Silicon Everywhere

Today I had the very distinct privilege to share about some lessons learned from the region so lovingly known as Silicon Valley. It was part of the first “Silicon Valley Comes to the Baltics” — attended by over 1,100 mostly student entrepreneurs and produced with aplomb thanks to the crack team led by Andrius Neviera.

Indeed the legendary (if not downright mythical) Silicon Valley has a unique and incredible history that I touch on, helped largely by the timeless (if 16 years can count as that) analysis of AnnaLee Saxenian. But, while entrepreneurs can learn a lot from the Valley, it is key to realize that our increasingly networked world has information, relationships and even capital crossing borders in unprecedented fashion.

So rather than isolating the Valley as some kind of mystical place, I encourage startup founders to apply some key lessons – primarily around openness and sharing — to the markets they know best: their own.

You can watch me by forwarding this video to 1:35 (I go until about 1:51), and the slides are here. Enjoy!

It’s the Community, Not the Code

That was a huge “aha” of mine when I interviewed at Mozilla over a year ago. Since then, I’ve enjoyed a year of immersion into one of the most fascinating, cool communities ever.

Today I had a chance to share a bit based on the experiences of Mozilla and some of our WebFWD teams at the HTML5Dev Conference in San Francisco. Not lots of notes on the slides so it was awesome when I learned that David Dehghan from the Dolphin Browser team posted a summary of the points I addressed! Those and the slides below should provide a sense of what I shared. Thanks to Chris Heillmann for the backup!