Mitch Kapor [1950-0] American Rank: 102 Businessman
Computers, Technology, Attitude, Cool, Design, Environmental, Intelligence, Medical, Sad
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Lotus's efforts around the Mac were pathetically unsuccessful, which is sad. | Sad | 101If information wants to be free, then that's true everywhere, not just in information technology. | Technology | 102It's illegitimate to talk about a post-scarcity Utopia without talking about questions of distribution. There have always been these Utopian predictions - 'electricity too cheap to meter' was the atomic promise of the 1950s. | | 103Wikipedia has a way of compiling compendiums of information on subjects. | | 104Open source can propagate to fill all the nooks and crannies that people want it to fill. | | 105The critical thing in developing software is not the program, it's the design. It is translating understanding of user needs into something that can be realized as a computer program. | Design | 106Before I started a company, I was an employee with a bad attitude. I was always felt like, bosses are stupid, and people weren't well treated. | Attitude | 107It became clear to me by 1984 that Microsoft was likely going to be the big winner in the PC software apps and operating system category, partly because of the dynamics of owning and controlling the operating system: that gave you enormous power, and I came to see Bill Gates was fierce competitor. | | 108Oakland's time is coming. In fact, Oakland's time is already here. Tech is coming to Oakland, and it's terribly exciting. | | 109There are a lot of similarities between cyberspace and the frontier. It's pretty raw and primitive. I mean, you have to churn your own butter in cyberspace. You can't go down to the 7-Eleven and buy a stick of butter because it's not that well developed. | | 110The accomplishment of open source is that it is the back end of the web, the invisible part, the part that you don't see as a user. | | 111I've been around long enough to know that empires come and empires go, and I can't tell how long the Google empire is going to last - but I'm pretty convinced that the answer is less than forever. | | 112The more you eliminate the inefficient use of information, the better it is for productivity. | | 113I originally invested in Dropcam because I foresaw what the company and their products could do for consumers and the industry. I've been deeply impressed with what they've done in such little time, and I'm confident that they'll continue to exceed my expectations. | | 114In an economy where more and more value is in information - is in the bits, not the atoms, where bits can be copied essentially for free - any time you have that situation, economic schemes that rely on existing models of intellectual property laws for protection are going to do less and less well. | | 115Life in cyberspace seems to be shaping up exactly like Thomas Jefferson would have wanted: founded on the primacy of individual liberty and a commitment to pluralism, diversity, and community. | | 116Technology advances at exponential rates, and human institutions and societies do not. They adapt at much slower rates. Those gaps get wider and wider. | Technology | 117We've already gotten a significant grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, and a university consortium. I think the whole sector of Foundations, potentially with government support, is promising - more than promising, I think, it's substantial. | | 118That's why it has to be a nonprofit, because a nonprofit is required to take monies it receives and use them for the purposes for which it's chartered by the government. It can't be pocketed. | | 119The main languages out of which web applications are built - whether it's Perl or Python or PHP or any of the other languages - those are all open source languages. So the infrastructure of the web is open source... the web as we know it is completely dependent on open source. | | 120Physicians today, as human beings, are not exempt from the perverse economic pressures created by fee-for-service regimes to see more patients for shorter appointments and order more tests and procedures. If the incentives were changed to pay to foster better health outcomes, I am convinced physician behavior would change over time. | | 121Successful entrepreneurs develop products that inspire their passion. They have to. It's that passion that gets them through the long, arduous, uncertain and frightening early days of a start-up. | | 122Old ways of thinking die hard, particularly when they were weaned by legally enforced monopolies. | | 123The culmination of all of that was the decision to start a company, which became Lotus, to do a product, which became 1-2-3. By the time I reached that point it had been four years, and it felt like a lifetime, but really it was kind of evolutionary. | | 124I'm an inveterate note taker - I scribble all these things down on pieces of paper. I wanted to create some way of organizing all of them. | | 125For people who know both New York and the Bay Area, it is a complement to say that Oakland is San Francisco's Brooklyn. It's a complement both to Oakland and to Brooklyn. And, if you look at Brooklyn, Brooklyn is hot; Brooklyn is cool. | Cool | 126Hackers are seen as shadowy figures with superhuman powers that threaten civilization. | | 201No, my family is Russian, Georgian, via Ellis Island. | | 202I actually built a tiny computer as a junior high school project. | | 203People are hungry for community. They're hungry for meaning in a society that is oriented around the production and consumption of consumer goods. | | 204Everyone has a subconscious and automatic preference of this over that. Once you're aware of that, you can take steps to change. | | 205The Internet, the network of networks, is growing at an exponential pace. It's growing so fast, in fact, nobody really knows how many people use the Internet. | | 206One of the perks of being the founder is that you get to build the company in your image. | | 207Computers ought to help people find their own best path through lots of textual information. | Computers | 208I'm fascinated by management and organizations: how organizations get things done and how successful organizations are built and maintained, how they evolve as they grow from start-ups to small companies to medium companies to big companies. | | 209Reversing the escalation of health care costs is going to need more than legislation, yet it can be done without imposing rationing, as critics of reform fear. | | 210A typical medical practice is like an old-fashioned business which keeps all of its records on paper. It can probably track down any individual transaction if it needs to, but it's basically helpless when it comes to overall measurements of performance. And that's the big problem. | Medical | 211When new technology in the classroom starts happening, some people get very excited and think of it as a panacea. It attracts very high amounts of money; it raises expectations, and those expectations aren't met. | | 212Human intelligence is a marvelous, subtle, and poorly understood phenomenon. There is no danger of duplicating it anytime soon. | Intelligence | 213Often, the disconnect between the marketing hype around a new product and what the product actually does is astounding. | | 214Few industries have the ability to transform society like tech, yet too few companies are asking the questions or working on the problems that would create meaningful social change. | | 215When regulations restricting competition are relaxed, nobody's market share is protected. If telephone companies can offer video programming, cable revenue will surely drop. | | 216I routinely failed to understand that 'simple and straightforward' would have been a much better product strategy for Lotus. | | 217There's an admirable belief about the virtues of meritocracy - that the best ideas prove the best results. It's a wrong and misguided belief by well-intentioned people. | | 218It is possible to take a population of students who are failing and whose schools are failing them, who are being written off as not being college material, and if they have the right support, they can all go to college and succeed. | | 219I think there is widespread agreement that there is a crisis in public education. | | 220We are living in an era of anxiety produced by computer and communications technology. | | 221Well, I had a lot of help from my father with the soldering and so on, and he was very good at math and was fascinated with computers, and so I was fortunate enough to have a bunch of exposure going all the way back to high school - this was in the 1960s. | Computers | 222I was trying to figure out what to do next, I'd been accumulating ideas for productivity tools - software people could use every day, particularly to help organize their lives. | | 223I was not a student of Wall Street, but I was a quick study. | | 224Startups, in some sense, have gotten so easy to start that we are confusing two things. And what we are confusing, often, is, 'How far can you get in your first day of travel?' with, 'How long it is going to take to get up to the top of the mountain?' | | 225If you go back to the '50s and '60s... there was zero tech in S.F. It was all in the Valley... and it crept northward in early 2000s. | | 226I had no fear of speaking to large audiences. | | 301Today, in the Internet gold rush, so many people go into dot-com jobs right from school or even before finishing. Their motivation is understandable, but sometimes they just lack experience. | | 302In my case, having knocked around at different jobs helped me get a sense of what the world is actually like and also helped me get out of a cocoon. | | 303I'd been a great angel investor, but professional venture capital was clearly not the right thing for me. | | 304I'd always wanted to live in San Francisco, and my circumstances never permitted it. I'm so happy I made the move. | | 305Beware angel investors: they can be disruptive. | | 306If only I'd stayed on the West Coast, I might have made something of myself. | | 307My history is to find the next big thing early. | | 308If you look at the history of other movements, whether Civil Rights or environmental rights, these are all decades-long undertakings. | Environmental | 309I soon realized that the best thing I could do for the profession of human services was to get out of it. | | 310Bulletin boards are sort of the garage bands of cyberspace. | | 311I tell people that the history of Mozilla and Firefox is so one of a kind that it should not be used - ever - as an example of what's possible. | | 312I don't think Silicon Valley understands the power of Wikipedia, how it works, or the opportunities it represents. | | 313If you can command a lot of attention, that's what is valuable, and many in the commercial ecology would like to have a piece of that attention. | | 314Both VisiCalc and MultiPlan were available when the IBM PC shipped in October 1981. 1-2-3 didn't hit the market until January 1983. | | 315I woke up nights, worrying that Lotus was out of control - that no one would know what to do. | | 316Managerial and professional people hadn't really used computers, hadn't sat down at keyboards, until personal computers. Personal computers have a totally different feel. | Computers | 317Even though I had the talent, programming just didn't feel right. I never considered it very seriously. Some people get gratification from bending a machine to their will. I didn't. | | 318'Silicon Valley' has come to mean the Bay Area, not just down the Peninsula. | | 319On a personal note, I was born in Brooklyn. My folks moved out to Long Island when I was quite young, but once a Brooklynite, always a Brooklynite. | | 320If advertisers want to decorate their ads to increase their conversions by showing what users think, that's a good thing. | | 321There's a great deal of suspicion and misunderstanding about IT among practicing doctors. One hears things like, 'I don't want to be turned into a data entry clerk, and I don't want some machine between me and my patients.' | | 322The widespread adoption of broadband and the continued advances in personal computing technology are finally making it possible for the collective creation of an online world on a realistic scale. | | 323Linden Lab's technological breakthroughs have made 'Second Life' a truly revolutionary experience. | | 324People in the industry foresee a time in which, for many people, the only thing they'll need on a computer is a browser. | | 325Velano Vascular has developed a simple, game-changing innovation that will improve the way medicine has been practiced for decades. | | 326E-mail is a victim of its own success. | | 401You can't be in the tech community... without realizing there's a big shortage of talent. | | 402StumbleUpon has humanized the Web and mastered a way for people to discover online content by incorporating an individual's personal preferences and recommendations of friends and like-minded people. | | 403 | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
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