No More Google Print
Now it’s called Google Book Search. Here’s Google’s bit on why it changed the name.
Now it’s called Google Book Search. Here’s Google’s bit on why it changed the name.
Another round of comments today on the wisdom of blogging as a university faculty member, generally and for the untenured… Read More »Whether ‘Tis Nobler In the Mind to Blog
I’m striking some flints this morning, trying to generate a spark. Two things in particular that I’m knocking together …
A few days ago, Mike posted on his effort to share some thoughts with the Pittsburgh community about the ingredients for successful economic development in “the new high technology world order.” He wrote a strong and provocative op-ed. Noting that Pittsburgh has great capacity to generate ideas (in excellent universities), seed businesses with venture capital, and lead them with a strong CEO culture, Mike focuses on two things Pittsburgh appears to lack: (1) a deep enough bench of managerial talent beneath the CEO level, and (2) tech transfer (i.e., licensing) shops at the universities that will “make a lot of small bets” with confidence that a few will do well (while most fail), rather than “negotiat[ing] every deal like it’s the next home run.” Mike’s analysis seems quite sensible to me. It prompts me to ask, what are some the things that push a university tech transfer office to focus most on “generating revenue” (which “means making sure that in each deal, the university’s risk is minimized and its upside is well-protected”), in preference to Mike’s recommended strategy (“Play small ball”)?
This morning, the New York Times published this story, seemingly prompted by a National Academy of Sciences report published last week, entitled “Rising Above The Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter Economic Future.” The story, and the report, give voice to the concern that the U.S. may lose its innovation edge to nations such as India, China, Taiwan, and South Korea, which graduate more PhDs in science and engineering or spend more on R&D.
The tiny spark is below the fold …
Read More »Education & Tech Transfer: Embracing Risk, Cutting Strings
There has been a bit of discussion, of late, about what should determine the relative weight of a given piece… Read More »The Variable Weight of Precedent
You want “spinning-head stuff,” Mike? How’s this for another Dysonian techdervish?
Amazon has announced Amazon Mechanical Turk, named in honor of von Kempelen’s 18th century chess playing automaton.
(Big hat tip to Nicholas Carr’s Rough Type, here.)
What does the service do? It let’s a program post Requests for Work that we humble folk out here can perform and return for the AIs in there. Wild …