Here’s How The Government Can Fix Silicon Valley: Leave It Alone. Silicon Valley has fueled much of the growth in our economy over the last few decades and has created amazing (and highly profitable) companies that are making the world a much better and more interesting place to live. All that happened while the government ignored us. We don’t want handouts. We don’t want ‘public-private partnerships,’ and we sure as hell don’t want legislation. Just let us do our thing and maybe say thanks to those companies that create jobs by the hundreds of thousands and send in those humongous corporate tax payments on profits. Because all you can do is screw up something beautiful. Really.
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9/63890987001?isVid=1&isUI=1
Techcrunch interview with Robert Cailliau, a Belgian informatics engineer and computer scientist who, together with Sir Tim Berners-Lee, developed the World Wide Web.
http://c.brightcove.com/services/viewer/federated_f9/63890987001?isVid=1&isUI=1&publisherID=1079084864
Techcrunch interviews Harvard professor and internet law expert Jonathan Zittrain on Google and China
More on Google and China:
The New York Times interviews Sergey Brin
The Wall Street Journal speaks with Sergey Brin
John Doerr on the Bloom Energy Launch: “This Is Like The Google IPO”
John Doerr on the Bloom Energy Launch: “This Is Like The Google IPO”
Techcrunch describes Bloom Energy’s technology, which was unveiled today at a Silicon Valley press event: “Each fuel cell, which is made from sand essentially (zirconium oxide), is a square wafer about the size of a CD box. Each wafer can produce about 25 watts of energy, enough to power a lightbulb. Stack them together and you get a box that could power a house. Group them into larger units, and you get enough energy to power a building or an entire campus. [Bloom Energy’s founder and CEO] calls them energy servers because they are modular like servers in a data center. Need more energy? Add more boxes.” The downside: not yet cost effective for homes.
More on Bloom Energy’s fuel cells:
Wired compares Bloom’s fuel cell approach with solar and wind. Also in Wired, are the Bloom fuel cells too expensive?
The CPM has done more to stunt innovation and drag down quality products than any single thing on the Internet