Off to Vegas

I’m heading out to Vegas early tomorrow morning to attend CES, The Hajj for the consumer electronics industry and the gadget-obsessed among us. This year I’ve got two of my portfolio companies who will have a presence at the show: Microdisplay and Sling Media.

I’ll be sure to check out all the new LCoS, Plasma, DMD, LCD and OLED displays while I’m there, though I’m secretly lusting after a nanotube flatscreen, which is likely several years from commercialization. I also plan to visit Sonos and SlimDevices (I own four Slimp3 players) and want to check out the cool UTStarcom Vonage WiFi VOIP phone.

I’ll also be tracking the activity in the blogosphere to plan my path through the exhibit halls and find cool gadgets to check out. Naturally, I’ll be using Technorati’s new keyword search watchlist feature to find CES blog posts as they occur.

Technorati Happenings

I’m a couple days late in posting this, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t congratulate the team over at Technorati for two recent milestones. First, Technorati is going international, in partnership with Digital Garage, who will be launching a fully localized version in Japan. For more info on this, check out David Sifry’s and Joi Ito’s blog entries.

Second, last weekend Technorati moved to a new data center, a process that strikes fear into the hearts of the hardiest engineers and network operations people. They managed to do it in well under their 48-hour goal. My hat is off to the entire team for pulling this off. I’m happy to say the new data center will give us plenty of room to grow, and we’ll all sleep better at night knowing the chance of fire-related downtime has been drastically reduced.

Dave’s blog and Adam’s blog have some great details on the move, including two graphs that show how Technorati’s spiders got back to work (and then caught up) after their move-induced downtime. And both blogs also point to photographic evidence of the project as it unfolded. Congrats to everyone who worked so hard to pull this off!

Google Suggest, Google & Libraries

This is a few days old and many folks have already made reference to it, but Google Suggest is very cool feature that bears mentioning.

But, even cooler, is Google’s announcement of their ambitious plan to digitize the collections of Stanford, Harvard, Oxford, the University of Michigan and the New York Public Library. Among these libraries are as many as 50 million books, though it isn’t clear how much duplication there is among them. In any case, assuming an average count of 200 pages per book, which is probably low, you could wind up with 10 billion pages in the index once the task is complete (though it is not actually possible to complete the task given the number of new books published every year). Compared to the 8 billion web pages they have indexed today, that’s pretty impressive, though by the time they complete the digitization over many years, the web index will no doubt have grown well beyond its current girth. In any case, one can see it is possible that in time this library index will rival the size of the web index.

One interesting feature of an indexed corpus of print media is that it lacks the hyperlinks among the pages that enable Google to deliver their highly relevant search results. The quality of Google’s search technology stems from the basic insight of the PageRank algorithm: that the link structure of the web itself is a useful determinant of the quality and relevancy of pages that match particular keywords. Of course, counting the “votes” from links among pages is not the only technique they employ, but it is a big part of their secret sauce.

It will be fascinating to see how the results from these library queries change over time, since presumably once these books are made available digitally, web pages will increasingly link into the books that are hosted on Google’s servers, which is why Google’s decision to do this is doubly brilliant; not only will they see increased search traffic due to these collections becoming freely available, but they will also see huge amounts of page views that result from all the links that accumulate on the web that will point into the library collections.

This is a great example of enlightened capitalism that follows naturally from Google’s simple yet audacious mission statement, which is “to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.” Kudos to them.

Hydrogen Powered Toys

Solarcar121659I’ve come across two cool hydrogen-powered toys recently: a hybrid solar / hydrogen fuel cell car kit from Hammacher Schlemmer that uses solar-powered electrolysis of water to produce hydrogen to power a fuel cell to drive the car’s electric motor, and a hydrogen-powered rocket from Estes Rockets that uses battery-powered electrolysis of water to produce hydrogen for the rocket launch. I’m encouraged by the emergence of these toys since putting clean energy technology into the hands and imaginations of kids and adults is a great thing to do to promote awareness of socity’s need to wean ourselves from fossil fuels. More on clean energy later…

Gallows Humor

HeavymetaloshaIf you are easily offended or a fan of Pantera or Damageplan, read no further. When I was a kid in junior high school, I was a metalhead. Heavy metal is what inspired me to begin playing guitar, for which I will always be grateful, though my tastes have broadened over the years. Pantera and Damageplan came along after I left heavy metal (and my early adolescence) for music with a bit less leather and testosterone, but I was a huge fan of the likes of Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Queensryche and Yngwie Malmsteen.

So when I read this story about last week’s shooting in an Ohio nightclub, I was of course saddened by the meaningless waste of it all. But at the same time, “the evil Ryan” was inspired to create a set of workplace safety guidelines to help prevent such tragedies in the future. After a few Google Image searches and half an hour using my rudimentary Photoshop skills, I created this masterpiece. It got a few laughs at the office from my fellow bandmates Rex and Jason, so I decided to share it here.

Grammar Crime: Teacher’s Plant

121104_1445I was out shopping today with Katherine and Quinn, and I spotted the following sign, which was proofread neither for grammar nor for irony. Perhaps Mrs. Miller (neé Noland), my high school English teacher, had too much influence over me in my formative years, but I’ve got a nearly reflexive compulsion to proofread everything I see, particularly signage. For some reason, sign makers in particular seem afflicted with two grammatical maladies: the “gratuitous” use of quotation marks and the tendency to use the apostrophe when there is no possessive in sight.

VC Holiday Cheer

OnsetEvery December, many VC firms (Mobius included) send out a flurry of holiday greeting cards to their VC colleagues, service providers, portfolio company management teams, entrepreneurs, friends, etc. And every December, I look forward to receiving the card that Onset Ventures sends to me. Over the past few years, I’ve had the pleasure of sitting on the board of directors of Glimmerglass with Susan Mason of Onset, which is how I wound up on Onset’s holiday mailing list.

Onset creates cards that are always clever and have an amazingly high production value. (See the picture in this post for a preview from last year’s card). You can also access the archive of their cards here. My favorite was 2002’s card, which contained a series of haikus that reflected the angst of the time. I’ll close with a few of my favorites:

snow falls silently
blocking pathways, bringing gloom
just like the NASDAQ

‘e’ here and ‘e’ there
‘e’ was almost everywhere
except for ‘e’arnings

coal in my stocking
once nothing, now an asset
warmth underrated

Happy Birthday to Q!

Img_0894Our son Quinn is one year old today! Katherine & I have had an exhilirating, exhausting and wonderful first year with the little guy, who is (seriously) the best baby in the known universe. We’re proud of ourselves today given we’ve had a dog survive over two years in our care and a little boy make it one year. That said, your odds as a houseplant in Casa McIntyre still aren’t so good…

I’m not a scholar…

But I play one on the web. With my search engine roots, I follow Google’s activities with great interest, given Excite’s prominence as an early leading search engine in the mid to late 90’s and subsequent demise in the bursting of the bubble. Perhaps I will opine at some later point on the “late-mover advantage” Google enjoyed that led to their current domination of search while early pioneers like Excite, Inktomi, Lycos, Infoseek and Alta Vista vanished or are shadows of their former selves. But I digress…

When Google announced the beta of Google Scholar, I used my usual technique to estimate the depth and breadth of a search engine: the vanity search. In this case, searching for “Ryan McIntyre” was a real test of their index, since I have only one published academic paper to my name. As usual, Google did not disappoint.

The paper, Bach in a Box: The Evolution of Four Part Baroque Harmony Using the Genetic Algorithm, appeared in the Proceedings of the First IEEE Conference on Evolutionary Computing in 1994 and was the culmination of a two quarters’ worth of classes I took during my senior year at Stanford in 1993 from Professor John Koza, who teaches an excellent course on genetic algorithms and GA’s cousin, genetic programming.

This paper was a satisying way to fuse my passions for music and computation, and it was thrilling to listen to the harmonies that my algorithm produced that sounded at least as good as anything any first year student of classical music theory might construct for class excercises. Ultimately, I think the genetic algorithm was not well suited to computer music composition because simpler randomized rule-based techniques could produce similar results while consuming far fewer computing cycles, but it was a fun project nonetheless, and according to Google, it has been cited seventeen times since it was published.

At the time I ran the evolutions for the project back in 1993, it took up to three hours to create a four-part harmony for a given melody on Sun Sparcstations and DEC 5000 workstations in the computer science lab at Stanford. Of couse, on today’s hardware, running the same program would take mere seconds, thanks to Mr. Moore.

The Coolest Vegetable

RomanescuMy good friend Martin Reinfried has a photoblog, where he took a couple shots that reminded me of the coolest (among a very nerdy fan-base) vegetable I know of: romanescu broccoli. The fractal, self-similar appearance of this vegetable is a great visual example of mathematics in the natural world and yet another example of the Fibonacci sequence in living things.