Showing posts with label Silicon valley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Silicon valley. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Silicon Valley Via HBO




Television is a hateful thing most of the time for TheHackerCIO. Whenever I'm watching the vapid content, I'm sure to have a laptop with me so I can learn something or try out a technique. BTW, you should always be coding on your laptop: during meetings, TV, listening to a presentation. All those wasted gaps of time can be easily redeemed by coding. It's a tremendously helpful habit.

But last night was different. I downloaded and watched the first episode of Silicon Valley. Geeks everywhere are talking about it, here and here, for instance. I loved it. I'm ordering HBO for the first time.

You can watch the first episode on the HBO Website.

If you're still unable to decode the characters, this page will help you.

In my opinion, they've nailed the culture. They've clearly done their research. Even my kid said, "They're just like those Hackathons you do." And that's reason to love it.

I remain,

TheHackerCIO



Wednesday, January 1, 2014

TheHackerCIO Does Silicon Valley


What better way to start the new year than with a tour of Silicon Valley?

Every good geek should do a pilgrimage here at least once in his hacking career. I've been lucky enough to work here and be in the area a number of times.  But I'm usually too busy meeting with clients to actually play the tourist. Also, the technology firms and startups aren't geared toward tourists -- most of the sites will only be markers in the ground, or, if you're lucky, a small museum and gift-shop in the lobby. 

To assist the busy Hacker, I've developed this itinerary, which TheHackerCIO has now tested and proven that it can be done in one day. You can probably fit a few extras in, but it's better to spend that time at the museum. Or at Stanford University.

As with touring any area, you need at least a rough geographical orientation to begin with. We'll be starting from the north at Redwood city, and moving generally South and east through 
  • Palo Alto and Menlo park, then moving down to 
  • Mountain View, then down to  
  • Cupertino and Santa Clara,
then finally, we'll find that we *do*, in fact, know the way to San Jose. But we'll be getting our peace of mind all throughout all of Silicon Valley, not just in San Jose. :-)

A.  We start, appropriately, for a long-time DBA, with the back-end, namely the Oracle headquarters.


B.  Then we move on to the Facebook Headquarters at 1 HackerWay. You should be aware that this used to be the old Sun building, and they preserved the sign on the back of this one! 


You have to back off into the brush a bit, but for those who miss the high-end servers might feel a little nostalgic:

C.  The ultimate iconic startup garage is a must-gawk, where Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard started HP. You can read about the restoration effort here. Off to the right is the shed where Bill slept, while they were producing their first product, an audio oscillator, which was ordered by Disney for use on Fantasia. Everyone has their own candidate for "birthplace of Silicon Valley," and this HP shed is definitely on the short list. 



Then you should head into Stanford University, and at least take a drive around the campus, if not spend a whole day there, as I did, the day before I tested this tour. 

D.  After that, head down to Sand Hill Road, the Venture Capital life-blood of Silicon Valley. I counted at least 25 VCs in just this one complex! 


E.  Nearby,  Xerox Parc Place is nestled, where the whole notion of a mouse and GUI was invented along with the Smalltalk and, thus,  Object Oriented languages!  


F.  Then, on to the site of the Shockley Laboratories, where production of the  first transistors began. The site is marked by this signpost, which considers it the Birthplace of Silicon Valley. 


G.  Unfortunately, all that remains is a signpost indicating this historic location. Likewise, the first breakaway company, Fairchild Semiconductors, where the "Traitorous Eight" -- defectors from Shockley's company -- led the first commercially successful semiconductor firm. Likewise, all that remains today is a plaque. This is candidate #3 for "Birthplace"!


H.  Then its time for some lunch and a visit to the Computer History Museum:


This museum is lucky enough to have a working reproduction of a Babbage Difference Engine! While we were there, we got to see the volunteers calculate a section of logarithms. The only other working copy is in the London Science Museum, but only here do they regularly operate the device. In Silicon Valley, volunteers are readily available for such cool & geeky endeavors. Here is a still of the Engine, with it's parts still displaced from the difference calculation:



I.  Onward to the Googleplex. We've spent a lot of time in the car, so it might be good to get some exercise. If you're lucky, like TheHackerCIO, you might find a spare bicycle to take for a spin. No tour or museum here, unfortunately. Plus, with the protesters who envy the money made by Google employees, the security is only likely to increase. 



J. Y-Combinator is the accelerator of Paul Graham. It's the gold standard for new, lean startups. You might not get a huge funding round here, as you would from the VCs, but you're going to get far better than an MBA from the advisors he'll put you in with! 



L.  Intel has a nice little museum about the development of the chip and it's miniaturization through the years. 

M.  Ebay seems almost like a mainstream institution these days. 




N.  Apple has an infinite loop around their main campus. But this one leads to practical parking, not to a hung system. 


I'm sure that you could (and should) put together your own tour of Silicon Valley, but if you're too busy to do it, this one is a good starting point: well balanced between historical sites, museums with more substance to digest, and some major highlights along the way. For additional resources, consult Geek Silicon Valley, although be forewarned: it's getting a bit out of date.  The addresses are provided below, together with a Google Map. So, enjoy ... and ...

Happy New Year!!!

From

TheHackerCIO

===================================================================================
TheHackerCIO's 1-Day Tour Guide to Silicon Valley
A  1.  500 Oracle Parkway, Redwood City, CA
B  2.  Facebook Inc., Willow Road, Menlo Park, CA
C  3.  367 Addison Avenue, Palo Alto, CA
D  4.  3000 Sand Hill Rd, West Menlo Park, San Mateo, California 94025
E  5.  3333 Coyote Hill Road, Palo Alto, CA
F  6.  391 San Antonio Road, Mountain View, CA
G  6.5 844 East Charleston Road, Palo Alto, CA
H  7.  1401 North Shoreline Boulevard, Mountain View, CA
I  8.  1600 Amphitheatre Parkway, Mountain View, CA
J  9.  320 Pioneer Way, Mountain View, CA
K  10. 487 East Middlefield Road, Mountain View, CA
L  11. 2200 Mission College Blvd, Santa Clara, CA
M  12. 2145 Hamilton Ave, san jose
N  13. 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, CA




View Larger Map

Saturday, December 21, 2013

Silicon Valley Silicon


Pictured here is a historic bit of Silicon from Silicon Valley.

Now, for the full story ...

TheHackerCIO is done with Cassandra training. Done meeting with clients.  Now it's time for fun!

For example,  spending the afternoon walking around Stanford. There is little better place for a long walk than a University Campus. I've walked them all over the US and Europe: Prestigious and not, picturesque and ugly, techie and Liberal-artsy. I've strolled through Dartmouth, Brown, Harvard, MIT, Princeton, U Penn., UCLA, USC, Cal State Northridge, CalTech, Santa Monica City College, the whole constellation of colleges found in both Oxford and Cambridge, the Sorbonne. I never made a complete list. But that would be fun. Someday.

It wasn't an ideal time to tour the campus: most everything was closed; it's close to Christmas. But I got a good sense of the layout. The Packard building right next to the Hewlett building. That was a nice touch.

Stanford has a symbiotic relationship with Silicon Valley.  It's the intellectual core of the valley. Many startups came from Stanford graduates, such as Google's Sergey Brin and Larry Page, who were grad students when they developed "BackRub," a new approach to web-page search ranking. David Filo of Yahoo did his masters work at Stanford. Stanford has close ties to entrepreneurial business.

The Hwang Engineering Center has a first edition of Donald Knuth's famous The Art of Computer Programming. And this, pictured above was supposed to be the first ethernet board used to make the historic first ARPA-net transmission from UCLA to Stanford Research Institute.  For the managers reading this, that amounts to the first internet transmission! Or maybe it was the first Ethernet board, invented by nearby Xerox PARC place. It depends on which student you talk to. Maybe it doesn't matter.  Who knows if the "accidents of preservation" resulted in the actual first board being kept for posterity! The amazing part is how central to every aspect of technology development Silicon Valley has been: from making computer intercommunication possible (Xerox's ethernet card), to making the first internet communication, to creating the mouse, and window-GUI -- everything seems to flow out of the valley.

And that makes me happy to be in this place, as ...

TheHackerCIO

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Have MacBookProRetina, Will Travel


Silicon Valley is where the heart is, for TheHackerCIO. And today, he's on the road heading up there!

Meetings with Clients ...

Training on Cassandra ...

And following the Geek Silicon Valley guidebook, to see as many Geeky points of interest as possible.

What could possibly be better?

I mean, learning new, cutting-edge, exciting technologies ...

Meeting important users and technologists ...

And touring the Mecca of Geekery.

That sounds like Nirvana.

And, it gives you a good indicator of topics coming up this next week, so stay tuned!

I Remain,

TheHackerCIO