Previous  |  Next

Sat

03.17.07

Tim O'Reilly

Tim O'Reilly

Additional Speakers at Radar Executive Briefing at Etech

In my writeup the other day of the O'Reilly Radar Executive Briefing at ETech, I neglected to mention one planned session.

As I've written before, one of the big things on our radar is the idea that the data center is the new programming platform. (Remember Debra Chrapaty of Microsoft's injunction: "In the future, being a developer on someone's platform will mean being hosted on their infrastructure.")

Recently, Paul Kedrosky asked the question, "How do you invest around data center construction?" We invited Paul, the outspoken venture capitalist behind the Infectious Greed blog, and Rich Miller, the technology analyst behind the Data Center Knowledge blog, to join us to discuss this provocative topic.

In addition, Alec Proudfoot of Google and Allison Randal of the Radar team, co-chairs of our Energy Innovation Conference, will talk with us about what they're seeing on the energy front as they're evaluating technologies, startups, and the hacker frontier for the conference.

There's more than a casual connection between these two topics. While there's a lot more happening on the energy front than its intersection with computing, it has been conversations with Google, Microsoft, and other large data center players that first made us aware of just what a critical factor energy consumption was becoming in their strategic thinking. It's become the new focus of many Silicon Valley VCs (Who would have thought that the investment focus of noted computer scientists turned VC like Bill Joy and Bob Metcalfe would be energy?)

And of course energy innovation is now becoming, at long last, once again a critical factor in the strategic thinking of our country.



tags:   | comments: 2   | Sphere It
submit:

 

0 TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://orm3.managed.sonic.net/mt/mt-tb.cgi/1884

Comments: 2

Steve Mallett   [03.18.07 08:40 AM]

Interesting, I'm hosting a BoF at the Web2.0 Expo (schedule not finalized ATM), for EC2 enthusiasts. Amazon's AWS (EC2, S3, SQS) being an on demand "iDataCenter" in the clouds.

Simon Wardley   [03.19.07 03:03 AM]

Not just on demand manufacturing (i.e. commoditisation of the manufacturing process) but also a subject which touches on the commoditisation of IT theme (the eventual provision of competitive utility based infrastructural markets).

As a totally vested interest in both of these field, this briefing just gets better.

Now to go dust off my old academic work in the energy & environmental field from fifteen years ago. Out of interest, there is some real movement being made in the use of organic semi-conductors for photovoltaics including flexible PV's (think of a briefcase with the outside being one large PV powering up your laptop while you walk or a plastic sheet you just apply to your outside walls).

A historical issue with PV's has been the cost of silicon and certain limitations with the technology, so there is some real movement here.

An excellent briefing on some fascinating topics


Post A Comment:

 (please be patient, comments may take awhile to post)




Remember Me?


Subscribe to this Site

Radar RSS feed

BUSINESS INTELLIGENCE

CURRENT CONFERENCES