Being Offline

So six days ago I decided that I was going to go offline. Went on a personal trip and left the laptop at home. I had my smart phone but did not really use it beyond coordinating movements with the folks I has hanging out with. Being offline created quite a bit of free time. So what did I do with it?

I engaged. With the people I was with face to face. Instead of checking messages in the lift line or on the chair or in the bar I had great conversations with family and good friends.

I read. Two books over the past six days which is about two more than I have read in the past six months. I read 127 Hours: Between a Rock and a Hard Place, Aron Ralston's autobiography. Ralston is forced to amputate his own arm with a cheap multi-tool knife in order to free himself after becoming trapped by a boulder in a slot canyon. Gruesome and intriguing. I also read Jane Smiley's latest The Man Who Invented the Computer. This is the biography of John Atanasoff, an Iowa State University professor that Smiley claims to have built the first computer prototype. While many of the reviews question the historical accuracy of the book it is a fascinating read.

I relaxed. Really. Did not think of work related stuff much at all and when someone asked Abby steered the conversation away.

It was a great six days.

And then I returned. I returned to 662 new emails that I have reduced to just 10 in the past 24 hours. Many of them were duplicate requests or notes notifying me that the issue had already been resolved. Lesson, time takes care of a lot of urgent email requests.

Nine LinkedIn requests. Lesson, people that don't know you very well try to connect all the time.

Six new ATDC companies that I had to manually process. Lesson, automate.

Put on one committee. Lesson, other people commit you to work regardless of if you agree to it or not.

The real lesson, leave your laptop at home when you go away.

January 19, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Management, Personal

Entrepreneur’s Night

Now that Hothlanta is firmly behind us and our climate is returning to its more Kashyyyk like norm it is time to get out and network.

A good place to start is at ATDC's Entrepreneur's Night. Entrepreneur's Night is a new monthly event that will take place the third Thursday of every month from 6 PM to 7:30PM.  The format is a half an hour of networking with beverages and food followed by an informal presentation by an ATDC entrepreneur. This month Chris Rouland of Endgame Systems is the featured presenter.

I think Entrepreneur's Night is sure to become one of the best networking events for Atlanta startup entrepreneurs.  The event is free to ATDC entrepreneurs but you are requested to register to attend

 

January 17, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Networking

I’m Gone

Not like I really need it after a three day snowcation but I am heading out to Utah for a real vacation.  As I mentioned in my time off the grid post, I am leaving the laptop at home. The first trip I have taken in over eight years without one. I am taking my iPhone, loaded up with Iron Man 2 for the flight out. But I am turning off the mail accounts. I would not take it at all but my kids need a way to reach me. If anyone has a solution for that other than a separate bat phone I would love to hear it.

I am going to be offline for six days. I expect to come back more refreshed than if I stayed connected. We will see.

January 13, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Internet, Personal

Cooking Barbecue

Over on Quora Geoff Graham has a very thoughtful response to the question "What is the startup and talent pool like in Atlanta?" How Geoff got connected to the Atlanta startup community is a roadmap for many wanting to do so. And I just love the analogy at the end comparing Atlanta to California and New York:

We're slow cooking barbecue. They're igniting flambé. They both taste great, but the preparation of the latter attracts far more attention.

I am going to be using this one a lot.

January 9, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Entrepreneurship, Networking

Bang

Two weeks ago I was asked by The Atlanta Business Chronicle to identify tech trends in Atlanta in 2011. I provided six. The first one is below.

1. Liquidity events return.

  • A few companies could see significant exits via acquisitions or IPOs (Silverpop, SecureWorks, Vendormate)
  • Many smaller firms will be acquired by larger corporations looking to use cash hoard to increase revenue as economy rebounds
  • Founders/executives will start to create/look for next opportunities which in general will strengthen the Atlanta startup scene

Today Dell announced that it had acquired SecureWorks in what, if one believes the whispers, is quite the significant deal.  In another surely much smaller deal Enkia was purchased by Sentiment360.

Two business days two deals. The year is starting off with a bang. 

 

January 4, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Business, Current Affairs

Time Off The Grid

It just seems to never end. Emails, IMs, DMs, status updates, checking in. Even voice mail my god. The stream of stuff coming at you just never seems to end. And the attention that we give to all this electronic stuff seems to be increasing at an ever increasing rate. I am willing to bet that since the summer of 2002, when I was on a bunch of little islands that did not even have dial up, the max amount of time that I have been disconnected from the Internet is less than 48 hours. There is not enough time to think and spend quality time with real people.

So inspired by Brad Feld's off the grid algorithm and aided by Georgia Tech's winter break shut down, I decided to spend the time between December 24 and January 3 offline. Granted I cheated a little. I had my iPhone in my pocket. But I pretty much kept my laptop closed. The only exception was a small window on the morning of January 30 when I had to setup some product requirements and a use test for an application that I am working on. But beyond that my laptop was turned off. I sent a total of 16 emails during those 10 days. One status update. Zero blog posts.  

And you know what. It's was all good. Great even. Almost excellent. Despite all the pressures to the contrary it is not necessary to be connected all the time. It's refreshing to shut it all off. To forget about some things and focus on others for a few days.

Perhaps I should have gone completely cold turkey, but that seemed too daunting at the time. I do know that when I go on a ski trip in a few weeks I am taking it one step further. I am leaving the laptop at home.

 

January 3, 2011  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Internet, Personal

Application Neutrality

Today is a pretty important day for the Internet. FCC Chairman Julius Geneachoski has asked for his organization to adopt rules to protect the open Internet. Net neutrality rules. The draft rules that Geneachoski is proposing have not been seen in public but I do believe something needs to be done. 

The reason why I believe this is pretty simple. Internet access has evolved to a duopoly in most markets. You have a choice of getting access from either your cable or telco provider. That's generally it. And the reason why is due to earlier decisions around "open access" that essentially stifled access provider competition. The arguments made then are essentially those being made by those opposing net neutrality today. Net neutrality will inhibit capital investment, deter innovation, and raise the duopolists operating costs which will in turn raise prices.

Hogwash. What it will do is protect the interests of the duopolists allowing them to limit competition and charge more for less service. Evidence of this can be seen in the market for Internet access itself. People in the United States pay much more on a megabit basis for Internet access than those in other countries. At the same time we have much slower access available by a factor of at least five.

A policy needs to be put in place that both encourages innovation for all companies regardless of their position of network ownership while at the same time encourages further investment in faster and more affordable Internet access. I believe it is possible to create such a policy and do so in a way that takes advantage of the architectural underpinnings of the Internet. But first a little background.

The architecture of the Internet was created back in the 1970s by DARPA. What DARPA created was a framework of computer network protocols called the TCP/IP model. The TCP/IP model is also known as the Internet Protocol Suite. Both of these models are comprised of four layers. The layers from top to bottom are referred to as application, transport, Internet, and link. The net neutrality issue that we are facing today essentially has to do with the changing nature of the application layer and how it effects those layers underneath it.

With that out of the way here is what I believe to be an obviously brilliant approach. In a paper entitled "Network Neutrality: What a Non-Discrimination Rule Should Look Like", Barbara Van Schewick director of The Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School proposes that "legislators and regulators should enact a non-discrimination rule that bans all application-specific discrimination, but allows all application-agnostic discrimination." This approach would ban the practice of "like treatment" where network providers have to treat all traffic the same. It would enable network providers to treat classes at the application layer differently as long as they treat all the specific applications in the application class the same.

Bravo. This non-discrimination approach seems to be a smart way to continue the innovativeness that we are seeing from new companies at the application layer while protecting the interests of the more entrenched network providers and maintaining the integrity of the core architecture of the Internet.

I hope to see the FCC go down this path.

December 21, 2010  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Current Affairs, Internet, Politics

50

Today is my 50th birthday. It even sounds old to me. But I am not old. Seriously. 

The first thing that pops out of people's mouth when I tell them my age is "you look ten years younger." Which I may. Or they may are just being nice. I certainly don't act old. I'll never forget walking into the house with a new Cake CD a few years back and Abby asked "are you 14?" In some ways yes. Or more like 28.

For some reason though 50 seems to be a pretty significant birthday. In the past it was the sevens that caused me great reflection. 27, 37. Those years made me realize that I was moving into the next life stage. The five oh. Tick tock baby. By all reckoning my life is half over. It's enough to make a guy want to go out and buy a Porsche. Not me.

I am pretty darn satisfied with the direction my life has taken. I have:

  • A great wife;
  • Two super kids;
  • Health and fitness (taking a little knee injury out of the equation);
  • Time with energetic, smart, and young people;
  • The choice to work on things that I find interesting;
  • Love for the industry I am in;
  • Atlanta, a great place to live.

At the risk of a trademark infringement suit, life is good.

Old? No. Hell no even. I don't feel that way. I attribute this to a few things. Two of my stated life goals certainly have an impact.

Continue to learn. Read regularly and pick up new crafts, sports, or topics.  Seek out new adventures in life.

Exercise regularly at least three times per week.  Keep fit and at my appropriate body weight.

These things keep my body and mind engaged.  

And over the past four years I have also been able to spend some time on broarder generativity. Which basically puts me around a lot of young smart energetic people. That stuff rubs off. It stems from and builds my sense of optimism in humanity. I am pretty sure I am heading toward ego integrity.

But the clock is ticking. On my 50th birthday, more than anything else I feel a sense of urgency. A sense of urgency to do more, to do better, to do good.

And I will get to all that. But for the moment I am going to celebrate. Abby threw one killer surprise party for me when I turned 40. Maybe 100 people. A big shocker when turning on the lights in the house after a long cross country flight on a Friday night. She asked me what I wanted to do this time around. I told her I wanted to have parties like a ten year old, lots of them with lots of family and friends and cakes and presents.

I might be 50 but I am still a kid.

December 17, 2010  |  Comments  |  Tweet  |  Posted in Personal