Sunday, November 30, 2008

At work now, it's going to be a busy December! Only 4 more weeks until Christmas!

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Just finished reading The Last Lecture book, it was really good, I enjoyed reading it. Lots of life lessons to learn from Randy Pausch

Thursday, November 27, 2008

At work, TGIF, happy Thanksgiving to the American people!
great day of doing of research now need to finish changes to thesis

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

happy birthday to my sister!
Making changes to the PhD thesis tonight, almost finished point 6 out of 12 points to address.

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Reading The Last Lecture by Prof. Randy Pausch who died this past July, a great book about life in general

Monday, November 24, 2008

Mobile Mondays Beijing event

Right now I'm in the meeting at Mobile Mondays Beijing. This event was started by Benjamin Joffe of PlusStar. The meeting tonight is about foreign firms in China. The speakers for this meeting are Lin Song from Opera China, David Sullivan from Alliance Development Group, Karl J. Weaver from Gemalto China, Dan Wong from Nokia China and Allen Yang from LemonQuest China. There is such a great turnout here at the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business, around at least 100 people! The speakers are now talking about why they entered into the Chinese market.

Lin Song is talking how Opera started as a narrow facility and then how it expanded in the mobile browser market. Allen Wong says their main reason to come to China was to bring research and development together, produce in China, and then market abroad. LemonQuest does development of mobile games. Karl J. Weaver is now saying why Gemalto came to China because it makes sense to come to the largest market in the world. In fact, I did not know that Gemalto was the original developer of the SIM card that is used in GSM mobile phones. It makes sense to go to China to go to the largest subscriber base. David Sullivan is now explaining that it is important to choose your partners, working with Huawei and ZTE, it's having your engineers work with others. He says that you become "customers of your partners". You must maintain speed and the technology roadmap, you need to have offense to protect your defense, in football speak.

Benjamin is now talking to Dan Wong, VP of Software and Services of Nokia China about how Nokia is getting into the services area. IPR for services and software is more complex, one of the important things is how to protect IPR for your business, one way to do this is to look at China. In China, it is easy to copy products, as people are familiar with. China created free software but charge for time to connect with the server, that is the business model that works, according to Dan. The deeper question is can you develop a business model that is IPR proof, it is broader challenge for developing services globally. Nokia's vision is that OVI provides a very differentiated experiences via just the hardware. According to Karl Weaver, you cannot stop IP, you cannot stop the flow of technology, there are strategies that you can compete. According to David Sullivan, a lot of foreign companies use the same model to start up shop in China, but it doesn't work. Services are becoming very important and critical in China, if you get the service model right then you can protect yourself. You need to keep staying ahead.

How do the foreign companies keep staying ahead, is the next question addressed by Benjamin. According to David Sullivan, it is important to identify the ecosystem and then identify the suppliers, there is a need to be much more creative. From Lin Song of Opera, you need to have a great product and get constant feedback from users.

Third question: What kind of difficulties have you found in growing the business in China?

Karl J. Weaver: Chinese companies treat information as secret, which is frustrating in trying to grow the business in China.

Allen Yang: Foreign companies can never act local when they are global, they say act global stay local.

David Sullivan: A lot of companies go into China and see the level of investment needed, and decide not to come. The challenge is localization, you need to find the Chinese partners and the language. The challenge is also talking with headquarters.

Dan Wong: The biggest challenge is market challenge, the biggest market in the world. In China, there are 2000 models, the level of competition is at an entire new level from the regulatory environment, the unique standards, and the market structure. The biggest challenge is the combination of all those things.

According to David Sullivan, there are companies that are starting to develop with the China market first and then bring it globally, that have 95% of the development work in China. From a consumer demand, Nokia's Dan Wong says want to compete in the services arena in a different way, it is not to replicate this. For mobile music, people in China will pay for downloading music, Dan says we are seeing pockets of opportunity.

Question: What are some failures and success stories with your companies?

Lin Song: There is an importance of finding the right people, it is not that they are not competent, it is the element of trust.

David Sullivan: A lot of companies project their experiences but have no idea what is going on, which results in failure. when companies find the right technology fit and right partner, and commit to that localization, then there is a lot of opportunity for success.

In the end, a great talk and discussion, I've never been to an event where there was so many people listening to the speakers, and there is internet access, and power where my seat is! Now, it's time to network and eat a light buffet!

i'm at mobile mondays beijing here, lots of people!
heading to mobile mondays beijing meeting now

Sunday, November 23, 2008

heading into work, excited for going to my first mobile monday beijing meeting tonight!
i've never thought i had to enter my pin # almost 100 times at the bank!

Friday, November 21, 2008

University of Toronto CS department featured in ByteClub



The University of Toronto Computer Science department of which where my PhD comes from, is featured in this video from Byte Club which is a Toronto-based web show featuring technology companies and their culture:



It's a great show, showing the cool things in Computer Science happening in University of Toronto and what the students are doing. Who said Computer Science was just for geeks?

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Thursday, November 20, 2008

back at work after 2 days at home with stomach flu

Monday, November 17, 2008

heading into work on a chilly morning in beijing
I'm trying out GLUE, a Firefox plugin to link your social networks with what you browse on the web (http://ping.fm/j8njC)

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

I'm trying out this new service called Ping.fm for posting to multiple social networks like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and FriendFeed. This allows you to avoid having to go to the individual social networking site in order to write your message. It's quite nice, and they also have a feature to post to Blogger which I'm doing right now.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Great day of brainstorming and discussions at the lab retreat, it's great to do research!

Monday, November 03, 2008

It's now Dr. GadgetMan

Yes, that's right, you heard me. I successfully defended my PhD today with just minor changes. Finally, after 5 long, hard, blood and sweat years, I've been able to arrive at this milestone in my life. Thanks to everyone my family and my committee for being there and supporting me. And especially thanks God for providing me the strength to do the PhD, God is so awesome. Also, my wife who has always supported me in everything I do, thanks honey!

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Finishing the final preparations for my PhD defense

I'm right now finishing up my preparations and rehearsal of my talk for my PhD defense tomorrow at 10 am. I hope everything goes well. Please pray for me in your prayers tonight and tomorrow, and once I know the result of my defense I will let you all know on this blog, Twitter, Facebook, FriendFeed, Plaxo, MSN, Google Talk and all my other social networks.