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FYI France EXTRA: Google cofounder Sergey Brin, online

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jack Kessler)
Thu Oct 6 20:26:51 2005

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Date:         Wed, 5 Oct 2005 19:27:14 -0700
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From: Jack Kessler <kessler@WELL.COM>
To: PACS-L@LISTSERV.UH.EDU

FYI France EXTRA: Google co-founder Sergey Brin, online

For an inside look at Google, and the new generation of Silicon
Valley wunderkind, see the wonderfully-interesting and
illuminating talk Sergey Brin just gave:

	http://webcast.berkeley.edu:8080/ramgen/bibs/f2005/group3/sims141/brin.rm
	http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/10/04_sergey.shtml

-- to Professor Marti Hearst's class in "Search Engines:
Technology, Society, and Business", at UC Berkeley, their SIMS /
School of Information Management and Systems,

	http://webcast.berkeley.edu/courses/archive.php?seriesid=1906978252
	http://sims.berkeley.edu/

The "casual brilliance" which goes into the perhaps uniquely -
American system of SiliconValley-style hitech should impress many
who watch this webcast. Notice the speaker's resemblance to the
students: in dress, manner, age -- Brin is just over 30, as are
many of the students -- and particularly the open and fresh and
somewhat anti-hierarchical nature of the presentation. For
instance the professor has the chance to deliver a stuffy
introduction and read an impressive c.v. and she doesn't: just
passes on it, with a shrug, and says simply, "Here's Sergey..."

Also the "collaborative research": this is a Stanford University
graduate student -- Brin is on-leave but continuing work on his
PhD, as he manages and builds his multi-billion dollar Google
Inc. (current market capitalization nearly $90 billion) -- and
here he is sharing knowledge with, and revealing secrets to,
arch-rival University of California students, who he knows may go
out into the field to become direct competitors of his own firm,
although many of them may go to work for him at Google...

Moreover, as a representative of the "commercial" world, Brin is
an interloper in the ivory tower -- an invader of academia --
more incredibly, to some perhaps, he has been invited to be so.
There was a time, in US academia, when this was not possible, but
that time is long past. What is shown in this webcast has become
the norm, in the US anyway: the "commercial" and "academic"
worlds have merged -- they think alike, talk alike, look alike --
both inhabit "campuses", and dress as Brin does here, and play
volleyball at breaktimes, and drink fruit juice -- and they work
terribly, terribly, hard, for many long hours, at what they do.

It's a model which is not unique to US hitech. Right now,
watching Brin on this video, I've just come from the Genentech
Building at the new University of California at San Francisco
Mission Bay campus, where stem cell and other new "biotech"
industries are being blended with their commercial counterparts,
too. So both Google's "digital hitech" and Genentech's "biotech"
-- the commercial and the academic -- work the same way, now,
here in the US. A new convergence: commercial<=>academic.

There are disadvantages to this... But a disquisition on all of
that would run on for many pages, and here I really wanted only
to give everyone a fascinating glimpse of what is going on, by
reporting on Brin's video and encouraging everyone to view it.

If your personal higher education has taken place entirely since
the year 2000, none of this will look surprizing. But for anyone
whose schooling took place much before then, and certainly for
any from long before that, be prepared: this is a Brave New World.


Jack Kessler

ps. Anyone wishing to explore the theoretical underpinnings of
this approach is encouraged to read locus classicus on the
SiliconValley-style approach to things: the author, Saxenian, now
is Dean at UC Berkeley SIMS --

	Saxenian, AnnaLee. "Regional advantage : culture and
	competition in Silicon Valley and Route 128" (Cambridge, Mass. :
	Harvard University Press, 1994) ISBN 0674753399.


			--oOo--


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