Story On Marty
Today’s NZ Herald has a story on Marty. If you are in NZ, the print edition has a terrific photo of him standing in front of a mural he painted in Kaitaia that later became a painting that hangs in our National Gallery, Te Papa.
Oracle wins!!!
Big set-back for Allinghi scum… Larry Ellison‘s BMW-Oracle won a court battle to become the official challenger to America’s Cup sailing champion Alinghi owned by Swiss billionaire Ernesto Bertarelli.
Bertarelli said today in a phone interview that he won’t appeal the court’s ruling, adding “Let’s settle this on the water.” Bertarelli said the sailing event should be delayed until July 2009 because neither team would be ready to sail by this July as suggested by New York State Supreme Court Judge Herman Cahn.
Bertarelli has dishonored the legacy of all Cup winners.
Digital NZ Keynote…
I managed to beam into the Digital NZ keynote out of Austin using an amazing Polycom system. Ok, I sure missed an All Press coffee, breakfast at Cafe Melba Vulcan Lane, a plate of green-lipped mussles and catching up with Greg, Sandy, Rod and crew… But then I didn’t have to sit on a plane for 21 hours either…
The kit up at Polycom blew me away. HD video conferencing. Awesome.
My main premis was:
- Broadband is an issue but in a tightly regulated economy Telecom, Telstra and the Govt will need to sort that out. Hopefully while giving enterprises like Woosh a chance at succeeding. Somehow we manage to stay ahead of demand when it comes to the Internet. I heard an interesting soundbite the other day – YouTube today consumes all of the Internet capacity that existed five years ago. And, every second, six hours of video is loaded to YouTube.
- But, given this does happen we face two greater issues. First, if we continue to deploy infrastrucutre as we have been, there simply won’t be enough power to go around. Now, given that many of the major sites used by Kiwis are offshore – like YouTube — that might not be such a problem to the consumer. But for businesses planning on participating in the global economy this is a major issue. Green computing coupled with low cost, low impact power could be a major source of competitive advantage for NZ.
- Then, to the real problem. Running out of power is one thing. Running out of people is much more problematic. We are simply not outputting talent to run and build on the infrastructure we need to dearly. This is a problem we must fix for the long-term. Fixing it means getting started now though.
So, those are the main tenets of my story.
Rod had a few things to say, as did ComputerWorld.
A few had follow-on questions about the correlation between bandwidth and power. I’ll get you some data courtesy of our friends at Gartner. The key to understanding this is to grok not what it takes to run the bandwidth but rather what the bandwidth is accessing… Massive and multiplying data centers across the planet. It’s not jsut Google or Microsoft. It’s nearly every Enterprise of any substance facing this challenge.
Minor thing: I few journos keep reporting that I chair the NZTE beachhead program in the US. As they expanded the program I stepped out of this role. Bridget Liddel has that honor. I do play a leadership role on the technology team that exists as part of the overall program though.
congrats to team endace…
Congrats to all the team at Endace on their win at the NZ Hi-tech awards. I’m proud to be a board member of this amazing NZ company.
Also congrats to all the team at Xero on their wins. You can read more over at Rod’s blog…
intriquing NZ ict numbers…
From today’s NZ Herald:
- Government target for ICT sector’s contribution to GDP: 10 per cent by 2012.
- Estimated number of workers needed to reach that goal: 66,000.
- Number of people working in the industry as of late last year: 22,000.
- Number of tertiary IT graduates: 1200 a year.