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View Full Version : Real Help or just a dumb stunt by a naive fool? You be the judge.



Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
08-24-2013, 11:03 AM
http://gma.yahoo.com/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-055155050--abc-news-topstories.html ---------------------------------------------- NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes. <cite class="byline vcard" id="yui_3_9_1_19_1377359855042_159">By JOANNA STERN | Good Morning America – <abbr title="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z">21 hours ago</abbr></cite>

http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/i0spMpXL5fT8rYAchr3Uxw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Y2g9NTU4O2NyPTE7Y3c9OTkyO2R4PTA7ZH k9MDtmaT11bGNyb3A7aD0zNTU7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg
(http://gma.yahoo.com/photos/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-photo-055155352--abc-news-topstories.html)Good Morning America - NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes (ABC News)













<!-- START article --> <!-- yog-5u -->
<meta content="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z" itemprop="datePublished"> <meta content="Good Morning America" itemprop="provider"> <meta content="NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes" itemprop="headline"> <meta content="JOANNA STERN" itemprop="author"> <meta content="New York Man Decides to Help a Homeless Man He Sees Every Day with Some Tech Knowledge" itemprop="description"> <meta content="http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg" itemprop="image"> <!-- google_ad_section_start --> Patrick McConlogue is a lot like the many others working in the New York tech scene. Every morning, he walks to work, passing a few homeless people on the streets, and then spends the rest of his day at a computer, writing software code for a 35-person startup.
But the 23-year-old engineer didn't think those two parts of his day had to stay separate. Earlier this week, he made an offer to one of those homeless men.
"I walk by a homeless guy every day on the way to work and I get this feeling every day that he is a smart guy -- he has books and he writes," McConlogue told ABC News. "I was trying to think of a way to engage him and help him."
McConlogue approached Leo, a 36-year man who lives on the streets of lower Manhattan, on Thursday and gave him two options.
The first was $100 in cash."I figured that was enough for a ticket some place or a few meals, if that's what he wanted," McConlogue said.The second option on the table was a laptop, three JavaScript books and two months of coding instruction from McConlogue.After hearing the offer, Leo, who McConlogue described as very articulate and gifted, especially in on the topic of environmental issues, decided to take the coding option."I want to spread knowledge and information about climate change and global warming," Leo told ABC News in a phone interview facilitated by McConlogue.
Soon, McConlogue will deliver him a Samsung Chromebook with 3G connectivity, three JavaScript books, a solar charger for the laptop and something to conceal the laptop in. He will spend an hour before work every morning teaching him the basics of software coding.
McConlogue began documenting his plans to help Leo on the blogging platform Medium (https://medium.com/architecting-a-life/fee8f3ee97a0) earlier this week and has seen a mix of reactions.
The technology community, in particular, was critical of his first post, which was titled, "Finding the unjustly homeless, and teaching them to code." Many commenters criticized McConlogue for using the word "unjust," which he admitted was a poor word choice.
Still, some writers heavily criticized McConlogue's effort beyond that.
Techcrunch editor-in-chief Alexia Tsotsis (http://techcrunch.com/2013/08/21/tech-gets-its-own-modest-proposal/) said McConlogue was "tone-deaf" and that his plan demonstrated "a profound cluelessness about poverty and the disenfranchised."
Slate's Matthew Yglesias (http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/08/21/housing_first_give_the_homeless_a_place_to_live.ht ml) argued that housing, not coding, is the first step in fixing homelessness.
Then, Slate's Will Oremus called him a "naive techie."
But along with the critics, there were those who supported his effort. More than 1,200 people have liked the "Journeyman" Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Journeyman/167865816737032) McConlogue has set up about the project and he said he has even heard from some previously homeless individuals who see the effort as useful.
Leo himself, who is aware of the online chatter, said that he is understanding of the criticism. "It's America, people have the right to have their opinions," he said. "It's the Internet, people have the right to post what they want. I agree to disagree." When asked about housing Leo said that he thought "housing was great for people who want to be put in housing, for people who want and need it."

Larrymc
08-24-2013, 11:33 AM
http://gma.yahoo.com/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-055155050--abc-news-topstories.html ---------------------------------------------- NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes. <cite class="byline vcard" id="yui_3_9_1_19_1377359855042_159">By JOANNA STERN | Good Morning America – <abbr title="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z">21 hours ago</abbr></cite>

http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/i0spMpXL5fT8rYAchr3Uxw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Y2g9NTU4O2NyPTE7Y3c9OTkyO2R4PTA7ZH k9MDtmaT11bGNyb3A7aD0zNTU7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg
(http://gma.yahoo.com/photos/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-photo-055155352--abc-news-topstories.html)Good Morning America - NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes (ABC News)









<!-- START article --> <!-- yog-5u -->
<meta content="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z" itemprop="datePublished"> <meta content="Good Morning America" itemprop="provider"> <meta content="NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes" itemprop="headline"> <meta content="JOANNA STERN" itemprop="author"> <meta content="New York Man Decides to Help a Homeless Man He Sees Every Day with Some Tech Knowledge" itemprop="description"> <meta content="http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg" itemprop="image"> <!-- google_ad_section_start --> Patrick McConlogue is a lot like the many others working in the New York tech scene. Every morning, he walks to work, passing a few homeless people on the streets, and then spends the rest of his day at a computer, writing software code for a 35-person startup.
But the 23-year-old engineer didn't think those two parts of his day had to stay separate. Earlier this week, he made an offer to one of those homeless men.
"I walk by a homeless guy every day on the way to work and I get this feeling every day that he is a smart guy -- he has books and he writes," McConlogue told ABC News. "I was trying to think of a way to engage him and help him."
McConlogue approached Leo, a 36-year man who lives on the streets of lower Manhattan, on Thursday and gave him two options.
The first was $100 in cash."I figured that was enough for a ticket some place or a few meals, if that's what he wanted," McConlogue said.The second option on the table was a laptop, three JavaScript books and two months of coding instruction from McConlogue.After hearing the offer, Leo, who McConlogue described as very articulate and gifted, especially in on the topic of environmental issues, decided to take the coding option."I want to spread knowledge and information about climate change and global warming," Leo told ABC News in a phone interview facilitated by McConlogue.
Soon, McConlogue will deliver him a Samsung Chromebook with 3G connectivity, three JavaScript books, a solar charger for the laptop and something to conceal the laptop in. He will spend an hour before work every morning teaching him the basics of software coding.
McConlogue began documenting his plans to help Leo on the blogging platform Medium (https://medium.com/architecting-a-life/fee8f3ee97a0) earlier this week and has seen a mix of reactions.
The technology community, in particular, was critical of his first post, which was titled, "Finding the unjustly homeless, and teaching them to code." Many commenters criticized McConlogue for using the word "unjust," which he admitted was a poor word choice.
Still, some writers heavily criticized McConlogue's effort beyond that.
Techcrunch editor-in-chief Alexia Tsotsis (http://techcrunch.com/2013/08/21/tech-gets-its-own-modest-proposal/) said McConlogue was "tone-deaf" and that his plan demonstrated "a profound cluelessness about poverty and the disenfranchised."
Slate's Matthew Yglesias (http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/08/21/housing_first_give_the_homeless_a_place_to_live.ht ml) argued that housing, not coding, is the first step in fixing homelessness.
Then, Slate's Will Oremus called him a "naive techie."
But along with the critics, there were those who supported his effort. More than 1,200 people have liked the "Journeyman" Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Journeyman/167865816737032) McConlogue has set up about the project and he said he has even heard from some previously homeless individuals who see the effort as useful.
Leo himself, who is aware of the online chatter, said that he is understanding of the criticism. "It's America, people have the right to have their opinions," he said. "It's the Internet, people have the right to post what they want. I agree to disagree." When asked about housing Leo said that he thought "housing was great for people who want to be put in housing, for people who want and need it."People can and do surprise you, Is it help? depends on the person, in the end its his time and money it if being him happiness or fills some need to do some thing, good for them both.

tailfins
08-24-2013, 12:26 PM
http://gma.yahoo.com/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-055155050--abc-news-topstories.html ---------------------------------------------- NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes. <cite class="byline vcard" id="yui_3_9_1_19_1377359855042_159">By JOANNA STERN | Good Morning America – <abbr title="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z">21 hours ago</abbr></cite>

http://l2.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/i0spMpXL5fT8rYAchr3Uxw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Y2g9NTU4O2NyPTE7Y3c9OTkyO2R4PTA7ZH k9MDtmaT11bGNyb3A7aD0zNTU7cT04NTt3PTYzMA--/http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg
(http://gma.yahoo.com/photos/nyc-engineer-wants-help-homeless-man-software-coding-photo-055155352--abc-news-topstories.html)Good Morning America - NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes (ABC News)









<!-- START article --> <!-- yog-5u -->
<meta content="2013-08-23T18:51:08Z" itemprop="datePublished"> <meta content="Good Morning America" itemprop="provider"> <meta content="NYC Engineer Wants to Help Homeless Man With Software Coding Classes" itemprop="headline"> <meta content="JOANNA STERN" itemprop="author"> <meta content="New York Man Decides to Help a Homeless Man He Sees Every Day with Some Tech Knowledge" itemprop="description"> <meta content="http://media.zenfs.com/en_us/gma/us.abcnews.gma.com/ht_mcconlogue_mi_130822_16x9_992.jpg" itemprop="image"> <!-- google_ad_section_start --> Patrick McConlogue is a lot like the many others working in the New York tech scene. Every morning, he walks to work, passing a few homeless people on the streets, and then spends the rest of his day at a computer, writing software code for a 35-person startup.
But the 23-year-old engineer didn't think those two parts of his day had to stay separate. Earlier this week, he made an offer to one of those homeless men.
"I walk by a homeless guy every day on the way to work and I get this feeling every day that he is a smart guy -- he has books and he writes," McConlogue told ABC News. "I was trying to think of a way to engage him and help him."
McConlogue approached Leo, a 36-year man who lives on the streets of lower Manhattan, on Thursday and gave him two options.
The first was $100 in cash."I figured that was enough for a ticket some place or a few meals, if that's what he wanted," McConlogue said.The second option on the table was a laptop, three JavaScript books and two months of coding instruction from McConlogue.After hearing the offer, Leo, who McConlogue described as very articulate and gifted, especially in on the topic of environmental issues, decided to take the coding option."I want to spread knowledge and information about climate change and global warming," Leo told ABC News in a phone interview facilitated by McConlogue.
Soon, McConlogue will deliver him a Samsung Chromebook with 3G connectivity, three JavaScript books, a solar charger for the laptop and something to conceal the laptop in. He will spend an hour before work every morning teaching him the basics of software coding.
McConlogue began documenting his plans to help Leo on the blogging platform Medium (https://medium.com/architecting-a-life/fee8f3ee97a0) earlier this week and has seen a mix of reactions.
The technology community, in particular, was critical of his first post, which was titled, "Finding the unjustly homeless, and teaching them to code." Many commenters criticized McConlogue for using the word "unjust," which he admitted was a poor word choice.
Still, some writers heavily criticized McConlogue's effort beyond that.
Techcrunch editor-in-chief Alexia Tsotsis (http://techcrunch.com/2013/08/21/tech-gets-its-own-modest-proposal/) said McConlogue was "tone-deaf" and that his plan demonstrated "a profound cluelessness about poverty and the disenfranchised."
Slate's Matthew Yglesias (http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/08/21/housing_first_give_the_homeless_a_place_to_live.ht ml) argued that housing, not coding, is the first step in fixing homelessness.
Then, Slate's Will Oremus called him a "naive techie."
But along with the critics, there were those who supported his effort. More than 1,200 people have liked the "Journeyman" Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/pages/Journeyman/167865816737032) McConlogue has set up about the project and he said he has even heard from some previously homeless individuals who see the effort as useful.
Leo himself, who is aware of the online chatter, said that he is understanding of the criticism. "It's America, people have the right to have their opinions," he said. "It's the Internet, people have the right to post what they want. I agree to disagree." When asked about housing Leo said that he thought "housing was great for people who want to be put in housing, for people who want and need it."


If you can't avoid the figurative landmines in the corporate culture, you won't get off the ground. If you don't have social skills, you had better be able to tell some people what they want to hear so they will leave you alone.