Archive for the Category ◊ Computer ◊

Internet withdrawal
Tuesday, July 05th, 2005 | Author: kevin

Well I’m on the last day of my vacation before the ITHET conference. It has been really tough becuase there is no real place to work on the Internet except for these “locked” Internet Cafe style terminals. It’s been hell. I feel like a junkie and I’ve been needing a fix, reeeaaall BAD! So I sent my family to the pool while I check e-mail and other things this morning. It’s amazing how critical the Internet is in my life now.

Unless the conference has free wireless, or at least improved access, it is going to be tough staying up to date during the conference. Although $4 a half hour is not bad. It is extremely inconvenient. Another challenge is there is no business center or similar (oh yeah I miss my spell checker too) facility so I can finish, and start :) , my slides for Friday.

The family flies back tomorrow, so I’ll have to hunker down in the room with the free beer flowing to finish my slides. Wow, that sounds rough!!!

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You have to what?
Tuesday, June 07th, 2005 | Author: kevin

Someone left a comment on my post about the Forteleza requiring registration. So I said, why not I’ll bite. Let’s go register. But as the poster also offered, (you really have to appreciate the irony and sarcasm it inspires) you can’t register for the e-Government site on-line. LOL

From the FAQ:

¿Dónde me puedo registrar?
El proceso de registro de datos se llevará acabo en las Colecturías Participantes del Departamento de Hacienda, llamando a la división de Tecnologías de Información Gubernamentales de la Oficina de Gerencia y Presupuesto al (787) 977-9200 o en las Oficinas Regionales de PRFAA en Estados Unidos.

¿Puedo registrarme sin visitar una colecturía? SubirSubir
NO, para proteger su privacidad todo ciudadano tiene que asistir a una colecturía o un centro comercial participante para iniciar el proceso de registro. Luego será el ciudadano el que active este proceso en línea.

Alright, so it is not so stupid. Protecting citizens against identity fraud is serious business, but is there no other way?

UPDATE: I’m still trying to determine whether the Governor’s statements at the Microsoft convention have been publicly announced. There are few news items that look related, but further research is necessary.

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Sometimes it’s just hard to resist
Tuesday, June 07th, 2005 | Author: kevin

Just a simple question for now.

I was reading an article about the Ad Agency Euro RSCG in the Caribbean Business, June 2, 2005. The agency intends to continue their on-going study Prosumer Pulse here in Puerto Rico. The Prosumer is short for “proactive consumer”. This exclusive group represents the leading 20% to 30% of all consumers in the marketplace. If you are familiar with the maven role in Malcolm Gladwell’s The Tipping Point, the prosumer is the same thing.

Anyway, the local branch of this ad agency will study this group here in Puerto Rico. However, according to the article, although globally they have conducted the survey over the Internet, here in Puerto Rico they will use a combination of the Internet and telephone polling. The reason for this is that there is only 20% to 25% Internet penetration of their target market.

So here is my question: “If the prosumer are the leading consumers in the Puerto Rico marketplace, what is the likelihood that they are NOT on the Internet?”

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It just wasn’t meant to be, I guess
Wednesday, June 01st, 2005 | Author: kevin

My trip to Brazil by the numbers:

Number of times I packed my suitcase 2:
Number of times I went to airport: 1
Number of visas obtained from the Brazilian consulate in Miami: 0

Ultimately, even though I tried to reschedule my trip to fly through Miami, I didn’t make it out of Puerto Rico. What a huge disappointment. We really felt that we were going to take off with our SNAPPIX product.

Never in my career have I seen things come together so well, but still get ruined in the end. Those who knew about the visa requirement for Brazil are all like, well of course. While most everyone else thought, as I did, that a passport was sufficient. According to a friend of SNAP, the requirement is because the United States requires visas for the citizens of Brazil, they require visas for U.S. citizens.

We are still fighting the good fight and will attempt to be there as much as possible in spirit, commentary, and whatever else we can dream up, but in the end it just wasn’t meant to be.

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On Tuesday of last week, Governor Acevedo Vila attended Microsoft’s Government Leaders Forum. As an advocate for the adoption of open source software in our Government, this disturbs me. Even so, I’ll try to keep the open source rhetoric to a minimum. I don’t want this to be about proprietary versus free software. I want this discussion to be about choice. I want this discussion to be about the future stability of the Puerto Rican economy. So I couldn’t agree more with the Governor as he opened his speech at this prestigious forum: “The decisions Puerto Rico will make in the first decade of this new millennium will have a profound effect on our future quality of life. We sit at an important juncture in transforming our economy.” So if we are to make decisions, what are the choices? Have we properly prepared ourselves to make these decisions? Have we thoroughly analyzed the context of these decisions to determine all of the valid options?

I encourage you all to read the Governor’s speech. It is full of optimism and hope. It is a well-crafted speech that paints a fantastic picture of Puerto Rico today, and an even better Puerto Rico tomorrow. Unfortunately I live here and it sounds hollow when the facts, figures, and themes don’t match my personal observations. For example, the key to his entire speech was based on his strategy to build a new Commonwealth based on moving Puerto Rico to the new knowledge-based economy. He intends to accomplish this by leveraging two fundamental advantages of our beautiful and strategically located Island: 1) our sophisticated, highly educated, experienced and hard working people; and 2) our state-of-the-art telecommunications, transportation and utilities infrastructure, with an advanced e-government focus. As a leader myslef, I find this a pretty thin strategy.

Later in his speech he elaborates more on why these are fundamental advantages. As you might expect, in what was probably a fifteen minute speech, there are not many surprises announced that will make a dramatic difference. I would certainly like to know, however, how the begin the seventh busiest container port in the Western Hemisphere; having 40 shipping lines; and having International and regional airports with 4,300 cargo flights per month will help us build a knowledge economy.

One initiative in particular, I would welcome eagerly. Too bad, I’ve been hearing about it for about two years already. According to Acevedo Vila “We are also expanding the amount of on-line services and transactions to facilitate the process of starting and operating a business in Puerto Rico to reduce the amount of time required to process permits and payments and comply with legal requirements.” This is something that is desperately needed, I just can’t remember seeing anything about this anywhere else than this speech. There were several other announcements that seem to only exist in this speech as well. I hope that I’m just misinformed.

We are certainly an unusual species. We promise things that we have no intention of doing. We forcefully claim positions, and then invalidate those positions with our actions. We do things that are good, but allow them to fade away which is bad. These things trouble me, they mystify me. I’m a computer scientist, logic rules my life. However, logic is useless in understanding our behavior. For when we say that we want our government to leverage information technology to its fullest, making it a more accessible, transparent and effective in our organization through the adoption of information technologies and improved processes, that sounds like an awesome ideal. However, when we allow companies with deep pockets to compromise our decisions, then can we be sure that we are going to leverage information technology to its fullest? Further, when there are options that do not require significant license fees, why would we pledge we are making a significant investment in technology? When we compare ourselves to other governments doing the same thing, which are these governments? It is unlikely they are Chile, Brazil, China, Malaysia, Philippines, or India. Each of these countries are investing deeply in open source software, does that mean that we will?

The stakes are high indeed for how we answer these questions. Since our government is the largest employer, it is the standard bearer for Puerto Rico. Many companies will do as our government leads. According to El Nuevo Dia, our government already has $37 million worth of contracts with Microsoft. Again, my observations place that number closer to $150 million. With Gold Partners and many other Microsoft business partners, what this leadership means is significant persuasion on how Puerto Rican companies and therefore households spend their information technology dollars.

I’ll leave you to ponder the biggest question of all. With nearly four million residents, the Governor was proud to claim that the Puerto Rican e-government site processes an average of 400 transactions per month. That volume of transactions means that 1/10,000th percent of the population completes transactions monthly. For $150 million dollars, do you think that is a good investment of our valuable tax dollars?

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Into the dust of history
Saturday, April 09th, 2005 | Author: kevin

I’ve finished posting the last of my pictures from the Open Source Business Conference to flickr. They are available here. So I still want to do a more in depth analysis of Geoffery Moore’s speech, Lawrence Lessig’s, and SpikeSource’s announcements. However, I think that my ambition is too big to fit into my crowded schedule. Anyway I look forward to the speeches becoming available on IT Conversations.

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HSH & More of the Same
Friday, April 08th, 2005 | Author: kevin

Finally back into the office again after attending this mornings Global High Tech: The World and Puerto Rico, presentation by Bertil Chappuis, principal at McKinsey’s Silicon Valley office. The event was part of the ongoing activities related to the EntrPRize Business Plan Competition sponsored by Gurpo Guayacan.

The presentation covered these high level concepts:

  1. The High Tech Industry is maturing…
  2. …and Globalizing, with China and Inda playing a prominent role
  3. Silicon valley is subdues, and the energy has shifted from enterprise IT to consumer
  4. What does this all mean for entrepreneurs in PR?

Ultimately we were very fortunate to receive such a high caliber presentation. the level of information available to Mr. Chappius is totally unmatchable at my level. Some of what he said was right on the money with everything I just saw in San Francisco, but I’m not the audience heard him For let those that have ears here. However, everything he had to say about globalization is frighteningly true and I think it is here that we truly don’t want to hear what he had to say. If the United States faces aggressively competition in the future from what he calls BRIC (Brazil, Russian, India, and China), what does that mean for Puerto Rico’s ability to compete? For me the implications are terrifying.

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Heading home
Thursday, April 07th, 2005 | Author: kevin

With all of 40 minutes of shut eye, I have just enough time to post a last minute update. It has been an intense two days. During my time here I’ve made some great new friends and set the seeds for many new opportunities. I have a new set of action items to add to my to do list. When I get back to the SNAP Development Center I’ll have to remain focused to make those seeds grow into real positive impact for the project.

What has this been like? Every chance I got I sat beside or stood beside or followed people that I wanted to meet and introduce myself and the project. Although it is kind of a challenge to context switch between the meeting people mode, the analyzing information mode, and the blogging mode. Conferences just provide enough time to fit everything in. This is probably why I got maybe 11 hours sleep over the past three days.

I set a goal for myself of meeting 5% of attendees. According to Matt Asay there were 700 attendees at the Open Source Business Conference. I didn’t quite make it, but I think between the people I talked with and those I exchanged business cards I came pretty close. More importantly, some of the contacts I have made should be very strategic for the project.

Well it is off to the airport to fly 4,000 miles back home. It should be real fun. The cold I developed coming here, plus the lack of sleep, has really come on strong this morning. Well at least I made it through the show without it really slowing me down. Looking forward to take off to shut my eyes for a while.

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The heat is on…
Tuesday, April 05th, 2005 | Author: kevin

Well the conference has started and things are happening quickly. Blogging about SpikeSource yesterday and today has earned me a seat at the invitation only Town Hall Meeting with Ray Lane. I spent some intense time with Glen Martin from SpikeSource really trying to understand what all of their new announcments are about. Testing as a service, interesting. Met very briefly Kim Polese, and Robyn Forman from SpikeSource. You can almost feel the electricity coming off of these folks.

While waiting for a meeting this morning I posted my photos from yesterday. They are available here.

Most importantly, after a slight SNAFU I met with the guys from OpenLogic. Roy and Rod seem like real straight shooting good guys. We had a great meeting and I hope to spend some more time with them and see a demo of BlueGlue.

I haven’t seen Tim O’Reilly yet, I hope he was able to attend.

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OSBC 2005 – San Francisco
Monday, April 04th, 2005 | Author: kevin

I’ve made it to San Francisco and I’m mostly settled in. Today I’m going to be working on X-cito and trying to get some writing done before the action gets going tomorrow. It should be a busy day. I’ll try to find some time to get out and get some pix for everyone to see. I’ll be using Flickr, which I got hooked on and upgraded from the free account. Hey I earned it! I got it integrated with X-cito didn’t I?

This is an important conference for SNAP, we’ll be talking with some very strategically positioned companies. I know that SNAP has an interesting value proposition, and I’ll be working on honing how to present that value later today. One of my new mentors Mr Hugo Schmidt at the Inter urged me to really push hard on the networking opportunity. He is convinced that I need to find a place that better fits me, but it is always more complicated than that. I have a vision on how to work my way out of Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rico Business Plan Competition is key to my vision.

Once it is crunch time. These are the times I wish I could slow time down just a little so I could get everything in in the few short days I have for this opportunity. I’m praying for th strength and stamina to make something incredible happen. It hasn;t helped that I’ve been developing a cold and on the flight it got worse. Oh well, just have to keep pushing.

Currently listening to:

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