The 10,000-Hour Rule
The Tech Geniuses
Patterns of Opportunity
Practice Makes Perfect
100

How many hours of practice does it take to achieve mastery?

10,000 hours

100

What do Steve Jobs and Bill Gates have in common in their early lives?

Both got rare early access to advanced technology and mentorship

100

What key factor allowed some people to get 10,000 hours while others didn’t?

Access to time, resources, and supportive environments

100

According to Gladwell, what does practice do: make you good, or come after you’re good?

It’s what makes you good

200

Who created the 10,000 hour rule?

K. Anders Ericsson

200

Who co-founded Microsoft with Bill Gates?

Paul Allen

200

What company did Bill Joy help found after leaving Berkeley?

Sun Microsystems

200

About how many hours did amateur pianists practice by age 20?

2,000


300

Why did older engineers and workers in 1975 not join the computer revolution?

They already had stable jobs and families, so they couldn’t take the risk.

300

What company did Steve Ballmer eventually run as CEO?

Microsoft

300

What does Gladwell say many successful computer pioneers shared besides intelligence and hard work?

They were born at the right time to catch the tech revolution

300

What does Daniel Levitin call the “magic number” for mastery?

10,000

400

According to Gladwell, what was the perfect age to be in 1975 to join the computer revolution?

About 20 or 21 years old

400

What did Steve Jobs do as a teenager that helped him learn about electronics?

He attended HP science talks and called Bill Hewlett for spare parts

400

What common pattern does Gladwell notice among tech pioneers’ birth years?

Many were born between 1953 and 1956

400

hat does Gladwell suggest is more important than natural talent for success?

Hard work and opportunity to practice


500

What idea does Gladwell use this birth pattern to prove about success?

Success depends on opportunity and timing, not just talent or hard work.

500

How does Gladwell compare Steve Jobs getting spare parts from Bill Hewlett to Bill Gates’s early experience?

Both were rare, lucky opportunities that gave them early access to technology

500

How does Gladwell describe the idea that success is only about talent?

A myth

500

What does Ericsson’s study suggest about “naturals” and “grinds”?

They don’t exist 


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