Amusing, but irrelevant, article. Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and a large number of people became successful without college degrees, and presumably, without the math. But, as the last couple of paragraphs in the article show, he can't even do calculus, or much trig presumably, so he can't do or understand ANY analysis of his designs, and has to rely on someone else who did grind through the math classes to do that work. Which is OK, the world needs visionaries and geniuses, but to conflate his innate intuition with something that should be emulated is a silly notion.
MM's comments also reveal another fallacy, which is that you know in college what you want to do with the rest of your life, and therefore can meaningfully decide what knowledge to learn, and the bottom line reality for many, is that it's not so at all. The math. and science, background gives you the freedom to do more than just being a button pusher. Hiring a mathematician, or even a consultant, is fine when you're flush with money and time, but most projects are not that way, and hiring someone who knows nothing about your project and your requirements every time a math problem comes up is death by a thousand cuts. Moreover, the rejection of math likely condemns most people to a pigeon-hole for the rest of their lives, which may be perfectly fine for some people. But, there are lots of people for which doing no more than what you basically did upon graduation is not the life for them; they want to grow and expand their responsibilities and challenges. THAT requires the math and science background that the article blithely considers to be irrelevant.
TTFN (ta ta for now)
I can do absolutely anything. I'm an expert!
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