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The Hypocrisy In Silicon Valley's Big Talk On Innovation

glowend writes "James Temple writes in the San Francisco Chronicle: 'In the fall of 2011, Max Levchin took the stage at a TechCrunch conference to lament the sad state of U.S. innovation. "Technology innovation in this country is somewhere between dire straits and dead," said the PayPal co-founder, later adding: "The solution is actually very simple: You have to aim almost ridiculously high." But for all the funding announcements, product launches, media attention and wealth creation, most of Silicon Valley doesn't concern itself with aiming "almost ridiculously high." It concerns itself primarily with getting people to click on ads or buy slightly better gadgets than the ones they got last year.' I feel like this may be true as more money and MBA types invade the Silicon Valley. There's a lot of 'me-too' startups with some of the best and brightest figuring out ways to sell me stuff rather the working on flying cars."

7 of 208 comments (clear)

  1. Is that wrong? by pushing-robot · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Computers have been getting "slightly better than last year" for a few decades now.

    Because of that, I'm now running a Quad i7 with a Geforce and a couple terabytes of SSD+HDD rather than a IBM PC with a monochrome adapter and two floppies.

    I'm not complaining.

    --
    How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
  2. Re:It's less an article about by fredprado · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And you have hit the nail on the head here. The problem is crony capitalism that is where we are heading too (and in many places already are). The excessive protection to big business IP and interests is what hinders any kind of innovation, and, as time progresses, laws keep being enacted to give them more and more power. There is no more need to innovate when you can control the markets by force of law. You can just slow crawl and make lots of cash.

  3. What happend with trillions lost in Silicon Valley by PythonM · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Millions of people lost their real (not paper) money "investing" in Silicon Valley companies. For example AOL’s market value went from $226 billion to about $20 billion now.

    The money did not evaporate like water, so who got the $$$ that millions of american lost by "investing" in Silicon Valley companies?

  4. Innovation vs Invention by ron_ivi · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Related to the big business around owning IP is the distinction between Invention (pushing the bleeding edge in technology) and Innovation (squeezing out competitors using sly business tricks). http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/2003/pulpit_20030904_000784.html

    But there is another issue here, one that is hardly ever mentioned and that's the coining of the term "innovation." This word, which was hardly used at all until two or three years ago, feels to me like a propaganda campaign and a successful one at that, dominating discussion in the computer industry. I think Microsoft did this intentionally, for they are the ones who seem to continually use the word. But what does it mean? And how is it different from what we might have said before? I think the word they are replacing is "invention." Bill Shockley invented the transistor, Gordon Moore and Bob Noyce invented the integrated circuit, Ted Hof invented the microprocessor. Of course others claimed to have done those same three things, but the goal was always invention. Only now we innovate, which is deliberately vague but seems to stop somewhere short of invention. Innovators have wiggle room. They can steal ideas, for example, and pawn them off as their own. That's the intersection of innovation and sharp business.

  5. Re:Forget about flying cars ... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This needs to be +5, Awesome. It's exactly right.

    Flying cars are DOA until we have self driving cars. On the way home last week, I saw a 5 car pile up. Nose to tail, every one. How did that happen? Either some moron managed to plow into the last car in a row hard enough to drive them all together (been there, done that as one of the hit cars, not the moron) or a chain of morons was all following so closely they couldn't stop as the first moron plowed into stopped cars.

    These are the people the "flying car" crowd want flying. I don't even want these people driving, let alone driving over my head at 150 mph or more. These people can have flying cars when we have self-driving flying cars, and never before or the carnage will be obscene.

  6. Re:It's less an article about by Wonko+the+Sane · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's rare to see someone post something so perfectly opposite of the truth.

    Herbert Hoover spent over $3 billion via the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to bail out Wall Street cronies, instead of letting them go bankrupt as Warren Harding did in 1920. That's why the 1930s depression did not end until a significant fraction of Europe's population was murdered and their industrial production destroyed while the 1920 depression only lasted 18 months.

    Unsurprisingly, Herbert Hoover was the Treasury Secretary in 1920 who argued for bailouts at the time but was ignored. When he was in charge and able to implement exactly what he advocated a decade before the Great Depression was the result.

  7. Re:What happend with trillions lost in Silicon Val by ottothecow · · Score: 4, Interesting
    That money went to the last person to sell the share to the person who lost all of their money.

    Maybe that person said "this is crazy, I gotta get out", or maybe they rode the tide all the way up to $226 billion and said "I want to buy a house with my proceeds, gotta sell". or they noticed that rapid gains in the tech sector had left their asset allocation unbalanced so they said "Gotta rebalance--sell half the tech and buy some other sectors and a few bonds"

    The value of the company evaporated, but the money was already gone. The people who kept their money aren't that different from the people who were left holding the stock when it fell...it's just what happens when you toy with a bubble.

    --
    Bottles.