Folks:

As can be seen on any Google Maps, in the 200 block of University Avenue, there 
is VANS shop with a giant Star Wars display in the window.  


On my way to a meeting at the Institute for the Future, I walk in and declare, 
"I'd like some Yoda shoes."  Without a blink, the clerk says, "Like everyone 
else, you'll have to wait for June 1st."  


So, I try on some of the same cut-of-shoe.  I'm a 10 1/2 -- so now I can order 
them online.


Star Wars really means something around here.  This is where the SDI flubber 
hit the road.  This is where Jay "The Leaker" Keyworth did his magic tricks.  
Way up in space (without ever getting off the ground.)  This is where the "evil 
empire" was finally defeated.  You see -- the USSR has no Silicon Valley 
(still).


The VANS generation has no idea about any of that.  They are busy designing 
hover-boards so they can flash their Yoda shoes.


The Cold War is dead; long live the Cold War.


"The Singularity gets no respect where I come from," I am told by a Whole Earth 
stalwart.


"When we started making microprocessors, there was no need to make moral 
decisions but now whatever you do is filled with moral implications," a veteran 
of Moore's Law tells me.


"The problem with Silicon Valley," an original Silicon Valley journalist 
says,"is that it's filled with really smart people without any brains."


The courtyard at the Rosewood, on Thursday's "Cougar Night." has three black 
Ferrari 458s poised by the door ready to whisk the lucky MILFs off to more 
secluded rendezvouses.


The owner/founder of Bucks walks by the table and my breakfast companion 
introduces us.  Jamis, whose account of the recent TED 2014 decorates the front 
of his "steal this menu," seems a little confused when complimented on the Abby 
Hoffman reference.


"Oh yeah, that," he concedes,"You know, they're going to start filming a 
television series here soon.  Startups pitching their deals to the VCs who eat 
here all the time."


Anil Kumar walks by and I'm introduced.  Anil was once the head of the McKinsey 
& Company offices in Silicon Valley.  Until he became the "star witness" in the 
trial of Raj Rajaratnum and his Galleon "gang of four."  It seems that his son 
has just graduated from Harvard Business School, where 100 of the 500 graduates 
got a job at McKinsey (and the other 400 wanted one.)  The junior Kumar was not 
picked.


"Remember the earliest settlers up north were the Russians," I'm reminded.  
And, in the words of someone who recently met with him for an hour, "Sergey is 
just a stoner," which gets me thinking about Dmitri Istkov and the one place on 
earth where the Singularity *is* being taken seriously.  Moscow.



It appears that the HBO comedy, "Silicon Valley," has had its intended effect.  
All is not well in Mudville.  The Empire has struck back.  Yes, you can see 
Siberia from here.



Mark Stahlman
Cardinal Hotel
Palo Alto


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