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garry says...

Electricity greatly improved our quality of life. But I'm not going to get excited about buying a basket of utility companies. Same for the Internet. Can't live without it, but can't live with it (in my portfolio).
--James Altucher via online.wsj.com

James Altucher will eat his words. To count tech out at a local minima is absolutely absurd. Fred Wilson is right: Tech is alive and well. But there are deeper reasons than what Fred Wilson mentions.

Other than computing technology, what field can boast exponential gains? Green tech is much talked about of late, but what are the rates of improvement for battery power, photovoltaics, and clean energy? Miniscule, in the single digit percentages. We can only wish for exponential advancement in almost all fields of technology. It's just not a reality.

With computers, we are blessed by the exponential curve of Moore's Law. Ray Kurzweil plots this exponential curve:

Just look at the innovation that has happened in 40 years. Bill Gates is famed to have said in 1998: "If General Motors had kept up with technology like the computer industry has, we would all be driving twenty five dollar cars that got 1000 miles/gallon."

Instead, GM has gone bankrupt, and now we have one-inch-thick netbooks that we can buy for less than $300 that provide 300,000x the computing power of the ENIAC, which cost $500,000 and filled a very large room in 1946!

The exponential march of software begets the exponential march of software capability. Software has gone more and more high level. Instead of slinging machine-readable bits, we started writing assembly. Then C/C++. Then Java and Perl. Now, Ruby and Python -- each step is less efficient for the computer but more efficient for the human. In 1946 you needed a PhD to even get near a computer, and only now are we seeing the rise of the truly interconnected, paperback computer that costs next to nothing but is indispensible for everyday life -- not just for an educated elite but for every person on the planet.

The advent of the Gutenberg printing press and modern mass-produced book changed society at its core -- at its basic fabric, humanity as a whole became more educated, more equal, more enlightened, and far more human, rising out of the depths of ignorance. The rise of cheap, ubiquitous books formed the modern world. But now we have a book that is infinite in length and unbounded in capability to teach, share, educate, and think.

So we've got an exponential engine of innovation, and it is transforming society before our eyes. And we're at a such a local minima where the WSJ is calling the whole engine dead.

We're still only beginning this mad experiment of infinite and ubiquitous computing. The greatest, most earth shattering software has yet to be created. On the upslope of an exponential, you'd be insane not to go long.

Filed under: finance, Moore's law, product design, social software, startups, stocks, technology in society

stephanie says...

I have been apartment-hunting this week and have seen everything from super tidy crate-and-barrel square-box apartments in Foster City to cramped but warm/friendly communal spaces in Bernal Heights.  


One house I saw near downtown San Mateo really took the cake when it comes to oddball yet strangely fascinating.  It was a 5-room house with a huge backyard that included a number of fruit trees (avocado, fig, apricot, fuji apple, lemon, orange) and other fruit-bearing plants (10 different kinds of tomatoes, a blackberry bush), a full garden with corn, squash and the like, and a fire pit around which they "conduct Buddhist ceremonies." They plucked a ripe fig off their tree for me to take home.

The house is populated by "hippies who shower," though I had to raise my eyebrow a bit at that claim.  Here's an excerpt from the intro e-mail one of the girls wrote to me (yes, she included the scrolly header up top)...
_________________________


 
Hi Stephanie,
 
We met briefly last evening when you came over to see the house, and I regret not being able to talk to you a bit, and get to know you.  
 
A little about us:  M****** and I are both healers and we work day jobs, M****** builds magical healing tools, and I do intuitive readings.  M****** works at a coffee shop, and I work at a local furniture store.  We are both masseuses and energy healers as well, and we are pretty free about offering help to people in our lives if they need it.  I love nature, painting, dancing, and singing, and M****** plays guitar.  M****** teaches [Renaissance] swordfighting in the backyard, and I teach channeling classes out of the house sometimes.  Generally, authentic, deeply compassionate, honest people are a match for us.  Creative, nature loving, spiritually interested people are especially welcome.
 
Warnings: Sometimes the house gets messy, and stays that way for a week until someone has the energy to clean it.  A couple of our housemates smoke, but they do it outside.  And, there is cat litter.  'nuf said.
 
A****

Filed under: Essays: Rants

garry says...









via Obama's first 167 days (boston.com)

Filed under: obama

garry says...

Knowing Facebook, they must have AB tested this and found it to be massively effective. Lets show photos of the opposite gender, and tell you that they will miss you. *tears*

Hat tip Patrick Collison -- wow, what a great find. This is remarkable.

Filed under: emotional design, facebook, product design, user experience

garry says...

Saw this infographic in this month's Rolling Stone-- this is a really interesting breakdown of Ticketmaster and where the dollars actually go.

It seems as though it might just be really crap marketing on the part of Ticketmaster + Promoters + Venues. So even if Ticketmaster wasn't so dang greedy, its possible that the price of a ticket might only go down by less than 10%. In the case below, possibly as little as only $4.75 per $66 concert ticket.

I still hate Ticketmaster with a passion, but the blame for rising ticket prices has to be shared with Live Nation promoters and venues too. But can you blame them that much? If record sales don't net anything anymore, we've got to pay more somehow.

Green Day's got to eat.


Jame says...

Raise your hand if you know a blackberry user.  Keep them raised if the use it for personal stuff.  

Keep them raised if the personal > work.

I'm sure if we were in a room of 100 people the number of hands left in the air would be less than 20.

Blackberries are the consumate work phone.  To get your mail your company needs a special server.  Cell phone carriers tack on the $30/month Blackberry surcharge, which frankly, even for the biggest Facebook addicts, isn't worth it unless someone else foots the bill,

In contrast the iphone is the consumate "play" phone.  Games, music, and movies are a breeze.  Work? Steadily improving.

If you recall, when Palm launched the Centro, it was called the "life" phone for work and home.  But it lacked the work streed cred of the Blackberry and the cool factor of the iphone.  It sold a lot, but didn't convert many existing smartphone users.

The Pre aims to change this by getting some work friendly features, and some play friendly ones.  Let's call it the crackberry for people looking for balance.

With that goal, Palm could be on to something.  And the idea behind Synergy and WebOS support this notion.

Here's to balance for work and play.

(BTW I wrote this on my Pre)


inxus says...


sachin says...

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garry says...

Filed under: webcomics

Sushmita says...

Seems like an awesome escape bike :) They forgot to mention that you can go backwards!  

Filed under: biking