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The technology is irrelevant
By Scott Bradner
It has long been a truism that the quality of the technology too often has little to do with marketplace success. VHS vs. Betamax is the most commonly cited example. But now we are seeing an old factor starting to have a bigger impact on technology selection than just marketing and patent licensing departments.
I'm writing this column on the day that Worldcom announced
that it had found about $4 billion worth of expenses which had not been dealt
with "according to generally accepted accounting
principles," as the Wall Street Journal quaintly put it in a news
story. The Associate Press writer
headline was not quite so quaint and called it "the biggest case of corporate
fraud in U.S. history." That
headline approximates the headlines over the past few months talking about the
cable operator Adelphia Communications, and,
of course Enron. It also echoes,
many smaller headlines announcing the demise of one company or another because
of questionable business practices.
Each one of these headlines
traumatizes the investment community and causes them to back away even further
from startups working on new technology.
Each time a big company like these goes bust it hits the potential
market for new ideas hard.
Throwing away a few hundred billion dollars of investor's money tends to
cause them to retreat and get that deer in the headlights look. Not exactly a good market to get new or
continuing funding for startups.
We had the Internet bubble, then
the Internet bust, but we thought that the bubble was just stupidity, or more
politely put: "irrational exuberance." And I did see a bunch of breathtakingly dumb ideas get
funding during the period when it seemed that VCs were funding anyone who knew
how to run PowerPoint. At one
level, the quality of technology did not seem to matter much during those
"good old days." When
the inevitable bust came, I figured that we, in the 'Net world, were just
victims of our own inability to think seriously about ideas. I figured our thinking was somewhat
muddled by all the money flowing around.
Lots of good ideas died for lack of continuing funding, along with many
ideas that just might have been dead to begin with.
But it now turns out that some of
this was irrational greed instead.
It's harder to stomach what is happening to the startups that were
leading the way on the paths of innovation which are key to our technological
future when criminal behavior is involved.
Since we cannot depend on
established companies, or now on VCs, to fund the longer term research and
development startups they once did we have to look to other sources of funding
or be willing to stagnate. In the
time before the boom, federal research money was a key innovation driver, maybe
not as adventuresome as it could have been, but key never the less. It looks like it's time for the feds to
open up the purse strings even more.
disclaimer: Harvard, as well as I, get federal
grants, but I did not ask the University's opinion so you just get mine