Saturday, May 31, 2003

bang! bang! bang!

I played in a puzzle hunt road rally called BANG3! tonight.

We walked around UC Berkeley at night campus solving a series of clues that each led to a location on campus that contained the next clue.

We came in 6th out of 22 teams.

Here's a clue from the game. See if you can solve this one:



We found a bunch of numbers scrawled in chalk under a footbridge next to Dwinelle Hall. They read:

2583 84733 2264 84733
-------------------------------
8253 2 2679 63 2583
3687 3766 36835763
86337 2362476884
63 666666884

Have fun!

Friday, May 30, 2003

bocce ball & gwyneth

Today our team went to go play bocce ball for four hours. It was a fun day, but I got very little work done.


(Bret Taylor and me playing bocce.)

After we got back, Gwyneth Paltrow and the band Coldplay came to visit us. They dropped by Google before their concert at the Shoreline Amphitheatre next door.

I showed Gwyneth and several Coldplay band members how to ride a Segway HT. I guess I now have a fallback career as a Segway celebrity evangelist and repair person if the whole product management thing at Google doesn't work out.


(Showing Gwyneth how to ride a Segway)


(Gwyneth and Coldplay autographing our crayon charts at Google.)

Thursday, May 29, 2003

living life in the age of terrorism

Thomas Friedman, OpEd columnist extraordinare of the New York Times, visited Google today. He imparted upon us five pieces of wisdom during a Q&A session with us.


(Thomas Friedman (far right) with Google's CEO
(far left), advertising director (left), and SVP of
Worldwide Sales (right))

He spoke about what he told Yale's 2003 graduates in his commencement address to them on how to deal with life in the "age of terrorism."

"You basically have two choices about how to live your life," Friedman told us and the Yale graduates. "One is to be a survivor and the other is to be a thriver. Be a thriver."

The other 4 points:

"The best way to thrive, very frankly, is to do what you love. Because if you do what you love you'll always love what you do, and 100% of people who love what they do end up thriving either emotionally or financially."

"My third rule is to be a good listener... Listening is a strategy of learning about the world in which you want to act, and listening is also about opening yourself to new possibilities that you have not thought of before, because listening means allowing other narratives that are working in the world to come to your attention before they bite you on the bottom... So go forth into the world and listen. It will amaze you, whether you become a journalist, a diplomat or a boss, how much you can accomplish in life, and how much you can get out of others, by just lending them an ear.

"Lesson 4, penultimate, is be a naive optimist. The world really needs more of them after 9/11."

"My last and final message, or lesson, is very brief. It's called "Call Your Mama." For me, the most searing images and stories of 9/11 were the tales of all those people who managed to use a cell phone to call their loved ones to say a last goodbye from a hijacked airplane or a burning tower."

His discussion with us was quite memorable, so much that I found his commencement address on the web and read all of it. It's one of the best I've seen thus far.

Wednesday, May 28, 2003

remarkable purple cows

I just finished reading Seth Goldin's Purple Cow book on building remarkable products and companies. It's well written and Seth makes some interesting points about why most products today are mediocre and unremarkable.



Did you know JetBlue Airways actually thought of instituting a dress code and giving away a free flight to the most remarkably dressed passenger on every airplane. (I guess they didn't wind up doing it...still pretty wacky though).

Anyhow, Seth talked about Google AdWords in his book. When you type in a query on Google or a bunch of Google-enhanced sites, ads relevant to the keywords you've typed in appear.

I took out my own ad on Google. See if you can find it!

Tuesday, May 27, 2003

the carters play with segways

Last Thursday, former US President Jimmy Carter and former First Lady Rosalind Carter visited Google. I got to give President Carter and Mrs. Carter a demo of the Segway HT.


(That's me showing Mrs. Carter how to ride a Segway.)

I was walking out of the main lobby at Google when President Carter and his enterouge of Secret Service agents were about to leave. Call it dumb luck, but someone asked me to start the segway and help show the former President how to ride it. Well, Mrs. Carter got so excited after the demo she just hopped on and drove round the lobby. It was one of those random "what the hell?!?" moments that can happen only at Google.

Monday, May 26, 2003

my first blog

So this is my coming out blog.

I've never really blogged before but it's the rage now so I guess I'll jump on the bandwagon.

Some stuff about me:

I work at Google as a product manager. I invent and help design new products and services for Google.

While many of the products I'm building aren't public yet, the one I can talk about is the Google Toolbar, which have improved the search user experience for many millions of people worldwide. (Get it at http://toolbar.google.com).

I love gadgets. Geoffrey Moore would peg me as an innovator or an early adopter. I did my graduate work at the MIT Media Lab and did a stint as an internet systems researcher at HP Labs where I got to help create new gadgets and test them out in random places like a supermarket. It was in those two places that I developed a fondness for new, wacky, and deliciously designed toys.

My 3 favorite gadets so far (and yes I've played extensively with all of them):

Apple iPod
Segway HT
Canon Powershot S230 Camera

I went to school at MIT, and got my degrees (undergrad and masters) in Electrical Engineering & Computer Science. I guess that makes me a huge dork.

I love the outdoors and in the past couple of years I've tried doing a bunch of new things, from skiing, surfing, and mountain biking. Since I'm paying a premium to live in northern California (one of the most expensive places in the US), I might as well enjoy the 320 days or so of sunshine we get every year.

And if you're hideously bored, you can write to me at wesleyc@alum.mit.edu.

Anyhow, that's enough about me...off to ponder about what I'm going to write next.