able to identify people in other residential houses—Harvard is a fairly unfriendly place. While each residential house listed directories of their residents, I wanted one online directory where all students could be listed. And I’ve always enjoyed building things and puttering around with computer code, so I sat down and in about a week I had produced the basic workings of the site.CM:And from there you spread the website to other top schools—MIT, Yale, Stanford.MZ: Yeah, but the goal was never to be elitist. We had a launch plan to enter into other colleges based on where friends would be most likely to overlap, so the site spread organically based upon that model and now we operate on a broad spectrum of campuses. It doesn’t make sense to exclude anybody or any college from the resources that thefacebook offers. This is a product that should be fun and useful for all college students.CM: Your website was one of the first social networking sites to explicitly ground its online community on a physical one.MZ: That’s why I think the website has been such a success. We don’t view the site as an online community—we bill it as a directory that is reinforcing a physical community. What exists on the site is a mirror image of what exists in real life.CM: But at the same time, can’t thefacebook distort people’s perceptions of the real world?MZ: To a certain extent, the website is unfortunate because it oversimplifies things. Everybody’s concept of having a friend is different. It can definitely blur the relationships that exist between people. But in the end, I think that thefacebook can only reinforce preexisting communities. We think we have been particularly successful in strengthening those relationships that exist between people who are only “fringe friends.”CM: So in your view, are there any negative aspects to the website?MZ: Oh sure, there are. It’s not unusual for us to receive an email from somebody saying, “I spend all of my time on your website and now I have less of a social life than I had before.” We would much rather have people meet people through the website and go out and party than stay at home on a Friday night reading other people’s profiles. And it’s surprising, but we have actually received far less complaints about stalking than we otherwise would have expected.CM: So we hear you're taking the semester off and renting a house. How do you afford it?MZ: We hate banner ads so we don’t want to inundate the site with tons of them because we think they’re ugly and distracting. So lately we’ve been putting thought into other advertising systems that would be less offensive. Right now we put up what we need to keep the site running, pay for servers and equipment and keep a house for ourselves. It’s not that cheap—we have to make $40,000 a month or something, but it works. The advertising revenue that we bring in changes because the size of the site doubles each month.CM: Has Bill Gates called you yet?MZ: No. I don’t think Bill Gates makes phone calls. I’m not sure that he’d be the one to call me if Microsoft got in touch with us, but it’d be sweet if he did.CM: What’s your favorite gadget?MZ: I have a minicomputer that I carry around, it’s a mini Sony VAIO. We named it Tinkerbell.CM: Tell us about your latest project, Wirehog.MZ: Wirehog is a social application for transferring files between friends. You can connect to a friend’s computer and browse the files, like photos, videos and music that they have, and transfer the files to your own computer.CM: So are you a beer guy or a mixed-drink kind of guy?MZ: Beer. [Laughing] But I’m underage. I don’t drink. And my friends all make fun of me because I don’t have a fake ID. They’re like, "You can make websites but you can’t make a fake ID?"CM: Why haven’t you gotten into the ID business?MZ: Because it’s... illegal. I really have never had a reason to have a fake ID. It’s good to get into bars, but my whole take on that is that I like college parties. And I live right next to Stanford, so I go to parties there.CM: Speaking of legal issues, what’s the deal with this lawsuit against you, in 15 words or less?MZ: Well, a waste of time and money. It’s not going anywhere, they have no chance.CM: If you could have dinner with someone, dead or alive, who would it be?MZ: Achilles. I could reach across the table and say, “Now you know who you are fighting.”CM: How did gym class in middle school work out for you?MZ: Gym was sweet. I actually used to be athletic. Before I went to Exeter at the end of high school, I went to public school and actually played three varsity sports. Then I got to Exeter and I was like, uhh, now I’m gonna program. I did crew, and tennis—preppy sports.CM: Have you benefitted socially from the website?MZ: I get more out of making the site and hearing from people who have benefitted from the site than actually using it. But the other weekend some friends and I were down in L.A. and we were able to throw an impromptu party after messaging some random people we didn't know at UCLA. That was pretty cool.CM: Does thefacebook help you pick up girls?MZ: It helps my friends pick up girls.Cornell student Matt Nagowski contributed to the reporting of this article.

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