The VCs are starting to invest more in start-ups.
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Silicon Valley on Tuesday cheered the first quarterly increase in venture investment since the peak of the dot-com boom, saying it pointed to a gradual recovery for the hard-hit business of taking stakes in risky high-tech start-ups.
The rate of investment is still less than a fifth of the amount at the peak of the bubble. Even if it turns up even higher there is a different trend running that looks like it will have a biger impact on US technical workers than a VC investment upturn. Jobs are getting shipped overseas.
Gartner Inc., the world's biggest high-tech forecasting firm, said in a report entitled "U.S. Offshore Outsourcing: Structural Changes, Big Impact" that 500,000 of the 10.3 million U.S. technology jobs could move just in 2003 and 2004.
Jeff Taylor of Reason magazine tries to downplay the threat of foreign programmer competition.
But the catch is that out-sourcing is being embraced without much sign that it will actually make high-tech firms, particularly software companies, more effective. Highly collaborative, imaginative work might suffer in the hands of technically adept but inexperienced programmers.
Here's the thing about inexperienced programmers: if they program for years they eventually become (oh, can you guess it?) experienced programmers. Remember all the industries where the United States used to be the world leader where it no longer is? Computer programming is supposed to be immune to foreign competition why exactly?
Venture capitalist Bill Ericson of Mohr, Davidow Ventures and other venture capitalists tell the Christian Science Monitor that they are starting to actively invest once again.
Moreover, it is times like now, when scientists and entrepreneurs can fully turn their attentions toward a new generation of innovation, that the technological cornerstones for the next boom are laid. "Today, a lot of that noise [from the Internet boom] is gone," says Ericson. "It is an environment of stability ... where you can work toward building up a good idea." Adds fellow venture capitalist Allan Thygesen of the Carlyle Group in San Francisco: "It is no different from the first half of the 1990s."
This comes on the heels of a tech sector downturn so severe that the Census Bureau estimates that from July 2001 to July 2002 San Francisco's population was the most rapidly declining of any city in the United States.
San Francisco's population fell 1.5 percent to 764,049. Nearby Sunnyvale and Daly City were among the Top 10 losers. San Jose declined 0.6 percent to 900,443.
Sunnyvale is next on the list, losing 1.4 percent of its residents in one year
The region has suffered big job losses.
Experts attribute the population losses to sweeping layoffs in the high-tech sector. The Bay Area lost an estimated 313,000 jobs from December 2000 to December 2002.
One problem that Silicon Valley faces is that it is less unique than it used to be. There are other cities with concentrations of highly skilled engineers and programmers. Also, communications cost reductions have reduced the need to co-locate as many different kinds of workers. I think they face a tougher time coming back this time than they have during previous tech downturns.
Simson Garfinkel, "Gadget Master" for the MIT Technology Review, says the new Bose QuietComfort 2 headsets are so superior in noise cancellation that they are worth their US $299 price.
But until now, all headsets with active noise reduction have shared a common problem: in the process of erasing the background noise, they added their own unmistakable hiss. These new Bose headsets are the first on the market to eliminate that audible artifact.
Shoshana Berger is also suitably impressed with the QC2.
Don't expect these headphones to eliminate all sound -- they're not designed for that. You'll still hear someone talking to you directly, but the plane's engine noise now sounds like an ebbing tide -- a soft white noise that's almost comforting.
You can plug the thing into a Walkman and listen to music even as surrounding sounds are cancelled out. Though the sound quality is not as good as that from a top-of-the-line regular audio headset.
CNet has reviews of the Bose QC2 along with Koss, Sennheiser, Panasonic, and Sony competitors. Also, check out Bose's web page on the QC2.
A good noise cancelling headset would be very useful in a lot of work situations. I'm continually struck by how much employers fail to appreciate how the noise in cubicle land is a frequent distraction and obstacle to getting real work done. In one job as a computer programmer I was placed next to a machine shop. Back before the era of electronic noise cancelling headsets I went by a gun shop and bought a noise muffling headset that is sold for gun range use. It is also a useful device for signalling to people that you do not want to be interrupted.
Anyway, this Bose QC2 sounds useful. I want one.
J.D. Powers (web sites here and here) has just released their new 2003 car quality survey. Check out the Quicken Dow Jones Newswires coverage.
What's surprising is that, while U.S. and European-made cars started out about even in terms of quality when they were new, after three years domestically made cars had just half as many reported problems as did European cars, according to their owners.
Quality at General Motors is rapidly rising to put them near the top, though still trailing Nissan and Toyota. Chrysler, owned by Daimler-Benz, beats Mercedes and yet Chrysler and Ford are slightly below industry average.
Japanese automakers continue to dominate in long-term durability. Lexus, Toyota's luxury brand, had the fewest reported problems, just 163 per 100 vehicles compared with an industry average of 273. Infiniti, Nissan's luxury brand, came in second with 174 problems, and G.M.'s Buick brand was third with 179 problems.
In terms of 3 year quality the most of the German makes and Volvo lag. Among the European makers Jaguar (owned by Ford), Saab (owned by GM), are better and Porsche has excellent quality.
Linus doesn't sound too concerned.
Q: How about the history of Unix itself. Is it hard to follow?
A: There was a lawsuit between AT&T and Berkeley. AT&T sued UC Berkeley for copyright infringement because the Berkeley version of Unix was made available openly with the Berkeley license. It took a few years but it was shown that it wasn't Berkeley that stole code from AT&T but it was AT&T that stole code from Berkeley, removed Berkeley copyrights, and they ended up settling out of court. So there is no judge that has said so officially but it was believed that Berkeley had done nothing wrong. This is the same code at issue. In that case, there was a clear genetic continuation. Now SCO is trying to use the same code that already failed a test once and to apply it to something where there isn't the same genetic continuation.
What, me worry? He goes on to talk about a great many other things related to Linux. Nice interview.
University of Minnesota researchers Joseph A. Konstan and John Riedl report that Web sites that accept user ratings but which show users the existing ratings before the users enter their own ratings influence the ratings that later reviewers enter.
ARLINGTON, Va. – Online "recommender systems" are used to suggest highly rated selections for book buyers, movie renters or other consumers, but a new study by University of Minnesota computer science researchers shows for the first time that a system that lies about ratings can manipulate users' opinions. Over time, however, users lose trust in unscrupulous systems.
The Minnesota research group, led by professors Joseph Konstan and John Riedl, conducted experiments with MovieLens, a member-driven movie recommendation Web site, which the Minnesota team created to put their research on recommender systems into practice. The results of their latest studies will be presented at the CHI 2003 Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, April 5-10, 2003, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The work is supported by the National Science Foundation, the independent federal agency that supports basic research in all fields of science and engineering.
The results suggest that "shills," who flood recommender systems with artificially high (or low) ratings, can have an impact and that recommender systems will take longer than previously expected to self-correct. The idea behind self-correction is that misled users will come back and give the item in question a more accurate rating.
"This study isn't about defending against shill attacks, but about trust in the system," Konstan said. "Our results show that individual shilling will take longer to correct, but the larger impact is the loss of trust in the system." In the Minnesota study, users were sensitive to the quality of the predictions and expressed dissatisfaction when the system gave inaccurate ratings.
Taken together, the experiments provide several tips for the designers of interfaces to recommender systems. Interfaces should allow users to concentrate on rating while ignoring predictions. Finer-grained rating scales are preferred over simple "thumbs up, thumbs down" scales, but are not essential to good predictions. Finally, because users are sensitive to manipulation and inaccurate predictions, to keep customers happy, no recommender system at all is better than a bad recommender system.
Many online shopping sites use recommender systems to help consumers cope with information overload and steer consumers toward products that might interest them. Recommender systems based on "collaborative filtering" generate recommendations based on a user's selections or ratings and the ratings of other users with similar tastes.
The CHI 2003 paper reports the results of three experiments that attempted to shed light on questions such as "Can the system make a user rate a ‘bad’ movie 'good'?" "Do users notice when predictions are manipulated?" "Are users consistent in their ratings?" and "How do different rating scales affect users' ratings?"
"To our knowledge, no one has studied how recommendations affect users' opinions," Konstan said. "We thought it was a socially important question because many of these systems are used in commercial applications. We found that if the system lies you can gain some influence in the short term, but you lose trust in the long term. This is a lot like trust between humans."
In the first experiment, users re-rated movies while presented with some "predictions" that were different from the user's prior rating of the movie. In the second experiment, users rated movies they hadn't rated before. Some users saw "predictions" that were skewed higher or lower, while a control group saw only the system's accurate predictions. The final experiment had users re-rate movies using three different rating scales and asked users their opinions of the different scales.
In the re-rating experiment, users were generally consistent, but they did tend to change their rating in the direction of the system's skewed "prediction." In fact, users could even be influenced to change a rating from negative to positive or vice versa. When users rated previously unrated movies, they tended to rate toward the system's prediction, whether it was skewed or not.
Konstan also noted that, while this study used movie ratings, recommender systems have much wider application. Such systems can also be used for identifying highly rated research papers from a given field or for knowledge management in large enterprises. New employees, for example, can bring themselves up to speed by focusing on highly rated news items or background materials.
Some quantitative results from the study:
The results revealed that people were fairly consistent in re-rating movies when there were no other ratings on-screen. Participants gave the movies the same ratings 60 percent of the time, one star below the original rating 20 percent of the time and one star above the original rating 20 percent of the time.
The results also showed that having other ratings on screen, whether they matched the user's original rating or were one star up or down, influenced the second rating the user gave. When ratings were bumped up or down one star, participants rated nearly 30 percent of movies one star above or below the original rating, respectively.
If a few people go over to Amazon.com and put in favorable reports for a new book those initial favorable reports will then tend to skew later ratings that are entered. I'm guessing that if all the ratings for a book are skewed in one direction at least some would-be reviewers who would otherwise have entered in a rating in opposite driection will decide not to enter a review at all since their review would be so far out of step with the other ratings.
The other problem with rating systems is that one doesn't really know much about the kinds of people doing the ratings. It would be far more helpful when reviewing, say, a technical book on a programming language to know whether the reviewer has been programming for very long, knows other languages, or has other books on the same language that they like more or worse. Some reviewers include those kinds of facts but most do not. Also, most book reviewers do not explain enough to allow a reader to understand what they did or did not like about a book. There is something to be said for a rating form that would allow a person to fill in a survey about a book covering major categories such as accuracy, readability, suitability for beginners, intermediate, and advanced users, and so on.
Konstan and Reidl are also co-authors of a book entitled Word of Mouse: The Marketing Power of Collaborative Filtering.
The US government's new National Do Not Call Registry has begun operation. If you know you want to sign up then go directly to the registration page. Note that you can register up to 3 phone numbers at a time.
If you reigster by the end of August 2003 then the telemarketers will stop calling by September 1, 2003. Note that charitable organizations soliciting for donations are not covered but you can ask each organization not to call you again after the first call and they must respect this request. Also, people conducting political polls and other surveys are not covered.
If only junk email spam was as easy to get get rid of...
Are you using some prehistoric era browser? Time to upgrade! The open source Mozilla v1.4 is released on many operating systems. Also, Netscape browsers are built from the Mozilla browser source code with some added extras and you can now upgrade to the Netscape version 7.1 that is based on Moz v1.4. One of the nicest features of these browsers is control of pop-up advertisements.
Popup Controls help you stop popups from taking over your browsing experience. (Popups are small windows that are served by various web sites and are often unsolicited.) The feature can be turned on from the tools menu. Additional settings in Preferences give you personalized control so you can "allow" popups that may be needed by an individual web site.
Mozilla and Netscape have improvements on their junk mail filtering capabilities.
Mail now has junk-mail context menu items, a "delete junk mail" menu item and many other usability improvements for junk-mail controls.
The Bayesian spam detection filter that was introduced into Mozilla v1.3 is now available on Netscape v7.1 as well. You will find more on Netscape v7.1 at Netscape DevEdge.
This release of Netscape represents a lot more than the v7.0 to v7.1 minor rev number change suggests. The underlying Mozilla source code has gone from v1.0 to v1.4 and that is a huge jump in terms of speed, bugginess, and features. Check out the discussion on Mozillazine on the Netscape v7.1 release. You web site developers please note the optional Developer Pack which includes the rather useful Venkman Javascript Debugger. See this list of advantages in v7.1 for web developers.
My favorite browser remains Mozilla Firebird (which was formerly known as Phoenix). With the latest Mozilla version now released we can shortly expect to see a new Mozilla Firebird release v0.7 that incorporates all of the v1.4 code. If you want to get the latest Firebird and don't mind living dangerously with nightly builds (and TechiePundit does live dangerously with nightly builds himself) then try the most recent Firebird nighly build.
Firebird does not come with an email program built in. If you want to get an email client to complement the Mozilla Firebird browser then try out Mozilla Thunderbird.
If you are still using an old Netscape version then it is time to move up. Any time I see a Netscape v4.x browser show up in my web logs I think "there's a person who needs my help if I only knew how to reach him". Your plight is heart wrenching. Please upgrade. If you have been using MS Internet Explorer then why not check out a browser that comes with many features that Microsoft doesn't deign to provide to its customers? The Mozilla project and the browsers that are built off it have made tremendous strides over the last few years. The results are worth a try.
Jakob Nielsen has an interesting Alertbox column entitled Information Foraging: Why Google Makes People Leave Your Site Faster.
The easier it is to find places with good information, the less time users will spend visiting any individual website. This is one of many conclusions that follow from analyzing how people optimize their behavior in online information systems.
This argument makes a lot of intuitive sense. I've personally been going to Google News a lot more to look for news stories and as a consequence do not go to the front pages of news sites as often as I used to.
Search engines still have a long way to go though. In some topic areas the sales sites for particular products will dominate over technical discussions of the performance of products. In other topic areas amateur sites with little useful knowledge will show up high in a search result list while pages with the most insightful analyses get low ranking.
One feature I'd like to see Google support is a date-sorted return in regular pages like it does on news pages. Sometimes one is looking for the latest that has been said on a topic and while one can restrict Google searches to recent months in the Advanced Search facility it is not the same thing. What would be nice would be more knobs to turn to tell Google the kind of page one is looking for. Rather than simply sort by date it would be nice to just say "assign more weight to page date in the index algorithm" or "assign more weight to academic papers in the index algorithm".
This seems like a very sensible decision. Blogs report what others are saying when they republish.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last Tuesday that Web loggers, website operators and e-mail list editors can't be held responsible for libel for information they republish, extending crucial First Amendment protections to do-it-yourself online publishers.
There is one lesson from how this case came to happen in the first place: if you send email to someone there is a very real chance that the email will be forwarded to others. If you want only the receiver to hear your thoughts then talk to them in person. Heck, even phone conversations are less likely to be recorded than emails are likely to be forwarded.