Guess Who’s Courting Seagate

27 08 2007

When was the last time you saw a story about disk drives on the cover of The New York Times? I didn’t check the archives, but I’d bet….never.

As a young reporter for Computer Systems News two decades ago I trolled the watering holes and industrial parks of Silicon Valley in search of stories about disk drive companies. I was fortunate enough to establish great, long-time relationships with the founders and senior executives of virtually each and every disk drive vendor — which back in the 1980s was about 50 companies. None of those companies was as much fun to cover as the market leader, Seagate Technologies. The combination of their market leadership, their high-visibility founders (Al Shugart, Finis Conner, Doug Mahon and Tom Mitchell) and the hyper-valuated public stock market for storage companies made it a treasure trove for a reporter. Read the rest of this entry »





Will SUNW=JAVA?

24 08 2007

Seems like every high-tech company now has “branding police.” You know, the often self-appointed individuals who zealously and insanely guard what they consider to be their company’s brand identity. Well, I wonder what the branding police at Sun Microsystems think about the company’s latest move.

TechIQ reports that Sun is officially changing its stock symbol from the long-time SUNW to JAVA. Presumably, this should be obvious to all the Valley’s cognoscenti, since Java (not workstations) has been the center of Sun’s universe (wait, isn’t the sun the center of our universe? Never mind.) for nearly a decade. Read the rest of this entry »





City CIOs Galore at MuniWireless07:Silicon Valley

23 08 2007

Posted by Mike Perkowski

It’s not easy being a big-city CIO. You’ve got to keep the network available 24/7, ensure absolute security for government records and employee files, and deal with the political whims of elected officials. Now, add onto that the task of rolling out citywide wireless networks; city CIOs today have to be one part technologist, one part politician and one part miracle worker. (All at a civil service salary, of course.)

But at our upcoming MuniWireless07:Silicon Valley industry conference on Oct. 21-23, literally dozens of city CIOs will join several hundred colleagues from all parts of the municipal wireless market ecosystem to discuss best practices in planning, deploying and operating wireless networks. Among our featured city CIO speakers will be Chris Vein of San Francisco, Hardik Bhatt of Chicago, Terry Phillis of Philadelphia and Bill Oates of Boston, to name just a few. (Important Update as of August 24: Add the name of Randi Levin, CIO for Los Angeles, to this impressive list.)

We’ll also give the audience a status report on what is arguably the highest-profile and most ambitious regional wireless initiative in the US: Wireless Silicon Valley. With a coalition of more than 50 Silicon Valley-area cities and counties, Wireless Silicon Valley could set a new standard for how municipalities collaborate on strategic technology initiatives. (“Municipalities” and “collaboration” usually aren’t found together in the same sentences, but you’ll hear plenty about it at our conference. Check out the program and register now for discounted pricing.