Google, Microsoft, Sun to Fund New Internet Lab 127
brajesh writes "Yahoo! News has an AP story about Google, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems coming together to back a new Internet research laboratory aimed at helping entrepreneurs introduce more groundbreaking ideas to a mass audience. The Reliable, Adaptive and Distributed Systems or RAD lab is scheduled to open Thursday and will dole out $1.5 million annually over five years, with each company contributing equally. From the article : 'Conceivably, the lab's services could help launch another revolutionary company like online auctioneer eBay Inc. or even Google, which has emerged as one of the world's most valuable companies just seven years after its inception in a Silicon Valley garage.'"
Re:What an odd couple... (Score:2)
they will research quantum superposition... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:5, Funny)
No, no, no, you've got it all wrong. Quantum mechanics says that they will be neither evil nor not evil until it observed that they are either evil or not evil. This post neither exists nor not exists until you observe it.
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:4, Informative)
Schrodinger's cat is neither dead nor alive until the box is opened and we observer whether or not the nucleus decayed and emitted a particle that triggered the apparatus which opened the canister of poison and killed the cat. Setting the box on fire is an interesting twist on the experiment, and I do mean twist as in twisted.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schrodinger's_cat [wikipedia.org]
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:1)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2, Funny)
*This post neither exists nor does not exist until you moderate it.
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2, Funny)
What post?
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
If a geek posts a comment on slashdot and no one is there to read it, did the comment make a noise?
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:1)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
So it is purple?
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2, Funny)
So it is purple?
The cypress tree in the garden.
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
So it is purple?
Mu
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:1)
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:1)
That'll barely cover the Jolt Cola costs.
Re:they will research quantum superposition... (Score:2)
Cheaper than developing (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the American Idol of developers. "We'll let you show off, decide who's best, sign them to a nasty license, and own your soul."
(Kidding, but only half.)
Re:Cheaper than developing (Score:2)
No, it's Superstar USA. They tell you they're looking for the best programmer and giving him a job at Google, but really they're looking for the worst and he has to do hardware for Microsoft AND software for Sun.
I don't get it... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's chump change to Microsoft and Google (I don't know about SUN). Why aren't any one of them just funding the whole lab themselves? It's great that Berkely is getting some needed funding, but I think that this may some sort of PR thing. Just my 5 cents.
Re:I don't get it... (Score:2)
Annually? Over five years in equal payments?
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it... (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it... (Score:2)
So how many resources would you, oh sultan of all research, throw into experiment with new stuff? Three well equipped and capable researchers sounds about right to start off with. If any good stuff starts coming out it, I'm sure that will increase. Bram Cohen was one man of almost no resources and yet look what he did...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it... (Score:1)
Or about 1.8 million graduate students to do the work for you.
Re:I don't get it... (Score:1)
I'm too lazy to google anything, but I do remember reading on slashdot about 2 weeks ago that Sun's CEO makes more than Bill....
just what I remember, as it was talking about Mr. Gates finally making >1mil in a year.
"Conceivably, the lab's services could help..." (Score:5, Interesting)
Most "revolutionary" companies have been launched by going against "common wisdom" and doing thigs different ways than everyone else. Thus getting "help" early on from big companies.. well.. you draw the conclusions..
Re:"Conceivably, the lab's services could help..." (Score:1)
Purpose? (Score:2, Interesting)
Err no? Surely the whole point of Microsoft, Sun, Google etc, forming this lab, is to STOP such an independent company from forming?
Re:Purpose? (Score:2)
Did I just read that right? (Score:3, Funny)
Hahhaha, next thing apple with bring out intel based macs... oh you editors you really get me going. hahah.
Imagine how many chair throwing tantrums there will be...
please type the word in this image: aperture
random letters - if you are visually impaired, please email us at pater@slashdot.org
Re:Did I just read that right? (Score:1)
Re:Did I just read that right? (Score:2)
Hahhaha, next thing apple with bring out intel based macs... "
I think I will start planning that ski trip in Hell.
Re:Did I just read that right? (Score:1)
and the first product is (Score:5, Funny)
* ducks *
Re:and the first product is (Score:1)
i know no one reads the article, but they mentioned SUN in the post!
Re:and the first product is (Score:1)
Bargain (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bargain (Score:2)
Now *that* would be the bargain of the century.
*smirk*
Re:Bargain (Score:4, Insightful)
Fixed that for you.
Re:Bargain (Score:2)
Re:Bargain (Score:1)
Re:Bargain (Score:2)
Let me be the First (Score:2)
I propose to gather the world's greatest minds to generate memorable, unpatented acronyms for the IT industry.
I'm sure the person hours lost to coming up with yet another acronym for yet another venture must run into the gazillions of dollars per year. Charges for my companies services will be slight by comparison.
So where's my 1.5 mill?
pun innit? (Score:2)
Google, Microsoft and Sun? (Score:2, Funny)
Who will stab who? (Score:2)
FTFA (Score:2, Insightful)
I hate to say it but I somewhat disagree, now that web hosting has gotten so cheap most can be done in there home/dorm, most just need the drive and the idea of what they want to do.
Re:FTFA (Score:2)
I have an idea I am working on, but it requires a cluster of machines, and a lot of bandwidth. Also, It would need about 25million to complete. However, If I could get 1.5 million to start, I could get enough done to go to other sources for funding in 2 years.
There are a lot of people like me with these ideas, but they are having a tough time getting past the first round of money.
Re:FTFA (Score:1)
'Nuff said....
$1.5 million? (Score:3, Interesting)
$1.5 million sounds like a honeypot, not a venture-capital firm...
They're sucking in neophytes who will sign over IP rights and get very little in return.
Stop the press, Google and Sun donate 1.5 billion (Score:1)
Re:Stop the press, Google and Sun donate 1.5 billi (Score:1)
Is it just me, or is there something going on here (Score:2)
poffttt!! Why are people looking for conspiracies? This is cheap at twice the price. Getting all those ideas pushed to them for the little money they spend on the lab? Yes, this is not unlike the police setting up a training school for thiefs so they can catch the graduates...
2 cents used
MS? Sun? (Score:2, Redundant)
Call me cynical, but look at the history of these companies before you do it.
Spare a quarter? (Score:2)
Re:MS? Sun? (Score:1)
Will only RAD tools be eligible? (Score:2)
Damien
Nothing to see here (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Nothing to see here (Score:2)
Absolutely right. I've been to and presented at several of the RAD retreats. This is just the successor to the ROC (Recovery-Oriented Computing) intiative, which is now being retired.
The Berkeley systems groups have some great industry support. This does not mean 'selling out'--t
Google, Microsoft, and Sun teaming up......... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Google, Microsoft, and Sun teaming up......... (Score:2)
Well, you have three of the horsemen already. Sun is Famine, MS is Pestilence and Google is... um... either Death or War, I guess um...
OK, so the funny analogy fell apart. And wasn't funny. Sue me.
Can we have get extra Babylonian whores with that?
Can anyone decide for me... (Score:1)
Re:Can anyone decide for me... (Score:2)
Um, OK. Be very afraid.
Good.
Now jump up and down on one leg and squeal like a pig.
Oh, you may scoff! (Score:2)
Sun Search
Sun Maps
Sun Earth
Sun Blogger
Sun Froogle
Sun Groups
And so on...
Re:Oh, you may scoff! (Score:2)
Now, this is downright scarey (Score:2)
garage? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:garage? (Score:2)
Good observation. Not sure of the history, but my recollection is the same.
It is much like the term you will often see in newspapers describing some drug bust. It often is a "pre-dawn raid", even if the raid was actually at 3pm on a sunny August afternoon. Reporters just seem to like the imagery a "pre-dawn raid" invokes.
Watch for it now, you
Re:garage? (Score:2)
"In September 1998, Google Inc. opened its door in Menlo Park, California. The door came with a remote control, as it was attached to the garage of a friend who sublet space to the new corporation's staff of three. The office offered several big advantages, including a washer and dryer and a hot tub."
http://www.google.com/corporate/history.html [google.com]
mahlen
Re:garage? (Score:1)
So, like the earlier discussion about Schrodinger's Cat, you are at the same time both correct and incorrect.
The good, the bad and the ugly? (Score:2)
Oh well, the IT industry never made sense, why should it start now.
On the other hand, idiotic alliances to fund startups. Hmmm do I smell a bubble?
RAD (Score:1)
confusion (Score:1)
Lab's organization (Score:2, Funny)
Microsoft: copy those ideas and implement them in their upcomming OS
Sun: rewrite them in Java and release them as Open Source ten years later
Wow (Score:1)
Re:Wow (Score:1)
I would love to start a project in my garage... (Score:2, Funny)
Oh what a load of bollocks!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
These people, Google MS and Sun, won't even spit on the ground for $1.5 mil, let alone create a business plan... If they really intended to go beyond window dressing, they should have put their money where their mouth is and pour some real money into it.
It's an intended failure from the word go.
Probably wasteful (Score:2, Insightful)
What, April First Already? (Score:1)
Yahoo reports their competitor Google is entering into a partnership with Microsoft and Sun (two companies that have been feuding for the last decade). Microsoft cooperating with Google (or any company that isn't paying them licensing cheques)?
I'd check the credentials on this one.
Read the papers ... (Score:3, Informative)
Looks like they're trying to come up some fancy-schmancy approach to network management, emergency handling and risk control. It would make sense all three of these orgs would be interested in refining techniques along those lines, but pardon me while I yawn.
Why not grow more software talent with $7+mil ??? (Score:1)
Don't they already have one of these (Score:1)
MASSIVE 1980s flashback. Ouch! (Score:2)
This new RAD thing is, like, you know, totally gnarly! It's just, like, a rad RAD! But it's got, like, Microsoft? Oh, totally gag me with a spoon! At least having Sun and Google, like, makes me, you know, feel kinda warm and cozy -- like when I've got my leg warmers on, right? Like, that is so-o-o weird, you kno
Will it make any difference? (Score:2)
The issue here is that what ends up becoming a phenomenon (like Google or E-bay), often start out as mere curiosities. I'm not sure that either of them set out at the very beginning to make something that would become wildly popular. What's more, I'm not sure you can buy this- it just sort of happens. It is my opinion that more often than not, the depth of one's pockets is irrelevent.
strange bedfellows? evil ahead? (Score:3, Interesting)
Don't panic. There seem to be a few things going on here:
1) The principle investigators for this project are basically intellectual "hubs". Stunning track records. Long histories of students who go on to "move and shake". Perhaps most importantly: active involvement with people from all over the industry. If you want a group that simultaneously has its fingers on the pulses of both industry and academia and has a far better grasp of both fundamentals and how to systematically move forward in good directions, you could do a whole lot worse. The point: this is, to a degree, a "write your own ticket" group of researchers and they wisely elect to go for independence and diverse funding sources. The Big Companies may be big but this crowd is a bit more immune than most to being bullied. Everyone involved knows and embraces that.
2) At the levels of management where funding decisions like this are initiated and made, people are not so out of touch as the average slashdotter is likely to think. Oh sure, they have blind spots. But they are not stupid. They've seen Internet service industry growth increasingly coming from garage projects -- almost to the point that that's the only place it comes from. They do what they can to systemize and potentiate entrepreneurial skunksworking internally but they also know the social and economic limitations of management. Importantly (as can be seen by acquisitions, for example), they know that they need to rely on many, many other people making the up-front R&D investments, most failing, and a few becoming targets for acquisition. One aspect of RAD is that it envisions radically lowering the costs of playing for those external high-risk investors. If today, there are 100 people trying to win the social-network/calendering war, and perhaps 1000 serious novel-network-service efforts overall, and each of these efforts costs many people-months just to get out of "coming soon" state --- an aim of this project is to bump those numbers of people by an order of magnitude or more and shrink the lead-time similarly.
3) This is how corporate investment in academic research is supposed to work (and so it's sad, really, that RAD materials describe this as a "new" model). Corporate investors specifically don't get exclusives and therefore don't invest all that much, individually. What do they get? Partly they get new ideas which, while open to all, the investors hope to be in the best position to use (or the best position to benefit from others using them). Partly (and complementing that) they get less tangible benefits like personal access to PIs and, generally, a leg up on "technology transfer [out of the lab and into the market]".
4) This funding model is an application of a Nash Equilibrium. Let's take Microsoft. They've no shortage of systems researchers that, polite rivalries aside, could be sequestered in a room and could do all of this work just fine -- at far greater expense to Microsoft. What happens if they do that? Google eventually figures out the gist of what problems they're solving and how and obtains the same results, given those hints, far cheaper (and good look trying to repair that with patents -- it just don't work that way). In general, at the bleeding edge like this, the most probable outcome for any of these companies is that they hurt themselves unless they choose a strategy that gives their competitors options other than a direct assault -- RAD is an example of such a winning strategy.
5) "There's something happening here." [Buffalo Springfield]. RAD materials don't talk about it directly and, indeed, they're taking a step-towards rather than looking
Valuable or valued? (Score:2)
which has emerged as one of the world's most valuable companies
Is Google valuable? Certainly it's valued, as evidenced by its stock price. But when I think of "valuable", I think of its real value, e.g. what one could get by selling off the tangible assets.
This seemed like more of a point before I started typing, now not so much. Oh well, hate to waste the effort so I'm posting anyway.
Clearly it's the superstar halo (Score:2)
Of course Google and Microsoft are working together. When you've got a famous name like Michael Jordan [berkeley.edu] on the roster, who wouldn't be enthusiastic!
Maybe I should change my name before I write a grant proposal...
Google, Microsoft and Sun... (Score:2)
Sounds like Invention Submission Corporation... (Score:2)
Don't buy it. If you have a great idea, persue it through the normal channels - hard work and complete confidence and persistence in your idea/IP.