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Diagnosis: Penguin

Sunday, October 05, 2008

blog alive...

ok, thanks to some clever mac widgets and ease of use, perhaps it's time to start blogging again...

cheers,

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

freedom...

today, I closed on an automobile...

finally, i'm free to roam where i please...

photos to come...

cheers,

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Young... Rich... Handsome?

Definitely the first two... not sure about the third...

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With YouTube, Grad Student Hits Jackpot Again
Grant Hochstein for The New York Times

Article Tools Sponsored By
By MIGUEL HELFT
Published: October 12, 2006

PALO ALTO, Calif., Oct. 11 — For Jawed Karim, the $100,000 or so he would have to spend on a master’s degree at Stanford was never daunting. He hit an Internet jackpot in 2002 when PayPal, the online payment company he had joined early on, was bought by eBay.

On Monday, still early in his studies for the fall term, he got lucky again. This time he may have hit the Internet equivalent of the multistate PowerBall.

Mr. Karim is the third of the three founders of the video site YouTube, which Google has agreed to buy for $1.65 billion. He was present at YouTube’s creation, contributing some crucial ideas about a Web site where users could share video. But academia had more allure than the details of turning that idea into a business.

So while his partners Chad Hurley and Steven Chen built the company and went on to become Internet and media celebrities, he quietly went back to class, working toward a degree in computer science.

Mr. Karim, who is 27, became visibly uncomfortable when the subject turned to money, and he would not say what he stands to make when Google’s purchase of YouTube is completed. He said only that he is one of the company’s largest individual shareholders, though he owns less of the company than his two partners, whose stakes in the company are likely to be worth hundreds of millions of dollars, according to some estimates. The deal was so enormous, he says, that his share was still plenty big.

“The sheer size of the acquisition almost makes the details irrelevant,” Mr. Karim said.

On Wednesday, during a walk across campus and a visit to his dorm room and the computer sciences building where he takes classes, Mr. Karim described himself as a nerd who gets excited about learning. Nothing in his understated demeanor suggests he is anything other than an ordinary graduate student, and he attracted little attention on campus in jeans, a blue polo shirt, a tan jacket and black Puma sneakers.

Mr. Karim said he might keep a hand in entrepreneurship, and he dreams of having an impact on the way people use the Internet — something he has already done. Philanthropy may have some appeal, down the road. But mostly he just wants to be a professor. He said he simply hopes to follow in the footsteps of other Stanford academics who struck it rich in Silicon Valley and went back to teaching.

“There’s a few billionaires in that building,” he said, standing in front of the William Gates Computer Science Building. But his chosen path will not preclude another stint at a start-up. “If I see another opportunity like YouTube, I can always do that,” he said.

David L. Dill, a professor of computer science at Stanford, said Mr. Karim’s choice was unusual.

“I’m impressed that given his success in business he decided to do the master’s program here,” Mr. Dill said. “The tradition here has been in the other direction,” he said, pointing to the founders of Google and Yahoo, who left Stanford for the business world.

Mr. Karim met Mr. Hurley and Mr. Chen when all three of them worked at PayPal. After the company was acquired by eBay for $1.5 billion, netting Mr. Karim a few million dollars, they often talked about starting another company.

By early 2005, all three had left PayPal. They would often meet late at night for brainstorming sessions at Max’s Opera Café, near Stanford, Mr. Karim said. Sometimes they met at Mr. Hurley’s place in Menlo Park or Mr. Karim’s apartment on Sand Hill Road, down the street from Sequoia Capital, the venture firm that would become YouTube’s financial backer.

Mr. Karim said he pitched the idea of a video-sharing Web site to the group. But he made it clear that contributions from Mr. Chen and Mr. Hurley were essential in turning his raw idea into what eventually became YouTube.

A YouTube spokeswoman said that the genesis of YouTube involved efforts by all three founders.

As early as February 2005, when the site was introduced, Mr. Karim said he and his partners had agreed that he would not become an employee, but rather an informal adviser to YouTube. He did not take a salary, benefits or even a formal title. “I was focused on school,” he said.

The decision meant that his stake in the company would be reduced, Mr. Karim said. “We negotiated something that we thought was fair.”

Roelof Botha, the Sequoia partner who led the investment in YouTube, said he would have preferred if Mr. Karim had stayed.

“I wish we could have kept him as part of the company,” Mr. Botha said. “He was very, very creative. We were doing everything we could to convince him to defer.”

Mr. Karim was born in East Germany in 1979. The family moved to West Germany a year later and to St. Paul, Minn., in 1992. His father, Naimul Karim, is a researcher at 3M and his mother, Christine Karim, is a research assistant professor of biochemistry at the University of Minnesota.

“To develop new things and be aware of new things, this is our life,” Ms. Karim said, explaining her son’s interest in technology and learning.

After graduating from high school, Jawed Karim chose to go to the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in part because it was the school that the co-founder of Netscape, Marc Andreessen, and others who gave birth to the first popular Web browser attended.

“It wasn’t like I wanted to be the next Marc Andreessen, but it would be cool to be in the same place,” Mr. Karim said. In 2000, during his junior year, he dropped out to head to Silicon Valley, where he joined PayPal. He later finished his undergraduate degree by taking some courses online and some at Santa Clara University.

Armed with a video camera, Mr. Karim documented much of YouTube’s early life, including the meetings when the three discussed financing strategies and the brainstorming sessions in Mr. Hurley’s garage, where the company was hatched.

In his studio apartment in a residence hall for graduate students, he showed one of them, which he said was filmed in April 2005. In it, Mr. Chen talked about “getting pretty depressed” because there were only 50 or 60 videos on the YouTube site. Also, he said, “there’s not that many videos I’d want to watch.” The camera then turns to Mr. Hurley, who grins and says “Videos like these,” referring to the one Mr. Karim is filming.

Mr. Karim, who has remained in frequent contact with the other co-founders, said he was first informed of the talks with Google last week. On Monday, he was called in to the Palo Alto law offices of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati to sign acquisition papers, and he briefly got to congratulate Mr. Chen and Mr. Hurley, he said.

Asked what he thought of the acquisition price, Mr. Karim said: “It sounded good to me.” When a reporter looked puzzled, he raised his eyebrows and added: “I was amazed.”

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

zebras...

New York Times
January 24, 2006
The One-in-a-Thousand Illness You Can't Afford to Miss
By PERRI KLASS, M.D.
Evening session at the health center, three of us seeing patients in pediatrics. My colleague asked whether I would take a quick look at a boy with a fever and headache. In the exam room, the overhead light was off because it hurt his eyes. He was lying on the table, but he sat up and answered my questions, and he let me look in his throat, and he moved his head around when I asked him to.
We excused ourselves, my colleague and I, and went out of the room. We conferred. The boy didn't look good. Pronounced photophobia - avoidance of light - and severe headache and fever. And although his neck was not actually stiff, he did indicate some neck pain when we asked him to bend it.
He needs to go to the emergency room, we agreed.
What do you think, my colleague asked, would you send him by ambulance?
"Yes," I said. "I mean, if this is your meningitis, wouldn't you want him in an ambulance?"
She understood what I meant, of course. Sometimes it feels as if you spend your career in primary care pediatrics waiting for your meningitis, your leukemia, your dislocated hip.
The bad things, the things that cross your mind - automatically and usually fleetingly - day after day as you examine children, the diagnoses that statistically will come your way at least once or twice over the course of years and years of walking into one exam room after another.
Every time you examine a little baby's hips - and you always examine a little baby's hips - you are looking for congenital dysplasia of the hip, a hip that doesn't fit properly into its socket. Find it early, fix it early. Don't miss it.
Every time you find unexplained lymphadenopathy, enlarged lymph nodes, in a child, leukemia crosses your mind, at least fleetingly. Children have swollen lymph nodes all the time. But you had better not miss your leukemia.
Or meningitis. In winter especially, lots of children come in with high fevers. Most have flu or other viral illnesses or ear infections. Some look reasonably bright and bouncy, fever and all, and some look sick and miserable.
And as I go from room to room and examine those children and swab their throats for strep or dig the wax out of their ears, I think quickly about meningitis. O.K., the giggling 3-year-old eating crunchy junk food snacks while he runs busily around the exam room may have a temperature of 103, but he does not have meningitis.
But what about the hot-to-the-touch fretful 1-year-old who will not let her mother put her down? Or the feverish, headachy 12-year-old?
Fever, headache, stiff neck, photophobia - these are the clinical hallmarks of meningitis, an infection of the membranes that surround and protect the spine. It can be caused by a variety of viruses and bacteria, and the bacterial form, in particular, can be a virulent fast-moving infection, an infection that can devastate or even kill a child.
It needs to be treated promptly, and to treat it, you need to diagnose it, by doing a spinal tap, and to diagnose it, you need to think about it.
I have seen plenty of children with meningitis. I did my residency in the days before children were routinely vaccinated against Haemophilus influenzae Type b and Streptococcus pneumoniae, two bacteria with propensities for spinal infections, and I took care of plenty of hospitalized children with meningitis.
I worked in the emergency room and did my share of spinal taps, on the wards, where we took care of some children who ended up deaf or brain damaged, and in the intensive care unit, where the sickest children were on life support.
Nowadays, with children well protected against those two particular bugs, meningitis is less of a worry, but it has not gone away. I know my meningitis will walk in the door in primary care someday, one of those feverish hard-to-console babies or one of those flu-ish unhappy teenagers.
My colleague sent the boy to the emergency room by ambulance. By ambulance, because that way he got there as fast as possible. Because that way we knew he would receive attention immediately. Because that way, if by some chance he was her meningitis and his mental status began to deteriorate or he started to have a seizure - well, at least he would be in an ambulance.
So you worry about it with every sick child, week after week, winter after winter. Hundreds of cases of influenza and other viral illnesses, fevers and headaches and body aches and sore throats and general miseries will come and go.
But at some point, your meningitis will arrive, and it will all come down to whether you recognize it or not.
You stand in the exam room, worrying about this one particular very important child, mindful of the danger and trying to look the threat in the eye and recognize it - even with the lights off.

Monday, August 28, 2006

music evolution...

check out this cool, free service from the people at the music genome project...

they'll design playlists/audiostreams around your tastes, and make suggestions as to what else you might like...

a very good time...

cheers,

Friday, August 25, 2006

Nice showing, MSP!!! ---- America's Drunkest Cities

According to Forbes.com, Milwaukee has been crowned the "Drunkest" U.S. city.


Great work, everyone. Truly a team effort.



Here are the rest of the Top 10.


9. Providence, R.I.
9. Philadelphia
8. Pittsburgh
7. Cleveland
6. Chicago
5. Austin, Texas
4. Boston
3. Columbus, Ohio
2. Minneapolis-St. Paul
1. Milwaukee


good to see Beantown cracking the top five... guess i should feel more like home here than i do...

Cheers,

Monday, August 21, 2006

another winner...

jrob is full of winning references this week...

check this article out on OBL dig for Whitney Houston...

unbelievable... and creepily weird...

enjoy,

Sunday, August 20, 2006

a classic where are they now...

oh, Boy George, you civic servant you...

Saturday, August 19, 2006

News Flash: Red Sox Suck

three reasons for a ruinous weekend:

yankees @ red sox
yankees @ red sox
yankees @ red sox

Thursday, August 17, 2006

crazy medfield story...

courtesy of JRob...

cheers,