He had a point. He just phrased it in a way that alienated a lot of people. But there is a certain energy and willingness to see things in unconventional ways that most people lose as they get older.
I also think the world is changing to value it more.
Math, for example, is famously a young man's game. And I think the world is changing so that more things are like math.
Math seems to becoming less of a young man's game. There is simply to much to learn now before you reach a field still ripe with unsolved problems. There still lots of said problems, they are just built on top of other things.
Math is hard. I have about as much formal education in math as I do in CS (about to finish undergrad as a double major). Yet I can pick up nearly any CS research paper and breeze through it, but my eyes will glaze over at 90% of math research.
I'm a CS major but by the time I'll graduate I'll have taken more math than CS courses (degree requirements are funny that way). I would tend to agree with you about the relative difficulty if CS and math but this could be partially a consequence of how it is taught. If some school was crazy enough to offer a "real" (see Dijkstra[1]) program that would compare more favorably.
But this sort of proves the original point. Since cs/programming has lower barriers to entry (cool new stuff is still "easy") there are many more opportunities for young people.
I don't understand the relevance of your point about CS curricula. My comparison was with respect to my ability to read research papers written by professors, not to do classwork at my current level. I'm observing that math papers are much more difficult to understand and inferring that the state of the art in math is more complex than the state of the art in computer science.
It was partially a tangent prompted by your comment. I meant "the stuff CS people do and think about" not just homework or research. Through whatever accidents of history, practical concerns, or being a young field, the stuff CS people do tends to be easier than the stuff math people do, but that doesn't necessarily need to be the case.
I don't think the OP meant specifically that math is important, just that the same energy that makes young people better at math also makes them better at startups.
I think he meant smart as in that their more apt to know what is 'cool'. It's obviously being blown out of proportion though. A comparison is with music. In high school and college everyone knows the music scene and all of the up and coming bands. It's all around you and you can't avoid it. When you're a little older it's harder to stay on top of those new artists and underground musicians.
Unless I missed a subtlety he meant "smart" as in intelligent. He later clarified that one should never compromise intelligence for experience when hiring.
I think that open-ended creativity has little to do with math. Yes, most people get worse at math as they age, but some get better at open-ended creativity.
For most web 2.0 startups, I would say that creativity is more important than math.
As for the actual programming part, well many people can do that. It's not that big of a deal.
Yeah, but don't you think it's more important to care about people having points than people being asses? I'd certainly rather live in a place where everybody had a point but was an ass than where nobody was an ass but also had no points. (similarity to places real or imagined entirely coincidental)
Zuckerberg is not very smart here, and his comment illuminates the area where younger people are stupider (in general): Blindness. Lack of awareness of the world around you means that you will not understand what your customers are asking for, etc. You can get away with this when all your customers are within 2 years of your age. But it will come up to bite you... better to be wary and listening rather than arrogant.
There is no area of achievement-- physical, mental, or character where one age group dominates over another. There are exceptional people at all ages.
The perception that there are more exceptional young people is actually ironic-- its more surprising when a young person has high achievement and so it gets more media coverage. Exceptional achievements from older people are less noteworthy-- even though they are not less exceptional.
Confusion on this point is exactly the kind of naivete' that keeps young people back.
DO NOT BE ARROGANT-- it doesn't pay. It is a form of escapism.
Maybe I am just jealous since I am over 30 and have not yet succeeded in a startup, but I think it is lack of commitments that allows younger people to be more inventive. If your mind is occupied with IRAs and Cars and Kids ... etc, you never have enough time to get immersed in the process of solving problems.
Rich, I like your point. I find that I do a lot of my best work when I can allow at least several days to a project, then my mind is saturated with the problem and requires smaller amounts of energy to get something done. I don't this this happening if you have a family or other huge responsibilities.
I also think the world is changing to value it more. Math, for example, is famously a young man's game. And I think the world is changing so that more things are like math.