Tag Archives: Stanford University

Why Do Most Of The Successful Startups Come Out Of The USA?

By Quora, Contributor

I meet with startups from around the world. There are several reasons that more big tech startups come from here than from any other place. Access to role models. One CEO, as we drove by Apple’s headquarters, told me how he watched Apple growing up from a startup, like I did (I lived a mile or two away and got a tour when it was smaller than Y Combinator back in 1977). He said “if Apple can do it, anyone can.” More on why role models are so important later. Access to funding. Apple needed funding to get started. So does every startup. Only a few can go it on their own with just friends and family money. But here even friends and family money is easier to get because of the role models. We all know that if we give you $10,000 (what GoPro started up with, by the way, less than two hundred yards from my house) that it could become a billion-dollar company someday. How many people around the world know that’s possible? Not many, in my experiences. Access to business infrastructure. Need a lawyer that understands how to help startups? They are here. Need an office with good startup help? Go see something like Plug-n-Play that houses 300 startups. Need a PR firm? They are here. Need a mentor who has built a company before? They are here. Need a launch vehicle, like a conference? They are here. Need a CFO who understands how to get a company ready for an IPO? They are here. Etc., etc. Yeah, they might also exist elsewhere, but not in high concentrations like in San Francisco, Seattle, Boston, New York, Los Angeles. Access to distribution. How will you get your new service into the hands of people? How about app stores? Amazon, Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Facebook have them. Who else? No one with serious ones. How about search engines? How about partnership possibilities (want OpenTable to distribute your stuff, for instance?)? Those distribution and partnership opportunities are probably in San Francisco or New York. Rarely other places. Not to mention that most of the world’s tech press is located in San Francisco or New York. Access to monetization capabilities. You want ads? New York has them. Who else will deliver you the USA market, which is still the richest in the world (at least for a few years until China totally takes over). There are other markets that can monetize, but they are not as profitable and harder to kick off a worldwide brand with. Access to Talent. The modern company will probably need a big data expert. Someone who knows how to push around a big Hadoop cluster, for instance. Do you have one in your local community? Probably not, but they exist like flies in the San Francisco area. Google, and many Silicon Valley tech companies (HP, Cisco, Sun, Yahoo) started at Stanford University, which continues to pour out a lot of top-rate engineering and business talent. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Report: UK to begin testing driverless cars in bid to ease congestion

By Brandon Turkus

Filed under:

Google, Stanford University, and a few other institutions have been testing driverless cars on American roads for some time now. Soon, though, the autonomous vehicle will go across the pond for their first tests on the wrong side of public roads.

The BBC reports that the British government has approved testing of driverless cars, provided a real human being is riding along in the event that things go wonky. The okay came from the Department of Transport, which included the testing as part of a 28 billion pound ($42.5 million at today’s rates) investment to combat the notorious congestion on British roads.

The appeal of driverless cars is rather easy to see on the overused UK road network. As the DoT report states, driverless cars “maintain a safe distance from the vehicle in front at a set speed and without deviating from their lane – all without the driver’s input.” That means a smoother flow of traffic and a lower chance of accidents.

The cars will be operated by the brains at Oxford University, which had previously tested an autonomous Nissan Leaf. It’s unclear whether Oxford would continue to use the Leaf, or switch to the Toyota Prius favored by Google.

And before our British readers start worrying about driverless EVs hurtling down the M1, the testing will be done on lightly used roads, only.

UK to begin testing driverless cars in bid to ease congestion originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 18 Jul 2013 08:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Researchers suggest conformity pressure and desire to keep-up is pushing unsustainable population growth

(Phys.org) —Partha Dasgupta an economist with the University of Cambridge and Paul Ehrlich, a conservation biologist at Stanford University have published a paper in the journal Science in which they suggest that peer pressure and a desire to keep up with others can lead to unsustainable population growth. They use data from several sources to compare population growth rates between people in African—where population growth is exploding in some areas—with others where it is not, to show that when people experience peer pressure to have large families and also feel pressure to keep up with the consumption habits of other people where they live, the result can be explosive population growth.

From: http://phys.org/news285583115.html

Carbon Tax…Are Republicans Really That Stupid?

By Larry Bell, Contributor

As much as I admire former Secretary of State George Shultz, and because I do, I was totally flummoxed by a recent Wall Street Journal article he co-authored with economist Nobel laureate Gary Becker. Incredulously, the two senior fellows at Stanford University’s conservative Hoover Institution expressed support for a “carbon neutral” tax on carbon.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/larrybell/2013/04/16/carbon-tax-are-republicans-really-that-stupid/

Mind-controlled helicopter takes some serious brain power

Puzzlebox Productions and its mind-controlled helicopter are easy to spot at tech events like this week’s Robot Block Party at Stanford University. After all, the company’s Puzzlebox Orbit is the device that’s whirling above everybody’s heads—provided the person controlling it is concentrating hard enough.

The Puzzlebox Orbit and the app that helps control it.

The Orbit pairs up with a NeuroSky EEG Mindwear mobile headset which communicates with a mobile app. The headset communicates brain activity to that app loaded onto a phone. Give your brain a challenge and your brain activity goes up, eventually triggering the helicopter, which is linked to the phone through infrared.

(If this sounds familiar, Puzzlebox has demoed the Orbit at shows like the CES 2013 event in Las Vegas this past January.)

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2034131/mind-controlled-helicopter-takes-some-serious-brain-power.html#tk.rss_all

LinkedIn to Buy E-Reader Company Pulse for $90M

By The Associated Press

Filed under: , , , ,

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — Professional networking website LinkedIn is paying about $90 million to acquire Pulse, which makes an e-reader platform used on mobile devices.

More than 30 million people worldwide use Pulse’s e-reader applications on devices running both Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Google Inc.’s (GOOG) Android-based operating systems. Pulse, based in San Francisco, was founded in 2010 by Akshay Kothari and Ankit Gupta while they were students at Stanford University.

The deal, which is expected to close in the second quarter, is a combination of 90 percent stock and 10 percent cash.

Following the close, Pulse employees will join LinkedIn Corp. (LNKD) at its headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.

%Gallery-181469%

Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/12/linkedin-buys-pulse/

Mining Electronic Health Records Reveals Clues Of Harmful Drug Reactions

By Zina Moukheiber, Contributor  A study published today in Nature Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics showcases the potential power of sophisticated data analytics when applied to electronic health records on a large scale. By predicting harmful drug side effects two years before an alert from the Food and Drug Administration, the technology can complement the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System, which collects information from doctors, pharmacists, and patients once a drug is on the market. Less than three years ago, bioinformaticians at Stanford University set out to capture information buried, not just in insurance claims, lab tests or medical codes, but in the rich narrative of 10 million clinical notes gleaned from 1.8 million patients on Epic Systems electronic health records. “Ninety percent of patient data comes from clinical notes,” says senior author Nigam Shah, who teaches biomedical informatics at Stanford.  Along a binary matrix, Shah and his colleagues plotted de-identified patients, diagnoses, drugs and outcomes, among other variables. Patterns emerged detecting which patients, for example, with rheumatoid arthritis took Vioxx, and subsequently suffered a heart attack, as well different variations of the same variables. Drug dosages were not taken into account. Shah and his Stanford colleagues tested their model on nine drugs that were slapped with strong warnings after deadly side effects emerged, including Vioxx and Avandia. Their algorithms were able to detect adverse effects in six of them, two years before the FDA’s alert. (Stanford had 15 years of patient data). Shah says they didn’t have enough patients to get statistically significant information on three drugs, but that will change as more patient data gets stored in electronic health records.  

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Sea urchins cope with rising CO2 levels

(Phys.org) —Increasing levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere are causing oceans to become more acidic. This situation poses a threat to marine organisms with shells made of calcium carbonate, because acid will corrode these shells. If they are to survive, these organisms will have to adapt to conditions of high acidity. In a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Melissa Pepseni of Indiana University at Bloomington and her colleagues at Stanford University and University of California, Davis report that when exposed to high CO2 levels, purple sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) experience significant changes in genes that affect survival in an acidic environment. This indicates that the sea urchins can adapt to high CO2 levels caused by climate change. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org

Education Finally Ripe for Radical Innovation by Social Entrepreneurs

By Skoll World Forum, Contributor

Editor’s Note: Debra Dunn is on the faculty at Stanford University’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (d.school), where she spearheads classroom and project work in Design for Sustainable Abundance and the application of user-centred design to service learning. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

IBM and Genentech Introduce a New Era

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

On this day in economic and business history …

IBM knew it had something big on its hands when it introduced the System/360 series of mainframe computers on April 7, 1964. Legendary IBM executive (and son of that other legendary IBM executive) Thomas J. Watson Jr. called the launch “the most important product announcement in the company’s history.” IBM hosted a launch event that would put today’s to shame — a coordinated nationwide reveal attended by more than 100,000 businessmen in 165 cities across the United States.

Watson told the world:

System/360 represents a sharp departure from concepts of the past in designing and building computers. It is the product of an international effort in IBM‘s laboratories and plants and is the first time IBM has redesigned the basic internal architecture of its computers in a decade. The result will be more computer productivity at lower cost than ever before. This is the beginning of a new generation — not only of computers — but of their application in business, science, and government.

Watson was right. System/360 was not a single mainframe, but an entire series of them, with capabilities and costs running the gamut from workhorse to wonder. It was the first time that computers had been designed with upgrades in mind, as the entire range of System/360s shared the same base instruction set and could thus be upgraded without forcing users to learn to use something unfamiliar. System/360s were available at monthly rental costs that ranged from $2,700 to $115,000 — compared with purchase prices of between $133,000 to $5.5 million — and users could feel confident that no matter which machine they ordered, they could always upgrade later as their data processing demands grew.

The System/360 family became extremely successful in the market, producing some of the strongest business (and stock price) gains in IBM’s history. IBM also created a number of industry standards with the System/360 family. Some have since been superseded by newer designs, but the 8-bit byte was possibly the most durable — it remains the standard to this day.

IBM continued to deliver and support System/360s almost up to the release of its PC in 1981, as the last mainframes were delivered to customers in 1978. It’s still possible to run applications for System/360 machines in the present day, as IBM‘s modern System z mainframes are fully backwards compatible with their groundbreaking ancestors.

Birth of biotech
Genentech was founded on April 7, 1976, becoming the world’s first true biotechnology company. Genentech itself tells the story of its founding through the “GenenLab Notebook,” part of a welcome kit the company gives to new employees that found its way online in 2012:

It all began with an experiment conducted by a team led by Dr. Herbert W. Boyer of the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) and Dr. Stanley N. Cohen of Stanford University. They proved that DNA could …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Top Trends in Higher Education: Krampetz and Kim in Conversation

By Ashoka, Contributor

Marriage SC Marriage is what it is

Erin Krampetz and Marina Kim co-founded Ashoka U in 2008, and, including their student leadership at Stanford University, they have now worked together for a decade advancing social innovation education. In this conversation, they discuss trends they are seeing in higher education and the role of new models like the Cordes Innovation Awardees. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Facebook Ignores Research, Goes All-In With Targeted Ads

By Chris Neiger, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Facebook is the darling of social media, but it’s been a bit of a disappointment to investors. The company is making big strides with its mobile advertising strategy lately, but Facebook’s ever-increasing targeted ads may not be all they’re cracked up to be.

Like it or not
Pew Research recently reported that 68% of online users don’t like online-targeted ads because they don’t want their browsing history tracked. But at the end of February, Facebook partnered with four data collection companies to gather information on Facebook users’ online habits for targeted ad campaigns. Acxiom , Datalogix, Epsilon, and BlueKai now provide Facebook with users’ browsing history, loyalty card purchases, spending habits — even court records and government documents. Facebook then uses this information to help advertisers target Facebook users that match very specific criteria.

For advertisers, the surface benefit is pretty obvious. Companies and brands can display ads to specific groups of people already interested in their products. The big question: Does target advertising really work?

To click or not to click
At the World Wide Web Conference last year, an employee from Yahoo! and an economics professor from Stanford University presented a study (link opens PDF) on targeted advertisement effectiveness. They found that targeted ads may cause more conversions for less money than a non-targeted ad, but said that conversions on targeted ads don’t paint the entire picture.

Here’s what they wrote in the concluding paragraph (emphasis mine):

Advertisers are seeking more and more to target their ads to the segments most likely to convert as a result of the advertising; however, this strategy may not be cost effective as this segment is likely to convert in the absence of any advertising. Our results indicate that more sophisticated targeting algorithms might not gain, and might even harm, the advertiser as those seeing the ad would convert in the absence of advertising.

The study suggests that if advertisers target those that are likely to convert on a targeted ad, then the advertisers may get the conversations they want, but the ad may have been unnecessary in the first place.

For Facebook advertisers, this information may not be of that much concern, though. Companies need to advertise, and when they spend money for an online campaign, they want to see conversions. If Facebook can provide them with specific user data that brings those conversions, that may be good enough for them.

The smart choice
The fact that 68% of online users don’t like targeted ads isn’t a good statistic for Facebook. But in the end, if advertisers flock to the targeted ads and enough Facebook users respond with clicks, then the new strategy could prove advantageous for Facebook. Online users have learned to tune out most ads and the same may eventually be true to targeted ads.

I’ve experienced the Facebook targeted ads firsthand and I haven’t found them intrusive. Despite some of the research, I think Facebook is …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The era of deep archiving begins

By hnn

As a Dartmouth student in the early 1970s, William McDonough went, somewhat casually, to hear a lecture by a visiting celebrity. Mr. McDonough had little idea beforehand who Buckminster Fuller was, but listening to the designer and futurist had a long-term effect.

Mr. McDonough was late and took one of the last seats left, in the front row. Three hours later, he realized that the rest of the audience was gone but that Mr. Fuller was still talking. “Do you want me to keep going?” Mr. Fuller asked politely but unnecessarily. They ended up taking a walk around campus, Mr. Fuller expostulating all the way.

That evening put Mr. McDonough on the path to becoming a prominent architect, but it exists only in his memory, which used to be where just about everything about our pasts resided. Now Mr. McDonough is in the forefront of efforts to change that, to record instantaneously the major intellectual events in our lives. He will be the first living archive at Stanford University….

Source:
NYT

Source URL:
http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/20/the-era-of-deep-archiving-begins/?src=recg

Date:
3-20-13

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at History News Network – George Mason University

White House Announces New Coordinator for Defense Policy, Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction, and Arms Control

By The White House

Today, National Security Advisor Tom Donilon announced that Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for European Affairs Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall will be moving to a new position on the National Security Staff as the White House Coordinator for Defense Policy, Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction, and Arms Control. She will take up her duties on April 8.

National Security Advisor Donilon said, “As one of the President’s closest advisors for the past four years, Liz’s leadership and advice have been instrumental as we have successfully strengthened our alliances and partnerships across Europe, helped to revitalize NATO, and worked with Europe to advance the President’s global agenda. Liz brings deep expertise and a track record of accomplishment in defense issues and in proliferation prevention. The President will look to her to bring significant energy and capability to his second term as we pursue the ambitious goals he set forth in his Prague speech in 2009 and prepare our military to defend the American people and our allies against the threats we face today and in the future.”

During the Clinton Administration, Dr. Sherwood-Randall served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Russia, Ukraine, and Eurasia, where she played a central role in the denuclearization of Ukraine, Kazakhstan, and Belarus. She has also held positions at Harvard University, Stanford University, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the Brookings Institution, and previously served as the Chief Foreign Affairs and Defense Policy Advisor to Senator Joseph R. Biden, Jr.

…read more
Source: White House Press Office

Vegetarian Protesters Compare Themselves To Oppressed Blacks

By B. Christopher Agee

Martin Luther King Jr. SC Vegetarian protesters compare themselves to oppressed blacks

An ongoing complaint by members of an animal rights organization offers further proof the civil rights struggle of the 1960s has been hopelessly watered down by today’s constantly offended leftists.

A group of disruptive vegetarians associated with Direct Action Everywhere now say backlash against a recent protest is no different than a segregated lunch counter in North Carolina denying service to blacks.

The incident took place at Stanford University and involved nine activists who stood up during the screening of a movie with a favorable message concerning meat.

The protesters later wrote an opinion article published by the school newspaper in which they said they were treated like the black students turned away from the Greensboro, N.C. eatery more than 50 years ago.

“We faced much the same critique,” the article claimed, including being “asked to leave, jeered at and scolded by supporters and critics of our message alike.”

Just a thought – if you’re being scolded by supporters of your cause, maybe you’ve chosen the wrong way to share your message.

The protest included each participant standing up and showing a photograph of his or her pet and linking the animal to the film with statements such as, “She doesn’t deserve to die, and neither did they.”

At least one attendee joined in the nonsense with a much-needed interjection, declaring, “My name is Aspen. I raise pigs. I love bacon.”

When the film’s director suggested toning down the vitriol, one protestor compared a discussion of meat to that of rape or child pornography.

“What’s next?” the individual asked. “Are you going to invite a dog fighter – Michael Vick – to this forum and allow him to talk about how wonderful it is to torture and kill dogs?”

The director noted he had not seen such a display at any prior screening, explaining his parents were in the audience, “and they were kind of shaken by it.”

While there is a case to be made for humane treatment of animals, we already have laws on the books dealing with such behavior.

When a group of morons jumps up to disrupt a film and compare eating meat to violent crimes, they no longer deserve to be treated seriously.

They certainly don’t get to compare themselves to blacks struggling for equal treatment during this nation’s arduous fight for civil rights.

Click here to get B. Christopher Agee’s latest book for less than $5! Like his Facebook page for engaging, relevant conservative content daily.

Vintage software, including games, find a home in archives

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Stanford University have partnered to save for posterity more than 15,000 software programs created in the early days of microcomputing.

IDGNS
The NSRL and Stanford are cataloging vintage software titles.

The 18-month project aims to make these titles, most of which were created between 1975 and 1995, available to researchers, and, eventually, to the general public. (See also “20 Games That Changed Gaming Forever.”)

“We don’t really know what people will need this [old software] for, but we know this is important. This software is who we’ve become,” said Barbara Guttman, computer scientist and director of NIST’s National Software Reference Library (NSRL). “Spreadsheets have changed the way we live.”

In this 18-month project, NSRL will copy and dissect a software library of 15,000 titles from the Stephen M. Cabrinety Collection in the History of Microcomputing, held by the Stanford University Library. Considered to be one of the largest collections of obsolete software, this collection came into Stanford’s possession in 1998 as part of its ongoing effort to preserve digital materials for research purposes.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

Mouse-Human Brain Mashup Makes Mice Smarter, May Help Explain How We Evolved

By The Huffington Post News Editors

By Moheb Costandi

Mice transplanted with a once-discounted class of human brain cells have better memories and learning abilities than normal counterparts, according to a new study. Far from a way to engineer smarter rodents, the work suggests that human brain evolution involved a major upgrade to cells called astrocytes.

Astrocytes are one of several types of glia, the other cells found alongside neurons in the nervous system. Although long thought to merely provide support and nourishment for neurons, it’s now clear that astrocytes are vital for proper brain function. They are produced during development from stem cells called glial progenitors.

In 2009, Steven Goldman of the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York and his colleagues reported that human astrocytes are bigger, and have about 10 times as many fingerlike projections that contact other brain cells and blood vessels, than those of mice. To further investigate these differences, they have more recently grafted fluorescently labeled human glial progenitors into the brains of newborn mice and examined the animals when they reached adulthood.

Most of the grafted cells remained as progenitors, but some matured into typical human-looking astrocytes. They connected to their mouse counterparts to form astrocyte networks that transmitted electrical signals. Furthermore, they propagated internal signals about three times faster than the mouse astrocytes and improved the strengthening of connections between neurons in the hippocampus, a process thought to be critical for learning and memory.

These human astrocytes apparently did so, the scientists suggest, by secreting a protein called tumor necrosis factor-α, which mouse astrocytes produce at much lower levels. This increased the number of receptors for the neurotransmitter glutamate in the membranes of mouse neurons, making the signaling between them far more efficient than mouse astrocytes alone.

Those differences translated into improvements on behavioral tests. Mice with human astrocytes performed better on memory experiments than those that had received mouse cell grafts, the team reports today in Cell Stem Cell. The human astrocyte-endowed rodents learned to fear a particular sound or part of their environment after associating them just once with an electric shock. This learning persisted for 3 days, during which time typical mice did not learn at all, despite being treated in exactly the same way. The mice with transplanted human cells also learned to find their way through a maze in about half the time and were better able to recognize familiar objects in new locations.

The results support the view that human brain evolution involved cellular specializations, including the elaboration of astrocyte structure and a boost in their ability to regulate communication between neurons at synapses, the researchers say.

These are “very interesting findings [that] strongly suggest that human astrocytes have an enhanced ability to control synapses,” says neurobiologist Ben Barres of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. But he adds that the study does not show that human astrocytes are genetically normal when engrafted into …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post