Archive
2009 Yearly archive

HOWTO: Download and Install Paid Apps on Canadian Android Market

Unfortunately, Canadians carrying Android phones don’t have access to paid apps on the Android Market as it is currently open for only the US and UK. This was a huge problem for me since I’m absolutely terrible with directions – I needed a GPS-software on my HTC Hero!
The current “best” GPS-app is the Copilot by ALK Technologies, and sadly I couldn’t pay and download their application. Searching on the Android Market didn’t work. Direct URL via barcode scanning didn’t work. Nothing did! Or more correctly put: there was no simple way of doing it.
In order to access paid applications with a non-US/UK Android you have to do the following:
1. Root your phone
2. Install Connectbot (only if you have an HTC Hero)
3. Install MarketEnabler
Sounds simple right? Not really. Be prepared to set aside an hour or so (it took me nearly 3 hours with lots of Googling. Hopefully this will help you shave off some time).
Are you in your comfy clothes yet? Let’s begin!
1. Root your phone
This will take up most of your time. It will take up even more time if your phone has Firmware 2.73.x.x or above, since you’ll have to downgrade your phone first. There’s currently no way to root your phone from more updated phones.
Since the steps are a bit complicated and long, I won’t paraphrase or try to simplify/clarify the instructions that I’ve found. Instead, I’ll just link them.
1. You’ll need to set up ADB/USB Drivers for Android  Devices so your computer can properly communicate with your phone.
2. Downgrade Your HTC Hero So It Can Be Rooted or if you have another Android-enabled device that is newer.
3. Root your HTC Hero or if you have a G1 or Mytouch.
4. Pick and install a custom (rooted) ROM for your device. For my HTC Hero, I used MoDaCo’s Custom Hero ROM. To get this to work with other devices, you’ll have to find custom (rooted) ROM’s specific to your device. Custom ROM’s also provide better stability and speed so you get the double benefit! This step is mandatory in order to root your Android.
2. Install Connectbot (only if you have an HTC Hero)
Phew. Now, the easy stuff. Remember to skip this step if you don’t have an HTC Hero, since there’s a bug in MarketEnabler which prevents it to work with HTC Hero.
1. Download Connectbot here.
2. Open Connectbot and hit ‘Local’ when prompted for connection location.
3. Enter ‘su’ to get Super User permissions and type ‘rm -rf /data/data/com.android.vending/cache/*’.
4. Reboot, and move on to the last step!
3. Install MarketEnabler
Download MarketEnabler and select T-mobile to emulate your location to the US. Open up ‘Market’ and enjoy!
- Peter Kao

Unfortunately, Canadians carrying Android phones don’t have access to paid apps on the Android Market as it is currently open for only the US and UK. This was a huge problem for me since I’m absolutely terrible with directions – I needed a GPS-software on my HTC Hero!

The current “best” GPS-app is the Copilot by ALK Technologies, and sadly I couldn’t pay and download their application. Searching on the Android Market didn’t work. Direct URL via barcode scanning didn’t work. Nothing did! Or more correctly put: there was no simple way of doing it. In order to access paid applications with non-US/UK Android mobile phones you have to do the following:

1. Root your phone

2. Install Connectbot (only if you have an HTC Hero)

3. Install MarketEnabler

Sounds simple right? Not really. Be prepared to set aside an hour or so (it took me nearly 3 hours with lots of Googling. Hopefully this will help you shave off some time).

Are you in your comfy clothes yet? Let’s begin!

1. Root your phone

This will take up most of your time. It will take up even more time if your phone has Firmware 2.73.x.x or above, since you’ll have to downgrade your phone first. There’s currently no way to root your phone from more updated firmware.

Since the steps are a bit complicated and long, I won’t paraphrase or try to simplify/clarify the instructions that I’ve found. Instead, I’ll just link to them.

1. You’ll need to set up ADB/USB Drivers for Android  Devices so your computer can properly communicate with your phone.

2. Downgrade Your HTC Hero So It Can Be Rooted or if you have another Android-enabled device that is newer.

3. Root your HTC Hero or if you have a G1 or Mytouch.

4. Pick and install a custom (rooted) ROM for your device. For my HTC Hero, I used MoDaCo’s Custom Hero ROM. To get this to work with other devices, you’ll have to find custom (rooted) ROM’s specific to your device. Custom ROM’s also provide better stability and speed so you get the double benefit! This step is mandatory in order to root your Android.

2. Install Connectbot (only if you have an HTC Hero)

Phew. Now, the easy stuff. Remember to skip this step if you don’t have an HTC Hero, since there’s a bug in MarketEnabler which prevents it to work with HTC Hero.

1. Download Connectbot here.

2. Open Connectbot and hit ‘Local‘ when prompted for connection location.

3. Enter ‘su‘ to get Super User permissions and type ‘rm -rf /data/data/com.android.vending/cache/*‘.

4. Reboot, and move on to the last step!

3. Install MarketEnabler

Download MarketEnabler and select T-mobile to emulate your location to the US. Open up ‘Market’ and enjoy!

- Peter Kao

Comment

Twitter for Entrepreneurs

Here’s another website that uses the Twitter model: it’s called Sprouter - just launched this week!

Check out their video tour.


I don’t use Twitter anymore, but I’m enjoying this neat little startup though. With Twitter, there is too much noise from too broad of  a network. All I see when I log in to my Twitter account are short, barely-descriptive statuses written by bored people. Too often I see the extended version of these statuses on Facebook, so why even bother logging in at all? (More beef on Twitter later in my upcoming blog post)

I think Sprouter (and also Yammer) did exactly what Twitter needed to do, but didn’t: divide and conquer. There is a need for micro-blogging, but it is important for users to sift through the sea of statuses. Twitter could have done that by implementing filters to segment different interest groups, but they decided to invest in the unfamiliar realm of real-time search instead. This is great, but it requires active involvement – the act of ‘searching’ – too bad people are lazy online!

In the near future, there will be more and more startups applying the micro-blogging concept (or Twitter model). And Twitter will be a dead bird – a martyr for micro-blogging – the Youtube comments of the internet.

You can follow me on Sprouter here: http://www.sprouter.com/peterkao

Peter Kao

Comment

Entrepreneur Week – Nov. 16-22, 2009

Another year, another Entrepreneur Week. And once again, I’m unable to attend :( but you can!

If you are in Waterloo, Canada (click for Google Maps location) or near it, you can participate in this year’s exciting “innovation festival.”

Here’s some more information (also available on their website):

“Entrepreneurs! start your engines: Entrepreneur Week, North America’s largest annual innovation festival dedicated to the entrepreneurial spirit, will be held in Waterloo November 16-22 and it promises to be another high-octane event to inspire innovation.

Entrepreneur Week is an invigorating week-long festival of events dedicated to celebrating the significant contributions of our greatest community asset – our entrepreneurs!

Waterloo Region is the best place in the world to do a tech startup. Just ask the 200 tech startups doing their thing here. And Entrepreneur Week is a festival unlike any other on the planet. Entrepreneur Week connects entrepreneurs, financiers, students, youth, mentors and the services that support them to success.

Entrepreneur Week 2009 will feature:

Startup Stories: Intimate speaking engagements profiling successful techy entrepreneur founders, including Chris Hughes, co-Founder, Facebook, Tim Bray, Father of XML and Internet Search, Razor Suleman, Founder and CEO, I Love Rewards Jim Estill, the CEO Blogger, Ali Asaria, founder of Well.ca, and more!

The Waterloo Region Entrepreneur Hall of Fame Gala: A black tie formal gala event, celebrating local and international entrepreneurs.  Inductions are made into The Waterloo Way Hall of Fame.

The Leading Edge Youth Entrepreneurship Conference: This one is for the highschool students who dream of making it big with their own venture. A full day workshop and seminar to inspire young entrepreneurs.

StartupCamp Waterloo: the un-conference. An ad-hoc gathering born from the desire for people to share and learn in an open environment. It is an intense event with discussions, demos, and interaction from attendees.

Celebrating Entrepreneur Week with Andy Macaulay, President and CEO, ZiG, at the Schlegel Centre for Entrepreneurship, Wilfrid Laurier University as part of their Innovation and Entrepreneurship Speaker Series.

The return of the Founders and Funders Dinner. Founders & Funders is a social event aimed at bringing together the people that start the next big successful company with the people that fund these companiesin their earliest stages. This ain’t a pitch fest.  It is an opportunity for entrepreneurs to meet funders, and each other.  By invitation only.

Strategic Partnering Day: Communitech connects budding entrepreneurs with some big guns in the Tech Industry (including RIM, Google, Intel, Microsoft, Celestica, Open Text, Sybase, Agfa HealthCare, Rogers and ON Semiconductor. Proposals to participate welcome. Now in its fifth year, Entrepreneur Week promises to be another huge success in sparking entrepreneurial innovation in the Waterloo Region. Save the date – and watch for more details coming soon.”

Peter Kao

Comment

Halfbakery.com – A Place for Wild Business Ideas

There are great business ideas, and then there are half-baked ideas. This is where halfbakery.com comes into play. It’s a website that is solely dedicated to ridiculous, improbable, and naturally – hilarious business ideas.

To give you a sense of what the website is like (because, you know, visiting a link yourself is hard) take a look at this invention, entitled, evil laugh activated hand dryer.It works as follows: “instead of a button or infrared sensor, people sometimes rub their hands together in the airstream, activate this hand dryer by laughing evilly.” Look! There are even pretty pictures,

Basic model

Activate!

Now, this is my kind of humour!

To give the website some credit though, there are some serious ideas. For example, the Panic PIN idea, which is ranked as the top idea on the website, works by “entering [an] alternate ATM PIN number [to summon] help.” The idea is that if you are forced to withdraw cash, you can alert the police without the robber knowing.

There are great business ideas, and then there are half-baked ideas. This is where halfbakery comes into play. It’s a website that’s solely dedicated to ridiculous, improbable,…[add more], and naturally, hilarious business ideas.
Now this is my kind of humour!

Look around, you might even find a solid business idea to stea- err, I mean, examine.

Peter Kao

Comment

eCornell Entrepreneur Online Video Contest

Here’s a broadcast for all you fire-breathing entrepreneurs. I received an email from a representative for Cornell University regarding their upcoming online video contest.

Details for the contest:

“Now through November 30, eCornell is inviting entrepreneurs who are developing (or have already developed) a new product or service to submit a 30- to 60-second video that explains or demonstrates their process for understanding what customers want and satisfying their needs. The first-place winner will receive a full scholarship (a $3,500 value) for Cornell’s newest online certificate program, A Systems Approach to Product and Service Design, which arms entrepreneurs with a unique eight-step process for effective product development. Second- and third-place winners will have the opportunity to enroll in two eCornell product design courses each, free of charge ($1,250 value per course). Winners will be selected based on quality of response, creativity, and methodology, and will be announced on December 14, 2009.

This is a great opportunity for your readers to connect with the brightest minds in the startup community, generate brand awareness for their respective organizations, and claim their FREE opportunity to win a full scholarship to one of the top universities in the nation. Additional information about the contest can be found at http://www.ecornell.com/l-entrepreneur-video-contest/. “

Go get them, dragons!

Peter Kao

Comment

HOWTO: Read Online Without Killing Your Eyes

I spend a lot of my time reading online articles. And if you’re like me, your eyes start to get dry and light-sensitive (to the monitor) after a few hours of reading.

To ease the pain, I’ve found two Firefox add-ons that help:

- Greasemonkey + Tired Eyes script (only works with Greasemonkey)

- NoSquint

Now, before you go ahead and download/install the first app, I’ve prepared my own version of the Tired Eyes script – available for download here. I will explain the differences later below.

Greasemonkey is an add-on that changes how a website looks by running user-generated javascript code. One of the script that I use is the Tired Eyes script which changes the text and background colors of any website. I’ve found that the color combination used for the script isn’t ideal for me, so I’ve played around with the colors a bit. The end result is this:

see the difference!

Although the top image is better to read in this example (partially due to pixelation), after a few hours the bright-white background feels like a flashlight in your eyes. The only way to really feel the difference is to try out the script and then turn it off by hitting the assigned (changeable) F2 hot-key. You will soon realize how bright your monitor really is, and how much light is shine through your eyes. No wonder our eyes feel tired sometimes! Really, try it out yourself!  Download Greasemonkey + My ‘Darker’ version of the Tired Eyes script.

The second add-on, NoSquint, remembers the zoom level you’ve set on any website. For example, I always increase the font size of Wired.com articles just because I find their font size a bit too small. This add-on remembers how much I’ve zoomed, and displays the website at the last zoomed level – saving me from having to zoom-in after every visit.

Hope this helps! Protect your eyes, and happy reading :)

Edit: You can also use a bookmarklet called Readability if you are not using Firefox. It strips a webpage of annoyances and leaves only the necessary text and pictures. Thanks Rajesh for the mention!

Peter Kao

Comment

My Motto

It’s hard to truly understand someone, especially with all the noises in our own lives that drain our time and patience. If entrepreneurs have their one-liner pitch for their business idea, then why shouldn’t each of us have our own pitches? Something that describes ourselves - our motivations, intentions and our general way of life.

This is what we call a motto. Italian for pledge, and motti when plural,” as says so on Wikipedia.

I’m pretty sure I derived parts of my motto from somewhere else, although I don’t remember it now. But this motto has been on the back of my mind for a while now, and it guides everything I do with an invisible hand. It goes as follows,

“Understand the past, plan for the future, and just survive in the present.”

The reason for the beginning and middle part is obvious. I won’t bore you by explaining it. The main idea is that the present as we perceive it really isn’t the present. There is a time lapse of when things are happening in reality and when we perceive reality. Putting science aside, the present happens too quickly for us to make good conscientious decisions all of the time.

In other words, don’t bet on making the right decision when you are suddenly given the opportunity, and withstand any troubles you face knowing that you have a solid plan, built on experience and knowledge. Survive the hurdles, and you will continue on your plan – better than what you were before.

Peter Kao

Comment

2009 Canadian Telecom Summit .iso File for Download

I received a nice little package from (surprisingly) the Canadian Telecom Summit I attended a few months ago. The package was in my mail after about 1 month the conference ended, which is pretty good considering the have hundreds of these DVD’s and packages to send out (for free!).

I’ve created an .iso file for those interested, but was unable to attend the conference. There shouldn’t be an issue with duplicating the DVD for sharing, since I don’t see any notices saying not to.

Anyways, here it is: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=ENCQRQBO

- Peter Kao

Comment

Ontario Enhances Support For Innovative Companies

NEWS

Ontario’s Emerging Technologies Fund is open for business.

The $250-million fund will co-invest – along with qualified venture capital funds and other private investors – directly into companies in high-growth sectors that are aligned with Ontario’s Innovation Agenda:

Clean technology
Life sciences and advanced health technology
Digital media and information and communications technology.
The fund is designed to help innovative technology companies find the capital they need to grow in Ontario. It was announced by the province in March in response to the current economic conditions and the reduction in investment capital available to emerging and high-growth companies.

Guidelines for investment are now available online at: www.ontario.ca/ocgc.

QUOTES

“The Emerging Technologies Fund is one more step the McGuinty government is taking to help ensure that innovative people and companies have access to the capital they need to continue growing their business and creating jobs in Ontario.”
- Minister of Research and Innovation, John Milloy

QUICK FACTS

Ontario’s Emerging Technologies Fund will address a lack of venture capital activity by co-investing with qualified investors directly into high-growth technology companies.
Eligible companies must have a significant corporate footprint in Ontario.
This initiative complements the $205-million Ontario Venture Capital Fund, a partnership between Ontario and leading corporate and institutional investors that is investing in venture capital and growth equity funds that support innovative, high-growth companies.
LEARN MORE

The Ontario Emerging Technologies Fund

Ontario’s Innovation Agenda

Canada’s Venture Capital and Private Equity Association – first quarter venture capital results

Comment

Notes from The 2009 Canadian Telecom Summit

I was extremely excited when Sean Van Koughnett, director of Velocity, selected me as one of the 7 Velocity residents (and past residents) to attend the 3-day Canadian Telecom Summit.

The conference has a whopping $2,250 ticket price, so I was extremely pleased that we only had to pay $100 dollars + hotel fees. Thank you Sean for giving us the rare opportunity to attend such a high caliber conference!

Last year, the conference attracted the likes of the President & CEO of Ericsson Canada, President & CEO of Rogers Communications and even the University of Waterloo president, David Johnston himself! This year was equally as impressive! Check out the line of speakers:

During the conference, I took some notes on my HTC Tilt (♥ the keyboard). Here they are for your viewing pleasure (note that the notes were quickly taken):

Palm Pre Demo:

Really nice UI, but what do productivity users, such as all business users think of it?

They have an IM app that links all messaging protocols together, but why don’t they just thread all of them together? If you’re talking to someone using MSN on your mobile and the other side disconnects. Why not continue the conversation using SMS?

CRTC Presentation:

Began presentation with the important topic of net neutrality, throttling and network shaping.

CRTC agress with Bell’s position on the need for traffic throttling to preserve the integrity of their service, but realizes afterwards that it is a bigger issue than they had previously realized. No shit. If they’d like to “preserve the integrity of their service” they should stop it with the false advertising (ahem, ‘unlimited downloading’?).

CRTC sees a need to increase Canadian content on the web. Subsidy scheme beign considered, but will discuss in the near future. Political answer for a political issue. How quaint :)

“The web revolution right now will influence our society as much as it did with the industrial revolution.” Cool – if our school systems were built on the basis of industrial design (students students go in, smarter students come out) then the web revolution will teach society that a linear learning path is not the ideal way for human beings to learn. I want that to happen right now! I see so many grade ‘A’ students who lack important characteristics – such as open-mindedness/free-thinking.

MTS Allstream Presentation:

“Businesses with an increase broadband capability also enjoy an increase in growth and overall employee satisfaction.” I wonder what these employees do with their faster internet ;)

What Customers Want:
- Big companies to feel smaller, more nimble.

- Small companies to feel bigger, have the capability of large firms

Industry challenges – Canada lagging in telecom investment – outdated competitive framework. How honest, and that coming from a service provider too!

Competition must be placed on networks, not between them.

Customers tend to buy services as a package from providers. If you are a service provider and you don’t offer television then you are losing on potential profit!

CWTA Presentation:

16 to 21 percent increase in mobile web usages. Random business idea: SMS usage is still growing rapidly. How do you use SMS to make money? An email to SMS service?

Internet drives innovation wherever it is embraced – so young users dictate how the web will be developed. More reasons to start a web-based company.

CBC Presentation:

Very very surprising presentation. Talks about the fact that CBC has always been at the forefront of using innovative mediums for distributing media. First to use Twitter, first to provide full-streaming, first to use podcasts in Canada.

Interesting fact: Streaming video does not cannibalize television viewership for Olympics 2008. Not a solid fact to prove streaming video doesn’t actually cannibalize television viewerships in general. Older age groups watch the Olympics, those who would watch it would watch it in any medium. Those who normally wouldn’t watch it on TV might watch it on the web due to convenience.

Awesomeness Panel Discussion:

You know something is awesome if it’s named so. This discussion was absolutely amazing. It was the most memorable discussion I’ve ever seen. It involved 4 top lawyers in the country that represent some of Canada’s biggest companies. These are the titans, and man were they fierce. Insults were thrown around, not of the personal kind but well-formulated low-blows relating to their positions on the market (ownerships of varying companies) and ‘hidden’ self-interests that became not so hidden (anymore). As intense as it was, everyone (including the panel themselves) found it hilarious. Well, except for that one guy that was steaming at the end.

Government is not stimulating digital but rather promoting the analog industry. Taxes service providers and puts the money earned into the failing auto industry. This one made me laugh and then made me think hard. Then, laughed again. Talk about over-simplification.

So why should service providers open access to smaller players? We’re the ones spending billions in developing infrastructure.

Government data involing internet speeds in Canada and how it’s so low is garbage. It doesn’t take into account of Shaw’s (and other’s) latest offerings, such as 50 – 100 mbps connections.

We can create a pipe dedicated to P2P for our customers, but that’s not what our customers want. I BEG TO DIFFER! Obviously, Rogers publishing subdisiary doesn’t enjoy people sharing their content with each other.

Internet is successful today because it is built and mainted by engineers. If we regulate service providers, then all will fail.

Note to self: Look into Dec 8 CRTC Forced Access – many service providers want this removed.

75% of revenues are from wireless services, not wireline.

The government is forcing service providers to make a decision through regulatory means on whether or not to build infrastructure in small towns. Do we really need to go? Give us the freedom to decide. It’s healthy! – No way. Corporations always follow the money. There is little to be made in small towns. Government should step in to avoid abandoning small towns and force them to live in the past.

Clear to me that titan telco’s do not believe int he role of the government. Why should they? They are self sufficient and sustainable! Very dangerous as corporations get bigger and bigger.

Cisco Presentation:

“Transformation of service providers to experience providers.”

Cisco trying to have the first mover advantage.

Lots and lots of mention on the ‘Connected Life’. First phase involves the home (information), followed by the media enabled home (entertainment), then visual networking (more effective communication). Isn’t this what Microsoft is doing with MediaCenter?

If Web 2.0 could be summarized as interaction then web 3.0 would be about recommendations and customization. Aren’t we there already? I really wish people would stop versioning the web. There are no clear definitions of web 1.0, web 2.0 and so on. If you’re going to version the web, at least set a standard for definition. Isn’t web 3.0 about the marriage between hardware and the internet?

CTV Presentation:

Mostly on the Winder Olympics.

CTV will be offering 14 different camera views for viewers to choose from. Hooray for customization!

Will be similar to the Obama inaugauration in that it will have live chat, Facebook connectivity, use of Twitter etc…

Twitter for athletes = not a good idea when they are in the midst of their sport. Actually, illegal (bylaw) for an athlete to be acting as a journalist. So, when XXX the skier broker his legs and blogged about it, he got into trouble and was almost suspended.

Broadcasters to aggregrate athletes’ websites, accounts (Twitter, Facebook) etc..

Drop in viewership in 1996 because kids used to watch the Olympics with their parents.

Talks of Twitter makes me realize it’s purpose on the web. Because it is still alive, there must be an underlying reason. More about that in the next blog post entitled, “Facebook’s Twin Brother – Maybe Twitter Isn’t Dead.”

Net Neutrality Panel Discussion:

Man was this boring. Nothing like the panel discussion above. Everyone all agree that DPI is required and traffic shaping is required.

CEO of Sandvine hints that in the future, users may be able to decide which app gets more priority over bandwidth.

Mike Lee is a bit of a jerk. (Chief Strategy Officer – Rogers Communications)

Comverse:

Interesting how everyone at this conference talks about their strategies on selling to the @ Generation which is supposedly us. They should turn around :)

She is clearly very nervous! Poor woman.

“Crisis is a terrible thing to waste”

Haha, quote of the day: “Back in the days, people used to mate to communicate…I meant meet…Back in the days people used to only MEET to communicate”

Really truthful slide deck picture, where there’s this girl smiling and hugging a wall of information (represented by 0 and 1′s). The wall is also hugging the girl and has a human form (kind of like wrapping a sheet over someone’s face) – shows our emotional attachment to the web.

People are worn out…too much ads and too much data, which causes ad blindness. That’s why relevance is the key to marketers. Contextual displays significantly reduces information overload.

People do not take BS on their mobile as opposed to desktops and laptops - my rationale: smaller screen, limit of processing resources and the personal nature of mobile will put more emphasis on UI for all existing computer/web apps even if they aren’t exclusively for mobile consumption.

Rogers Presentation:

The Senior VP of Business Markets presented. He was older than others but I think he was one of the better presenters. The other presenters were well-composed, but he was absolutely cool and calm. No ‘uh’ or ‘um’ or any awkward pauses at all. His presentation was absolutely flawless, and yet it didn’t appear rehearsed.

“If you’re ever in a meeting with a bunch of lawyers and they won’t shut up. Just mention the term ‘conscientious parallelism’ “

Huawei Dinner:

William Gibson – a re-known Canadian sci-fi writer that predicted the internet and other pervasive technologies existing today.

Operators own user’s granular location, and can pinpoint location and time to deliver contextual content. It’s not donen right now, but Huawei urges this to happen to bring the culture of the web to mobile and really bring out the full potential of mobiles.

Last Day Panel Discussion:

Canada has the highest penetration rate of broadband, followed closely by the US.

There are mostly two models: subscription or ad driven.

Oirtability of the TV will be the future – Microsoft’s Mediaroom will provide the ‘connected TV experience’. There are already over 3 million subscribers for Mediaroom, which I think is still in beta mode for Canadians – as always.

Windows 7 will act as the glue to the experiences possible for all the devices in a home.

Future will involve:

- bringing the web culture to mobile

- ex. When calling someone the operator will announce the receiver of the call’s status, such as whether he/she is driving right now, and gives the option to leave a voicemail or forward the call.

Summary and Lessons Learned

- The leaders of Canada’s biggest organizations have a few things in common: They are as bold as they are aggressive. And though aggressive, they are very well-composed and speaks in a manner that draws you in. It’s clear that these people aren’t super-heroes with some divine given power. They are people who understand uncertainty but does not act because of potential risks, but rather act on potential benefits and awards.

- The content presented at the conference are things that I would have (or in most cases, already have read about) on the web. However, it was am incredible learning experience just to observe how world leader’s interact with each other. Although, it was awkward speaking with someone twice your age who’s there for different reasons than you are, the panel discussion involving the lawyers was well worth the costs of the conference.

- I did notice that all the speakers talked about the future and how it might look like. However, there was little discussion on how to reach there, or what kind of infrastructure is required. I guess the purpose of these summits is for each company to show off their own vision of the future, similar to that of concept car shows. Whatever is in the works is top secret.

09_canadian_telecom_summit_pic

- Peter Kao

Comment

New Reality Show Looking for Teen Business Guru’s to Star in New Show

I received an email from a Los Angeles producer about a new reality show they are filming. The producer has developed such shows as Supernanny, Real Housewives of New York and It’s Me Or The Dog for the ABC network.

If you are under the age of 18, you should apply right now!

Check out the PR release below:

[start]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 6/9/2009

Contact: Brian Robles – TV Development : 323/904-4680 brobles@shedmediaus.com

PRODUCER’S OF ABC’S SUPERNANNY ARE SEARCHING ACROSS AMERICA FOR TEEN BUSINESS GURU’S TO STAR IN NEW REALITY SHOW:
Those under 18 are encouraged to apply immediately

Los Angeles, CA – The producers of ABC’s popular parenting series SUPERNANNY are searching for kids UNDER 18 years old that have their own business or help run a family business to star in a new network show!

Producers want kids who run various types of businesses and have become financially successful. Do you consider yourself a mogul in the making? Do you know someone who is a business expert and is only a teen? If so then we want to hear from you!

Those interested may apply by e-mailing brobles@shedmediaus.com for an application. Please include a short note about your business success and why you are perfect to star in your own show.

The producers of this show are based in Los Angeles and also have offices in London and Brighton. The production company is one of the leading independent production companies of high quality un-scripted television programming in the United States and abroad. The international phenomenon, SUPERNANNY, launched the company in the United States where they are building an innovative reputation for creating transformational, critically acclaimed reality based documentary style television.

[end]

- Peter Kao

Comment

My Workterm at Microsoft and What I have Discovered About It’s Culture

Working at Microsoft Canada in Mississauga last work-term has taught me many lessons. Lessons that weren’t directly applicable to my job title at the time, but lessons on where I want to be in terms of my career and what I want to do. Also, my work-term showed me just how much I hate the corporate culture – the cubicle job, the many politics, the fake smiles on people’s faces and so much more. It really got to me midway through.

Now, instead of continuing on with my complaints (there are many) there are some good aspects to working at a big company, especially for a marketing position. For one, the larger the company, the bigger their spending on advertising. So, as someone interested in getting his foot in the door with marketing Microsoft was an ideal place for me. Or so I thought…

The thing with big corporations is that their culture has matured to the point of saturation. At some point in time, Microsoft’s culture became a staple. If you didn’t think like them, you weren’t hired or kept for long. A company’s culture is extremely important and Microsoft failed to create a sustainable culture.

Microsoft’s culture is pretty obvious. One can smell it in the air upon setting foot in their premises. Many programmers know it, and try to avoid it – bashing Microsoft’s brand in the progress. What is Microsoft’s culture? I’ll put it in 2 short sentences: Microsoft’s culture is aggressively business-oriented. It is dominated by old-fashioned behaviour along the very tall hierarchy chain. 

Microsoft’s culture is aggressively business-oriented.

Microsoft, a software development company (now branched into hardware development, as well), has non-technical staff in all positions. At Microsoft Canada, I would say most employees were non-technical. I don’t expect the marketing division to have programmers, but  they should at least hire people who understand where technology is heading and the current internet phenomenon. So many project managers didn’t understand what Twitter is, let alone how to use it. There were even senior staff who don’t know how to copy and paste, resulting in tons of wasted time just re-typing everything.

It is dominated by old-fashioned behaviour along the very tall hierarchy chain.

I found this incredibly interesting. A few weeks into my work-term, I was happy to hear that Microsoft had recently replaced its staff with younger employees. I was expecting the workplace to be buzzing. Instead, it was stiffling. Senior staff did all of the talking and decision-making when it was clear that they weren’t the experts. I felt this first-hand. In one of my team’s monthly meetings, the higher-ups were discussing Microsoft and Google’s position on the market. I had a few inputs on this since I update myself daily with both companies, and plus I follow tech-internet news. I decided to send an email to the entire team, including the director of my work division to discuss an article I had found online. It was entirely appropriate since a few days before the team was scratching their heads on how to proceed. I received no replies back. It was after my work-term ended that I had found out the higher-management found my email to be (and I quote): “Inappropriately written for communicating with senior staff.” I believe I’m pretty good at writing emails. In fact, I’ve received several compliments before. The issue with my email wasn’t that it sounded “rude” but rather it was coming from a lowly co-op student.

Another fascinating event was when I had written a similar email (but of a different topic) regarding one of the emails another director had written. I was respectively opposing her point by writing to other Microsoft co-ops to initiate a discussion. Instead of a discussion, one of the co-ops told me that the director was way up there and that I shouldn’t be questionning her decisions. I should accept that she knows best and leave it as that. There was so much backlash that I just had to continue the debate. It was too interesting to just let it die off. It was clear to me that these students would be hired as full-time employees at Microsoft and continue the downward spiral of the company. They understood so little about their industry, yet they will dedicate years of their lives to it. Instead of spending time to learn more, they reject any ideas except those proposed by their immediate bosses. This was a trend with full-time’s as well.

Man, I can keep going on and on but I’m just going to cut it short. Microsoft is a dinosaur kind of a company: Ancient, big and slow.

Does the pride of a successful company always take over it’s culture? Is this the precursor to a lack of innovation that so many big firms face? As always, let me know what you think.

To cap it off, this is a print-out I scanned:

But Microsoft employees DO use Google Maps!

I had printed this off and someone at the printer picked it up and wrote a note. Funny thing is…everyone at Microsoft uses Google, they just don’t admit it infront of their bosses.

- Peter Kao

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