Jeff Bezos & me, Y Combinator Startup School @ Stanford

That’s Jeff Bezos, chairman and CEO of a small company called Amazon.com. And oh, the founder of a space company too.

At SUS, after each speech, the speaker usually has a 5-15 min Q&A session with the audience. The way Jeff handled his Q&A, and carried himself impressed me. He respectfully and politely provided a “good enough” answer when someone posed him the question in an attempt to pitch AWS head to head against Google App Engine.

What really impressed me though, was when someone asked him about some technical limitation imposed by the company on Amazon Web Services, an answer to which Jeff did not know, so he redirected the spotlight to one of his aides standing by the stage for an answer. The aide essentially gave a beat-around-the-bush type “politically correct” corporate cookie-cutter, investor-relations cover-your-ass type answer. Jeff cut the aide of in mid-sentence when he saw that the answer was practically rubbish, and said, “so basically, he’s not really answering your question” (referring to this aide) and apologized to the developer for not knowing the answer.

He then said the name of his aid so that the developer could follow up with his aide for a real answer. Jeff is obviously trying to woo developers to build on top of AWS. I tip my hat for his efforts to gain trust from the developer community. That burst of honesty, cutting through clutter .. was refreshing.

The videos at Y Combinator’s Startup School 2008 can be found here: http://omnisio.com/startupschool08

Picture taken at Kresge Auditorium, at Stanford University.

Fact: Did you know that Blue Origin does their computational fluid dynamics calculations on the AWS Elastic Compute Cloud? At first, I thought that was just corporate incest (and another sleazy marketing ploy) — but I was wrong. Blue Origin previously took 70 hours per calculation, and now they can get results in just 12 hours, quickly deploying (scaling up and scaling down) a massive fleet of servers! Talk about eating your own dogfood. Now that’s just plain good practice.

Update — Check out this video(s). In personal decisions, my methodical nature can confuse me. Some decisions are best made with the heart.

* The title of this post is inspired by the “Where The Hell Is Matt” project. I have wished I could travel like him, and I am thankful that I now have this opportunity to see the world.

This is my first full weekend in San Diego — after a week since I got back. Technically, I got back late Sunday night and had to work the next day .. so needless to say, didn’t have time to write much. As I have previously mentioned, I was backpacking western Europe. This is the first of my deferred blog post series on this little life-changing experience of mine, where I’ll wrap up in a final post on lessons learned, etc. I would have liked blogging live while I was actually traveling but am faced with certain constraints, such as: internet access wasn’t too easy to come by (I veto’d against taking a laptop at the last minute), I have to pay for ‘net access in euros (uhh, weak US greenback doesn’t help), the time writing and searching for access is wasted instead of exploring Europe.

So why go? Why backpack Europe, why travel alone, how do you justify this expense, what is the return on investment here? Why go on a vacation anyway? Aren’t vacations for people who are lazy and can’t stand what we call “working in the real world”? When I first started working, I pooh-pooh’d vacations. I loathed what was to me, a waste of precious time and money. Needless to say, after 3 years of “real world work” just right after my bachelors, it was really tough for me to admit that I was losing my sanity, and a vacation *gasp* was in order.

My doctor didn’t _explicitly_ recommend that I take a vacation, so it was even tougher to justify. I couldn’t say “oh, my doctor recommended it”. In the end, I read this great story here, and decided that enough is enough. My sanity is far more important than any job I will ever have in my life. What’s the point of having a great job if you are insane? You can’t function anyway. And so that justified the expense, I bit the bullet and paid for my flight. *I highly recommend workaholics to click on that link to the story

At this point in my life, money is nothing more than an enabler for me. If I don’t use it to enable me to do something, especially when it means to heal myself when I am sick, then why make money in the first place. Money making is just a skill. If I use up that money today, I can make that money back with my skills. I am confident in my skills. You could rob me of my money, but not my skills. Sanity, I rather not risk, since I don’t know if I can get that back. (Lack of sanity also means loss of skills?)

The backpacking trip was pretty much a marathon: 3 weeks, 12 places (2 repeats). Yes, I traveled alone — and I lived the pros and cons of that (cons include having to negotiate with a mugger/extortionist in Amsterdam, more on that later). I was careful though, to pace myself and take a breather, to say smell the flowers, and actually enjoy the scenery. Last thing I want is a vacation from my vacation. I wasn’t going to “work” myself just to hit up all the places I had on my mind. I was going to relax and enjoy this.

Since I was making the trip up as I went, I didn’t know what my final journey would look like while on the trip itself. I only planned a 24 hours ahead, sometimes only a few hours (like3-4 hours) ahead. The joys of unpredictability and randomness ;) In my normal life, I am very structured and I plan meticulously. Being this ad-hoc and unpredictable was not easy, but I got used to it, and look, I got back home in one piece!

I flew out of Los Angeles to London because its much cheaper than flying out of San Diego. My drop off point for my sprint across western Europe was London. I would land there, and depart from there. In case you’re wondering (I get asked this a lot), I got a return trip from LAX to London-Gatwick for about US $560 (from www.priceline.com’s “name your own price” game — which I must say, wasn’t too easy to game :/ I tried).

Just to mention, London has multiple airports. The London Heathrow (LHR) airport is probably the main one, and was a bit more expensive than if I were to land in London Gatwick (LGW), hence I took the latter. The Gatwick airport is a 30 mins train ride away from downtown London, not that much further than Heathrow. The train ride (Gatwick Express) takes you direct from the airport to the Victoria Station in downtown central London, a good starting point for backpackers. Each train ride costs about 18 pounds sterling, or about US$36.

Here’s my final itinerary:

  1. Arrive in London from Los Angeles
  2. Bruxelles, Belgique (Brussels, Belgium)
  3. Paris, France
  4. Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
  5. Interlaken, Switzerland
  6. Venezia, Italia (Venice)
  7. Nürnberg, Deutschland (Nuremberg, Germany)
  8. Berlin, Deutschland
  9. Hamburg/HafenCity, Deutschland
  10. Amsterdam, Netherlands
  11. Bruxelles, Belgique
  12. London, UK
  13. (and back to Los Angeles)

Here’s a map of my route (in orange). I went in a counter-clockwise direction. The places circled in blue was the places I had hoped to hit, but could not — did not have enough time, and as you can see .. were a little bit further from the circle around Europe I was taking. (Sorry I couldn’t make it to visit you in Sweden, Mathias! Rain check?)

countries_europe_map

Alright, so .. get on with the pictures already and stop babbling!

I arrived in London, but my trip really began with Brussels. I arrived in London in the morning, fought of a bit of a jet lag (stayed just 1 night), and took the “Chunnel” — a super high speed train across the English channel to Brussels. Cost was 60 pound sterling, and took 2.5 hours.

The beginning of my “Watch out world, here I come” 2007 western Europe backpacking trip. Yes, I do it like Hans Solo — me, myself, and I ;) If nobody wants to do what I want to do with me, then I will do it myself!! (I decided that “Watch out world, here I come” would be my motto for this little trip of mine)

Chunnel station

Looks like an airport, does it not? Security was about as tight as US airports, when it came to boarding:

Chunnel station, looks like an airport doesn't it?

Me and the “Chunnel”:

Me and the "Chunnel" itself!

.. and some Canadian chicks!

Picture 008

Next stop .. Gare du Midi, Bruxelles! “Gare” means “station”, “Gare du Midi” means “south station”. My first time in a non-English country. Wow-wee, should be fun fun fun.

Kara and Jay at DEMOfall 2007

That’s right b!tches, that’s me and _the_ Kara Swisher, of the All Things D and Wall Street Journal fame.

I like Kara because she says it like it is. No sugar coated Web 2.0 craplets! Everyone else says the same thing, the “safe” thing to say, afraid of going against the status quo. Not Kara!

Bring on the tough love. For her authenticity and courage of not succumbing to the pressure to conform, I tip my hat.

Here are some pictures from my hockey game against Flesh Wound last Sunday:

(Click on pictures for larger plus Flickr annotations)

Me going in for the kill! (dark blue number #7):
Going in for the kill!!

Locker room picture:
The Storm, team picture #1

This video clip is from a previous game, against the Rangers:

Gmail

Filed Under google, photos | 1 Comment

If you use Gmail, then you should probably meet Paul Buchheit, the person behind Gmail and Google employee #23.

I ran into Paul, while wandering the halls of Stanford.

Paul Buchheit

(I’m the one with the dorky name sticker on my coat and a laptop sling on my shoulder, incase you haven’t figured out)