# You don't want to be Tesla. He was one of the greatest inventors,
but it's a sad, sad story. He couldn't commercialise anything, he
could barely fund his own research. You'd want to be more like
Edison. If you invent something, that doesn't necessarily help
anybody. You've got to actually get it into the world; you've got
to produce, make money doing it so you can fund it.
The other Edison vs Tesla difference that strikes a chord in me is: Edison: "Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration."
Telsa on Edison: "just a little theory and calculation would have saved him
90 percent of the labour. But he had a veritable contempt for book
learning and mathematical knowledge, trusting himself entirely to his
inventor's instinct and practical American sense."
Edison was a hacker - and I mean one who hacks, like a bad golfer or a bad novelist, but who actually gets the ball in the hole, and actually writes the novel.When you are the only one who has done something, you are automatically the best. No matter how bad you are.
The second last quote sort of reinforces the "learn through mistakes" attitude of Edison:
# The thing that matters is experience. We have lots of executives
from failed companies; they learned a lot from these things. They
say, 'We can't do that -- we tried that and it didn't work.' So
failure is useful.Interesting question - How do you look at yourself? Scientist -> Engineer -> Entrepreneur
I work at Carnegie Mellon, and Google Pittsburgh is literally right next to the building I work in. I visited a friend there, and there really isn't much distinction between their office layout and the way the rest of the campus looks (except they have better food). Googlers attend and give talks on campus and in their offices all the time, right alongside the faculty and students.
So, yes, I would say they have succeeded in recreating the grad school environment, assuming their offices are anything like the Pittsburgh one.
# Part of our brand is that we're pretty understated in what we do.
If you look at other technology companies, they might preannounce
things, and it will be a couple years before they really happen,
and they don't happen in the way they said they would.
I miss this aspect of Google. Android and OpenSocial were announced months before they had an actual product.But with platforms, there's a real question of the chicken and the egg, and you have no choice but to drum up as much excitement you can, the earlier the better. Without the artificial momentum, it might not go anywhere.
But this article takes their (rediff.com) entire post, posts it in full and never gives them credit.
Why isn't this plagiarism?
However, I have another complaint. Why a plain text file? I don't want to have to download some bloated reader just to read this thing. Can someone print to pdf and upload it to something sensible like scribd?
Does your browser not render plain text?
Plagiarism is when you try to pass off someone else's work as your own.
I think what you really mean is "Why isn't this copyright violation?" The answer to that is that I did not in fact "take their entire post and post it in full." (Did you even compare the articles?) I cut out everything rediff wrote, leaving only Larry Page's quotes. Arguably they could claim they have a copyright on the selection and ordering of the quotes, but that is a pretty weak claim.
though pg should have posted source link with his note, i dont think that even rediff.com is the copyright owner - to what i understand pg did it in the good faith to help HN readers and that's what it matters ...
So, who is being plagiarized?
I'd like to see this applied to Google Analytics, which is nice but has no way to export any data. I'd also like a way to delete all the junk Google has on me like logs of my searches.
I guess I'd believe that "be good" was some kind of important principle to Google if they acted any different than any other company: use personal data for customer lock-in and to reuse/resell/mine elsewhere; give a small escape hatch to only those few services people complain loudest about.
http://www.google.com/support/analytics/bin/answer.py?hl=en&...
My take away from the whole list.
Have they lost it? Whom have they lost it to?