Even the Tech Cloud Has a Silver Lining
The bad news was that attendance at Comdex in Chicago was mighty sparse. The good news was that very few techies seemed inclined to jump headfirst into Lake Michigan as all the tech news continued to pile up in bad-news waves.
The bad news was that attendance at Comdex in Chicago was mighty sparse. The good news was that very few techies seemed inclined to jump headfirst into Lake Michigan as all the tech news continued to pile up in bad-news waves. Despite Web-based polling and instant news via the Web, technology shows are still a good place to get a feel for what is happening in the industry. Face-to-face meetings and quick conversations in the show aisles remain types of communication that the Internet cant match. For example, youd think David Peterschmidt, chairman of Inktomi, would be hard pressed to come up with optimistic expectations. Two days before his keynote speech, the company joined the chorus of other infrastructure providers with warnings of reduced earnings and layoffs. But Peterschmidt did a good job arguing that the continued rapid adoption of technology and the need to create new levels of software integration mean that the Internet will lead the economy out of the bad times. This time, the leader will be enterprises finally capitalizing on the Webs promises, Peterschmidt said.And Brian Halla, president of National Semiconductor, did a good job recasting the current California energy crisis as an opportunity. Toss out those CRTs for flat panels, use some of that massive bandwidth that has been laid in the ground over the past year and connect to a data center in an energy-rich area, Halla advised.








