[填空题]
{{B}}America’s Brain Drain
Crisis
Losing the Global Edge{{/B}}
William Kunz is a
self-described computer geek. A more apt description might be computer genius.
When he was just 11, Kunz started writing software programs, and by 14 he had
created his own video game. As a high school sophomore in Houston, Texas, he won
first prize in a local science fair for a data encryption (编密码) program he
wrote. In his senior year, he took top prize in an international science and
engineering fair for designing a program to analyze and sort DNA
patterns.
Kunz went on to attend Carnegie Mellon, among the
nation’s highest-ranked universities in computer science. After college he
landed a job with Oracle in Silicon Valley, writing software used by companies
around the world.
Kurtz looked set to become a star in his
field. Then he gave it all up.
Today, three years later, Kurtz
is in his first year at Har
[填空题]America’s Brain Drain Crisis
Losing the Global Edge
William Kurtz is a self-described computer geek. A more apt description might be computer genius. When he was just 11, Kunz started writing software programs, and by 14 he had created his own video game. As a high school sophomore in Houston, Texas, he won first prize in a local science fair for a data encryption(编密码) program he wrote. In his senior year, he took top prize in an international science and engineering fair for designing a program to analyze and sort DNA patterns.
Kunz went on to attend Carnegie Mellon, among the nation’s highest-ranked universities in computer science. After college he landed a job with Oracle in Silicon Valley, writing software used by companies around the world.
Kunz looked set to become a star in his field. Then he gave it all up.
Today, three years later, Kurtz is in his first year at Harvard Business School. He left software engineering partly because hi