Sunday, March 18, 2007

How to Reduce Global Warming and Make Humans Omnipresent Using Virtual Worlds


Hi everybody,

I’m back, sorry to not have written a lot lately,
but I have had to fight hard to find and choose the best internship and finally I made it.
Did I miss You?
I hope so…in any case I’m now back…
On Thursday I went to one of the most interesting conference I’ve attended since I’m here titled:
- How to Reduce Global Warming and Make Humans Omnipresent Using Virtual Worlds -



PARC Forum: George E. Pake Auditorium, Palo Alto, CA , USA




The Forum was focus on Virtual Worlds, past, present, and future, it began with a live demo of a virtual world application to illustrate concepts and capabilities. Than David discuss the history and current state of applications based on virtual world technology. The discussion of the future presented a vision of how virtual worlds may develop, including how interconnected virtual worlds could someday evolve into a 3D Internet that will allow people to make a quantum leap in how they communicate and collaborate and will fundamentally change the nature of society, redefining the norm for human interaction. The Forum concluded with a presentation of technical challenges that must be resolved for this vision to be realized.



The speaker Dave Rolston has more than 35 years of experience in high tech. His experience spans a broad spectrum of industries, applications, and technologies including simulation and training, graphics applications, imagery, gaming, artificial intelligence, entertainment, and the early Internet. During his career, Dave has performed in various roles, including technical, business, operational, and general management assignments. Before Forterra, Dave served as VP of Engineering for ATI, responsible for design of graphics chips that drive many of the world's PC's and game consoles. Prior to joining ATI, Dave was CEO of MultiGen-Paradigm, which produces foundational software and content development for the visual simulation industry. After MultiGen-Paradigm was acquired by Computer Associates, Dave served as a Senior VP, managing MultiGen-Paradigm, Viewpoint, and other content-development organizations. Before MultiGen-Paradigm, he worked for Silicon Graphics, starting as the Director of Marketing and later serving as GM of the Advanced Graphics Division. Prior to SGI Dave was a divisional GM of TRW subsidiary ESL, developing applications mostly for the defense and intelligence community. Earlier in Dave's career, he was a Honeywell, Inc., engineering fellow, responsible for corporate activity in artificial intelligence. Dave has a BS in civil engineering, MS in industrial engineering, and PhD in computer science with emphasis in simulation and artificial intelligence. Dave is a registered professional engineer and has taught engineering at several universities and served with several engineering industry consortiums. He holds several patents, has published a large number of technical papers and a best-selling book on artificial intelligence.


We also have had an interesting conversation at the end of the event!!



Me and Divid




Me and Steve



Next Week we will have the finals Exams so now I must go to study!




C U soon
Abramo



BTW: On the way back I also found a new road sign, never seen before!!!!
Have you ever seen it before?


Monday, March 5, 2007

You must "cross the chasm"

Hello everybody!

Just wanted to say

to you all and to the old quarter that has almost gone away...


Now we have to cross the line and then, immediately we'll be starting a new competion, the next quarter!!!

We are going to attend three classes on the next quarter. Among these is a very customized (just five of us!) class that will be focused mainly on how to prepare an appealing business plan.

The classes will be taken by Mr. Guillaume Decitre.

He's French but he has been living in California together with his family in the next 9 years. He's a venture capitalist.
He's really a nice person. We had french/italian breakfast with him while going through the syllabus... Europe sweet Europe...

He suggested us that we should read the book "Crossing the chasm" [by Geoffrey Moore] before our classes start .

Moore's basic thesis works off this picture:



The area of each segment corresponds roughly to the number of people who fit its profile.


The technology enthusiasts are the sort of people who jigger the microwave so they can cook their hands to "see what it feels like". (I know someone who did that. He said it feels weird.)

Visionaries are less oriented to exploration, more to exploitation. They are people who see breakthrough potential in some technology and are willing to brave hell and high water to realize that potential. From the vendor's point of view, the nice thing about both groups is that they're not too bothered by the fact that the product doesn't work. They're willing to make it work.



Pragmatists want a product that works. They are not interested in debugging it. They want to be able to hire people who've used it. They want to find books about it in the bookstore. If there's customization that's needed, they want to find third parties who can do it. Better yet, they want to buy third-party packages written for people just like them. In short, they don't just want a product. They want a 100% solution to their business problem. If they get the 80% that delighted the visionary, they feel cheated, and they tell their pragmatist friends.



Conservatives buy products because they really have no choice. They want products that are cheap and do their job as unobtrusively as possible. They are not reassured by the existence of books about the product, because it implies the product isn't simple enough to use.
Skeptics are not going to buy, though they may talk other people out of buying.



Technology adoption is supposed to go from left to right. The technology enthusiasts fiddle with a technology to discover if it's real. If it is, they tell the visionaries. The visionaries then will pass the good word on to the pragmatists. When you're the market leader among the pragmatists, you're finally making the money you promised in your business plan. You also have enough volume and experience that your products are cheap enough and undemanding enough for the conservatives. The skeptics can remain in their cabins in the woods.
The problem dealt with in Crossing the Chasm is that the visionaries aren't in fact good references for the pragmatists. They provide tales of heroics - not stories of smooth, predictable adoption. Pragmatists want references from other pragmatists. (Think about it: if your goal in life, like mine, is to do as little lawn work as possible while avoiding the censure of your neighbors, who do you ask for advice? The person who's out there every weekend tending their gorgeous lawn, or the person you never see?) Pragmatists want a safe buy from the market leader - but there isn't one yet. Crossing the Chasm is about getting the first toehold in the pragmatist market.



Thanks Guillaume for such an interesting and stimulating reading!

See you on April 2nd!

Emanuele

Sunday, March 4, 2007

my first week..

Hello guys,
how are you doing?

I'm good and I'm going to tell you about.....

MY FIRST WORKING WEEK!!!

I started my internship last monday at Panomics Inc., a biotech company located in Fremont.




I was so excited because is was not only my first working week but also my first work experience!!



As I told you the first time I posted this blog, I took my master degree last november and after that I moved here. I mean, I worked in the lab for one year performing my thesis project but I was still a student!

Now I entered the real working world!

When I was a kid(not a long time ago?!), I believed that this "strange place" in the world called "the Silicon Valley" was a sort of fictional world! I was not able to figure out what kind of place it could be! But now I'm here and I started working here, in this"strange place" and everything is real, everything exists!


I usually go to work at 8.00am by car and even if there's a lot of traffic on the freeway in the morning (it's the rush hour!) because everyone here in california has a car (at least one?!), is so nice drive early in the morning, listening to the radio and looking at the landscape around!


Before starting I'm getting into the habit of having a huge cup of American coffee, setting in my pretty cubical and then..let's the day start!

I'm having a great experience, both exciting and challenging and I'm learning a huge amount of things trying to do my best!


I met a lot of people during this week, people coming from all over the world, and everyone was so nice saying me "Welcome on board!". That feels nice!

First off all I think that for being able to do your best you have to feel good, and I'm feeling like this!

The week passed so fast!

Tomorrow is monday and another week is starting and I feel like starting!

Before saying you goodbye..

just a small gift to "Italy" and especially to Lu and Bella....from "Pierino la Peste"
See you soon guys!!
Micol

Thursday, March 1, 2007

US capital and Italian heart: a successful story...

Hello folks!

welcome back..last night I didn't write my weekly part to this blog, because we went to the SVIEC event in Athenarton, at the Libraros' house.

It was one of the periodical events organized by Mr Jeff Capaccio for the SVIEC members. SVIEC is the Silicon Valley Italian Executive Council, a group of Italian and Italian-American technology executives,who meet together on an informal basis to network, socialize and stay current on issues relating to technology, the law, government and public policy.
http://www.carrferrell.com/about/sviec.html

As a special group of technology executives within the National Italian American Foundation (NIAF), and for strengthening the ever increasing cultural and economic ties between Italy and the U.S., SVIEC hosts bi-monthly gatherings where its members can meet other Italian and Italian American technology executives from the San Francisco Bay area, as well as hear from highly-influential guest speakers on a variety of compelling topics.

Speaker invited yesterday was Mr Fabrizio Capobianco, CEO of Funambol, who held a very interesting presentation titled:

"Mobile Open Source and the Funambol Model: US Capital and Italian Heart"

Last January the editors of American Venture Magazine appointed Fabrizio Capobianco one of the top 40 technology executives, venture capitalists, inventors and philanthropists under the age of 40 who are driving new growth in the industry. Capobianco was recognized for his vision to put mobile email and other mobile data services on commodity phones by tapping a global community of developers. It has been a real pleasure to meet him and to know that a so young entrepreneur (and most of all an italian one) has been aknowledged by an american review!!!





And last, but not least, before listening to the presentation, we enjoyed a great dinner prepared by one of the most popular italian restaurant in Palo Alto, La Strada. Moreover, there was some great italian wine and coffee!!! Most of all, however, it has been a unique opportunity of networking, where we had the chance to know some of the most influential executives of the valley!
SVIEC meeting: with us, Mr Jeff Capaccio, SVIEC founder
...we hope to join next meeting as well, so that we can let you know about other challenging and successful ITALIAN stories....
See you soon...
Yours,
Elizabeth