Archive for July, 2008

Peer Producing A Web 2.0 Keynote

Image via Wikipedia The Web 2.0 conference juggernaut is coming to NYC this fall. On September 16-19 there will be a Web 2.0 Expo at the Javits Center. The conference organizers have asked me to give a keynote at 3pm…

MySQL Wins at LinkedIn!


Connecting Your Brain Directly To The Internet

It could happen before you expect it.  I read a lot of science fiction and have been fantasizing about the opportunity to jack into cyberspace for a long time.  We are getting one step closer with our latest investment in EmSense.

Why I Spend A Month A Year in Homer, Alaska

I wish it were as simple as "the weather."  After 27 days in a row of rain (ok - we had sun for part of two days), the sun finally came out today.

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I’ve been coming up to Alaska in the summer for about 15 years.  Amy grew up here and after we started going out together it seemed like a trip to her home state was in order.  I grew up in Texas, so after putting up with the "if you cut Alaska in half Texas would become the third largest state" jokes, I took a trip and immediately fell in love with the place. 

There are many magical things about Alaska.  Everyone here has a story.  The scale of things is unbelievable.  When the sun shines, nothing is wrong with the planet.  But my favorite is that everything here needs a power wash and I get to wear jeans anywhere I go.  We bought a house in Homer six years ago and have been coming here for about a month a year ever since.

I’ve written about my need for a periodic downshift as one way I manage the intensity level of my life.  I’m fundamentally an introvert, yet I spent much of my life in extrovert situations. Over time I reach a point where I need a break from human contact.  My month in Homer is my ultimate annual downshift.  While I’m up here I work about half time, which means a 40 hour a week schedule.  Since we don’t know many people here I end up with a remarkable amount of reading, thinking, running, and chilling out time.  We don’t have a TV - and we don’t miss it.

Over the course of the year I get tired. I get up every day at 5 am. I run 5 to 10 hours / week. I work 12 – 15 hours a day, Monday to Friday. I work on the weekends. I travel. As I get older, I’ve found I simply need some time each year to sleep until I wake up.

I want more focused time with Amy. When I die, I won’t have had enough time with her.  We take a week off together every quarter, but that’s not enough for either of us.  I want to spend more time with her and this is a way to get a lot of time together.

I periodically need to refresh / reboot my brain. I need time to think, experiment, and play with new ideas. Getting away and having a month in a totally different context does that for me.

Entertainingly, I always have plenty of deal activity that happens in July.  This year I was involved in a major financing and an acquisition that should close soon.  Anyone who works with me knows I am available, but very mellow.  Ah - the magic of DSL and a cell phone.

While a month in a different context doesn’t (and can’t) work for everyone, hopefully this provides a glimpse into how it works for me and answers the question I’ve gotten over and over again this month of "what are you doing up in Homer, Alaska?"

Increasing Liability Risks Threaten Growth and Trouble Boards

Increasing liability costs in U.S. can jeopardize company prospects, says Lloyds study

4th Annual Growth, Innovation and Leadership 2008

A Frost & Sullivan Global Congress on Corporate Growth, September 14-16, 2008, Parc 55 Hotel, San Francisco, CA

The Best Advice For The Economy I’ve Heard In A While

Mark Cuban has a brilliant post up titled How to Jumpstart the Economy - Tax Free Small BusinessesHe totally nails it.  Send a copy to every politician you know.

London’s Underground Mansion Boom

In U.S. cities, when the wealthy want to expand their homes, they usually build up and out. Witness all the giant glass penthouses, roof gardens and double-wide townhouses in New York and San Francisco.

Yet in London, the rich are digging down. According to a Sunday article by Paul Bignell in London’s Independent, a growing number [...]

The Death Trap

Jason Calacanis may have quit blogging, but he hasn’t quit writing valuable and provocative thoughts. His email yesterday on Google is worth reading. I think someone reblogged it but I am writing this from my blackberry on an early morning…

Fingerhut gets $56 million venture round

Fingerhut Direct Marketing Inc. has landed $55.9 million in financing, making it an unlikely winner of the largest venture-capital deal of the second quarter.