App Development Boom’s Depressing Underbelly: What Ever Happened To Big Ideas?


http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/18/business/as-boom-lures-app-creators-tough-part-is-making-a-living.html?ref=technology&_r=0

This morning’s New York Times published an article on the frothy boom in “app development”  for Apple IOS and Google Android devices.   The four page in-depth analysis of the “app industry,”  paints a very depressing picture.  For all of the hoopla about this area, the statistics suggest that it is little more than a bubble about to burst.  More depressing it adds to the chorus of concern from leading thinkers on entrepreneurship, innovation and technology: ” Where Have All The Big Ideas Gone?”    We have lost our way with innovation and the need to solve big problems.  Angry Birds is not solving any big problem, and leading people like the couple in this article, to chase the ephemeral rainbow.  This morning’s story will likely ignite a vigorous online debate, as it should.

The Washington Post published an article last year with the title, “Moral Decline and the End of Big Ideas.”   http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/on-innovations/moral-decline-and-the-end-of-big-ideas/2011/09/14/gIQAQntJwK_story.html  The author’s  point is that it is a sense of moral duty to make the world a better place that drives someone to change the World.  Or at least it should be..

Another opinion piece in the New York Times by Neal Gabler, also last year, asks where are the Big Ideas?  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/opinion/sunday/the-elusive-big-idea.html?pagewanted=all   The Atlantic magazine had published a list of the ” 14 biggest ideas of the year,”  the biggest of which, ironically was “The Rise of the Middle Class – Just Not Ours,” describing the rise of broad prosperity in the BRIC nations. The Atlantic list stimulated Gabler to predict a future of Big Data, but not Big Thought.. The implication I hear in Gabler’s editorial is that we are in a post Enlightenment time, a period of anti-intellectualism.  I hope not, but I fear it may be true.

The list of luminaries who bemoan this situation keeps growing. It includes Max Marmer, founder of Startup Genome, whose Harvard Business Review blog post, “Reversing the Decline of Big Ideas,” has probably been reblogged and emailed around the World hundreds of times, and has stimulated millions of comments. http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2012/07/reversing_the_decline_in_big_i.html.  No less than Marc Andreesen, founder of Netscape and now a venture capitalist himself, Vinod Khosla, founder of Sun Microsystems, and John Doerr, my former Intel colleague, have also spoken out forcefully on the need for a deep rethink on the state of innovation in America.  They are already on record that they aren’t interested in the next iPhone app.

We need more Big Thought on Big Ideas like the problem of heat dissipation and energy loss, being addressed by startups like Trajectory Design Automation, and water conservation technology, an area where Israel is the world leader.   We need to regain our lead in the World of innovation by refusing to accept mediocrity and greed as the drivers of our economy.

Entrepreneurship Event – UBC Faculty of Management


MARK YOUR CALENDARS AND SHARE IN YOUR CLASSES PLEASE!

Wednesday, November 14

2-3PM

EME 0050 (Lecture Theatre), UBC Okanagan

All students and faculty members are invited to learn more about how University of British Columbia and various partnering agencies, Alacrity Foundation, and Entrepreneurship@UBC are working to provide members of the UBC community (people with great ideas) with resources, advice, mentorship, funding, and even office space.   Learn about the Mock Pitch Competition being planned for our students and hear Peter van der Gracht from Alacrity Foundation explain their program, and the opportunities for new graduates to join an entrepreneurial team.

Make Meaning in Your Company: Guy Kawasaki


Very valuable words from Guy Kawasaki. Tom Byers of KPCB commented on this video, that he has consistently used it for the last 5 years in his entrepreneurship classes at Stanford.

Guy Kawasaki

In San Francisco and Silicon Valley, Even Tech Takes a Backseat to World Series


Somebody bring me some garlic fries and a Heineken.  Sports writers all over America will be writing about this game tonight. A historic performance by the San Francisco Giants.  How I wish I had been there.

Tonight the “Kung Fu Panda”, Pablo Sandoval steps up to hit 3 Home Runs, a single, and 4 RBI’s in a World Series game, joining a very select club: Babe Ruth, Reggie Jackson, and Albert Pujols.

We watched Tim Lincecum play like the Cy Young Award winner that he is and get 5 K’s.  1st time one Cy Young Award winner has relieved another Cy Young winner.

Marco Scutaro maintains his NLCS MVP form and Barry Zito is very hot again. The stats on the Giants over the last three games alone are absolutely staggering. Barry Zito was like Kevin Costner in “For Love of the Game.”  Even Fox Sports is commenting on the return of Zito’s magic in the playoffs.  He wants to prove he’s got more to give.  For the first time in memory the fans are chanting “Barry, Barry, Barry”  but not the asshole you may remember.

Orel Hersheiser on Fox Sports calls AT&T Park fans the loudest in baseball.  The fun at AT&T Park is extraordinary, with the music of  Steve Perry and Journey reminding us of his “City by the Bay,” Michael Franti and Spearhead singing a SF Giants/Willie /Mays version of their song “Say Hey,”  a bit of Boz Scaggs “City Lights,”  and every game ends with Tony Bennett.

This has been a great ride.

http://blogs.wsj.com/venturecapital/2012/10/24/in-san-francisco-even-tech-takes-backseat-during-world-series/?mod=e2tw&_nocache=1351128832344&user=welcome&mg=id-wsj

Jumpstarting Canadian Venture Capital: Is Harper the Man To Do It?


We are waiting to see how Harper‘s $400M very modest gesture to Canadian innovation will be invested, by whom, and how. We have had so many years stealing from Canada’s future, that one could easily claim that it is a moral travesty, depriving Canada of its future.   The obvious problem is that Harper is not Vinod Khosla. Harper is a closet climate change denier.  Harper’s vision is parochial and anti-democratic. While we have such a fragmented provincial political focus, we can only expect Harper to boost Alberta tar sands at the expense of the Canadian national economy and innovation.

This Techvibes article suggests that they may follow the Israeli government model, but the author is Israeli, has been there, done that, so she has some interesting insights.

http://www.techvibes.com/blog/jumpstarting-venture-capital-in-canada-is-it-possible-2012-10-18?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=linkedin