Friday, November 03, 2006

Parents Just Don't Understand

My parents are in town and as usual I have to deal with technology issues. I just set up a new WiFi network in my house and brought a new laptop, BTW great laptop for just over 400 bucks, the link has it listed at $499 but I paid $450??. My excuse for getting the laptop was for my 4 year old Lauren. Funny, how she has barely touched it. It is great sitting in my lounger, surfing the web while everyone else is watching TV.

My parents did not understand how it was hooked up the internet. My mom, who always knows EVERYTHING - told my Dad that the internet 'waves' went through the air and the laptop 'captured' them. In front of my dad, who thinks he is the techno geek between him and grandma, (which in actuality simply means that he can find where he saved photos on the computer) I say in a mocking voice ( I am good at that)"So let me get this right, internet 'waves' (insert wild hand gestures) just flow through the air and the computer picks it up?" Of course my dad joined in my derision of this obviously flawed concept. After a few minutes of this....I had to break it to Grandpa that Grandma was right and this was as close to an explanation as I would be able to explain. Grandpa said it was Bull$#%$#. I took him upstairs showed him my wireless router and tried to explain it to him. After a while I reverted to the previous explanation Grandma had told.....Dad...there are these 'waves' of internet and the laptop is capturing them.

Most of my technology issues surrounding my parents are getting them to a web site. I have given up on trying to get them to type in the URL and now simply have them type a website in google. Dad, type HTTP// Ah....F*&^ it just to google and type Woot.com. this seems to work better than typing in the URL.

I have another older person I help out with computers. I think the mistake I make is trying to give them simple 'steps' to take to help them out. I am going to start explaining more holistically what they are doing so they may be able to figure it out. It is like the old joke, 'hit any key' where someone can't get past this command because they are looking for a key that says 'ANY'. I don't know how many times I have got a telephone call that started with 'I pushed the key you told me too' Uhhh you have to have the window OPEN FIRST. As the world changes, we are going to have to take account of these changes, we can't afford to have these folks left behind. The digital divide is not simply one of economics but of culture.

Monday, October 16, 2006

Bunch of San Diego Tech Companies - AeA Awards

Been noticing a lot of traffic on my blog and I have not kept on posting, will try and keep it up do date. I have a lot of new content from the AeA High Tech Awards. I had a chance to visit with most of the CEO's since I see them when they do the video taping. We had some interesting winners this year!! Judges are last years winners and we often get a couple of surprises.

I am going to risk leaving some companies out, but would like to cover what I thought were some of the more compelling companies that were finalists this year.

ESET - I thought I knew all the San Diego Companies in the Web security space, but had not heard about ESET until a few months ago. They have some good traffic going through thier website (as well as revenue!!) I have met Rick Moy, VP of Marketing a few times. Any company that is succesful against the big guys in this space has my respect. With increasing revenue, they are moving out of thier Coronodo digs. I would keep an eye on this company, good international team and some good revenue growth. In a nod to uber geekiness they even have a page on their web where one of their programmers is caught composing songs about malware and viruses.....Uh...Nigel keep your day job.

Impact Engine. One of the common themes in this years AeA awards was the niche markets San Diego software companies were filling. Impact Engine is a good example of this. I often wondered about banner ads and the economics behind them. Impact Engine is going to put a whole bunch of spoiled HTML/XML programmers out of work. They create banner ad templates - hundreds of them and also some customization software to go along with it. I have known Neil Greer , the founder and CEO from a few other AeA members. He is a smart capable guy who should be able to take this company to the next level. He is just starting to build his team over there.

Entriq. I have been familiar with these folks for some time now, with all the $$$ going into video sites, someone HAS to be able to monetize it. That is where Entriq comes in - they have a very easy to use system to.....not sure how else to say it...get cash for your video. This may become a very crowded space, however Entriq has been around and has the experience and credibility to be a leader in this space. Entriq has also been branching out from its historical strong markets of sports to capture some of the other video opportunities out there.

More later.....just some of the finalists companies that did not win that were worth mentioning

Kevin Carroll




Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Tech Company Visits

Had a chance to visit some tech companies so thought I would do some name dropping. After a long time assisting to develop standards Staccato Communications is really starting to get some traction, they have a new CEO, Marty Colombatto, I have spoke to him a few times via e-mail and it looks like everything is in place over there. They have been under the radar for awhile, I really get a sense you are going to be hearing a lot more from them. AeA is going to assist them in an open house they are going to have in the near future - they recently moved into a new building in Sorrento Valley.

AeA hosted a 'North County Technology Mixer' and I had a chance to catch up with some AeA Members. Cymer hosted the event, they have a nice amphitheater that provided a cool backdrop for our event. We had about a hundred folks show up, the format is really simple we pick a geogrphic cluster of tech companies, in this case Rancho Bernardo, we recruit a few CEO's to tell us what is going on with their company. Bob Akins, CEO Cymer kicked it off by telling the Cymer story. I had a chance to meet the new Cymer COO Ed Brown, nice guy - some of my members knew him from previous stints at other companies. Next we had Tom Carter, CEO Trellisware brief us on his company, they are a ViaSat Spinoff and have some very intriguing technology. Everyone who knows Tom Carter, says he is the smartest guy in the room!! Next Robert Harling, Operations Director of AP Labs brought us up to speed on what is happening at AP Labs. They are moving very quickly and are adding folks almost as fast as they can find them, they have established a reputation for some very cutting edge quality technology work, especially in 'rugged design'.

San Diego is a very exciting place to be right now, lots of new companies coming out of the block, very diverse which bodes well for the region.

Monday, March 20, 2006

I Don't wear a watch

I don’t wear a watch

Recently I was playing Video games with a very video proficient 9 year old. We were playing one of those inexpensive plug in to your video game of old Atari games. I relayed to my young playing companion that when I was young you could only play these in arcades and we would pump quarter after quarter into the machines. He looked at the poor quality of the graphics and the slow game play and turned to me with all the pity a 9 year old can muster and said “that is so sad”. BTW I kicked his ASS in Galaga, I kept two spaceships for most of the time. He insisted it was a cheat and after I beat him a few times he asked what other games I had. Take that

The point being that technology marches on and once in a while it destroys other technologies, we all know this, but sometimes the cultural effects of the heap bin of technology has a real impact. Hence my new discovery/observation - I don’t wear a watch. I carry my phone everywhere and it has a digital watch on the screen, it is a clamshell so I can see the time when it is closed. I recently lost an expensive watch, and when I say lost I mean my three year old hid it and now I can’t find it. I was never into the ‘ I need 5 watches’ thing and figured I saved a lot of money over the years by only having one nice watch. Upon gearing up for a replacement search, I had the revelation that perhaps, just maybe, I don’t need a watch. Why do I need two pieces of equipment that do the same thing?? I have been testing my observation the past few weeks having gone watchless. I feel liberated, almost naked without something I have wearing since high school. I no longer have to worry about where I left it the night before. I don’t have to take anything off before I do any manual labor. OK, so that did not happen that often, but it did happen once in a while!! More importantly I don’t miss it or feel the need to have one.

Now, what else can I get rid of????

Wednesday, January 25, 2006

Alternative View on Google/China

While I understand the angst about the recent Google decision to accept Chinese conditions for market entry. I would like to point out an alternative view, (it may not necessarily be mine!!)

Yes, Google did conform to Chinese government regulations, in much the same way Google is also complying with a host of U.S. regulations, including the largest regressive tax on U.S. Business - Sarbanes Oxley, a particularly onerous set of U.S. regulations. Other foreign owned companies listed on an American stock exchanges must also comply. I am also sure that Google is complying with other foreign regulations in countries in which it operates. Yes, free speech is different and it is abhorrent that the Chinese government chooses to censor what its citizens can see. However..........................

The Internet and the free flow of information is the Trojan horse of democracy for China

For the Chinese, control of the internet is a cruel illusion and Google is rightly letting them have their ‘illusion’. Ultimately the Mandarin censors will be overwhelmed, attacked and thwarted, their illusion will quickly crumble. Information always finds a way to be free. Chinese hackers have already publicly announced hacks to get around a sophisticated network of filters. The masses will use the internet to communicate; underground networks will develop. Internet aided technologies such as IM, wireless communications, blogs, and broad access to the net will revolutionize the flow of information, once the monopoly of the Chinese goverment. The Chinese, will of course try and continue to filter, censor and block objectionable information, it won't work. Snippets of 'subversive' information will slip through, sophisticated users will find ways to reach the information they want, regardless of the Chinese authoriites attempts to stop it. The internet is a product of the U.S.A and no county has exploited it more than the United States, as much as the Chinese may like there will be no ‘Asian Internet’ thus the positive influence of America and other western culture will be felt by the Chinese. Freedom, Liberty, Democracy and Freedom of the Press is imprinted on the DNA of the internet through the inherent free flow of information.

Let the Chinese have their illusions, for their kind it is the beginning of the end. The Internet will contribute to thier demise. And Google will have helped bring it down.

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

Passages

I was very saddened to hear Pascal Didier, Cymer had recently lost his long struggle to overcome a serious illness.

I met Pascal maybe 5 or 6 times. Pascal had one of the driest wits out of any tech executive I know. I still remember our first meeting some years ago when Pascal asked me if I could cut Cymer's AeA dues in half, as I sputtered for a few moments, Pascal finally told me to calm down and he was just kidding. Pascal had a unique ability to put people at ease, his dry wit, vision and his ability to get right to the point made him an invaluable asset to Cymer.

IMOP, Cymer has one of the top management teams in town, Bob Akins is well known in the community and guides Cymer with a steady hand, I once joked to Bob that the cyclical nature of the semiconductor business must lead him to have a manic depressive mindset. Bob and his team has been able to 'even' out the cycles. In the semiconductor bust a few years ago, one would have thought that a company like Cymer would have been decimated, instead Cymer concentrated on R&D, and preserving their very technical workforce they had worked so hard to develop. Cymer has managed the boom/bust cycle incredibly well and probably does not get enough credit for this. Pascal was part of this and will be missed.

Pascal's passing will be missed not only by Cymer but the entire technology community.

Thursday, January 05, 2006

Holy Cow, I have never seen that color before

“Holy Cow, I have never seen that color before”

Lauren Carroll
My three year old daughter on seeing her first sunset yesterday

Everyone is bothering me about when I am getting my three year old her first computer. Being the daughter of a geek would seem to make her an early candidate for her own computer not to mention her own case of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome. I made the decision to wait on the computer as we both looked at the sunset yesterday. It was a particularly beautiful one as shades of purple and pink mingled to serve up a wonderful palette of colors. She asked me if she could touch it and I told her that if we touched it would disappear, she was surprisingly ok with this answer and sat next to me and continued to enjoy the ‘new colors’

If she had her own computer, I wonder if we would have had the opportunity to share that moment.