*http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/click_online/6929569.stm


The new wave of Silicon Valley start-ups

By Spencer Kelly*

Silicon Valley is the southern part of San Francisco's Bay Area, stretching
from the city to San Jose. This is one of the top research and development
centres in the world; wherever you look someone is having a good idea.

According to the Wall Street Journal, half of the 20 most inventive towns in
the US are in Silicon Valley.

Nowadays the place is not just about silicon chip makers; all technology is
here.

It is a string of satellite towns full of clever people, incredibly
successful tech companies, and hopefuls looking to make the big time.

This place was the centre of the dotcom bubble of the mid 90s, when
investors were pouring money into anything with a dot in the title. Of
course it was also the hardest hit when the bubble burst. For every
surviving big player, hundreds went under.

Now the optimism is back, along with the money.

Cash call

Each week there are meetings, networking events and presentations in which
hopeful start-ups attempt to garner interest from investors.

Vincent Lauria, Tech meetup organiser said: "Hi-tech meetups have actually
grown phenomenally. We started out pretty small, six people first met up. We
met every month and kept growing gradually, bigger and bigger until it hit
critical mass and started growing on its own.

"We are now over 1,500 people," he said.

"I try to pick companies that either I feel are on a very good course to do
well, or have a really unique idea that nobody else is really touching."

It is often the simple things that take off. Take Data Robotics which makes
high capacity home storage systems called Drobo.

Geoff Barrall, Data Robotics boss, said: "Today's storage solutions are all
very intensive; you have to move data around, you have to copy files, you
have to worry about backing up data.

"The Drobo does all of that for you. So once the data is on Drobo it's going
to worry about keeping it safe, it's going to worry about letting you add
more storage and grow into the future without you having to do anything at
all."

Simplifying storage and back-up has tapped into a big market. Data Robotics
claims it is selling its $500 (£250) boxes faster than it can make them.

Green machines

It is not just computer technology that folks in the valley are working on.
Green technology is winning investors too, said Drew Clark from IBM Capital
Ventures.

"I think [one of] the major drivers in today's buzz in Silicon valley is
clean tech or energy tech or energy 2.0, whatever we are calling it these
days," said Mr Clark.

"If you look at venture capital statistics it is now the third highest place
that money is going into.

One of the green innovations dreamed up is a highly efficient solar panel.

The panels produced by SolFocus reflect sunlight to a central point to
harness the energy.

Unlike flat panels it means the expensive materials used to convert the
energy to electricity are concentrated in one place. SolFocus claims to use
1/1000th of the area needed by flat panels, which keeps the manufacturing
costs low.

Gary Conley, SolFocus explained: "These cells have efficiency over double
that of the best silicon today. We concentrate the sun 500 times on that
small amount of cell, hence the 1000th of the amount of material used, or
the expensive part.

"When there is no sun, or you can't see the solar disc, our panels produce
zero power. They only produce power in bright sunny locations or when the
sun is out."

Contracts have already been signed with the Spanish government for a large
scale solar farm in Southern Spain.

Mash-ups

The other boom area is something called mash-ups which build on the crop of
richly interactive websites that are part of that nebulous movement called
Web 2.0.

This has given us sites such as RateItAll.com, which lets people express
their like or dislike of almost anything, and Like.com, which lets you shop
by searching for stuff similar to what you have already bought.

"Mash-ups come from hip hop DJs mashing together sounds to create new
sounds," said Mr Clark from IBM.

"Web 2.0 really was fundamentally about the web enabling that kind of thing,
but not necessarily music but other kinds of content.

"Google went out there with Google Maps and Google Earth and provided the
early mash-ups. So a lot of creative people came together and monetised it.

"They basically said real estate listings are boring, so what if we took the
text and the geographical coordinates and mash them up on a map so you can
actually look at the house and see where it is.

The next big idea could be very local too. In the age of virtual networks
many of us know more about Apple than our next door neighbour.
Fatdoor.comaims to tell you more - if you are interested.

Although research suggests that fewer than 1% of tech start-ups will be
successful in attracting enough cash, it is not hard to see the potential
returns if you pick a winner.

Peter Rip, venture capitalist, said: "A lot of the things that I see in web
2.0 are features, they are not really businesses and they are frankly pretty
easy to replicate.

"Two people with a couple of computers here in South Park can do a lot of
things very quickly, so the risk you have as an investor is to have
something unique and differentiate it.

Mr Rip told the story of two developers who had worked on a project for four
years before they showed it to him.

"So they had a deep intellectual property and they actually had invented
something that wasn't easy to replicate, he said. "That gives them a barrier
to go and build a business around it."


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke