Home Invites Blogs Chat Events Forums Groups Members News Photos Videos
Home > News > Post Content

A Brief History of Silicon Valley, the Region That Revolutionizes How We Do Everything (373 hits)


If you live in Silicon Valley, chances are that you are reading this article from your iPhone, while riding in an Uber car to the company you work at that holds the next world-changing technology.

But it goes beyond the technology we see and hold in our hands and includes all the industries the Valley has helped flourish, providing growth for technology that shapes our lives in ways many of us not only don’t understand, but don’t even know. The minds and innovation that live and thrive here hold the keys to future technology innovation. The San Francisco the Bay Area receives more than 50 percent of the country’s VC funding.

Silicon Valley offers unparalleled access to high-quality engineers, a risk-taking culture, venture capitalists and superb universities. But the reason this particular spot ended up at the heart of the technology industry might surprise you. It all starts with Sputnik.

Americans were brokenhearted when Russia beat the United States in the space race with the launch of Sputnik 1. NASA was created, and NASA needed high-powered components to be developed in order to put the first person on the moon. Fulfilling that need was Fairchild Semiconductor, which was founded in the Bay Area in the midst of Cold War competition.

The seminal event was the spark that ignited Silicon Valley’s innovative, risk-taking culture five decades ago and it has truly shaped the way our lives have been, and will continue to be, enhanced by technology. If not for Sputnik we would not have witnessed the massive technology innovations that spawned from Fairchild Semiconductor and “Fairchildren” companies like Intel, AMD and NVIDIA. This was just the beginning. A flourishing hardware industry emerged. As a result, the software and Internet industries also flourished.

Bay Area innovation is changing the way we do everything – from Uber disrupting the taxi industry, to Twitter disrupting the media industry and Facebook disrupting the communications industry. One can even argue that Barack Obama is president partially as a result of embracing social media technologies and Salesforce’s cloud-based software for campaign management – talk about a political disruption! In truth, you can look at any industry that has yet to be optimized by tech and bet that in the not so distant future it will experience a revolution in part due to innovations from Silicon Valley.

Related: Why We Need Another Sputnik Moment

Think about the transportation sector, an industry that hasn’t changed much in the last half century, but is on the precipice of complete technological disruption. Automated, self-driving cars are something we already see sharing our Bay Area roads, but in as little as five years these cars will likely be broadly available, instituting a massive disruption in the way we commute. Longer-term, this disruption will also offer a sizable boost to economic growth, with the number of accidents falling because of this sensor-based self-driving technology.

The opportunity for mobile commerce and communication are also limitless. While these are areas that receive a lot of air time, it’s breathtaking to think that each of us with a smartphone holds more power in the palm of our hand than every computer we used to put a person on the moon (take that, Sputnik!), or that a child in Africa has more and faster access to information than Bill Clinton did in the 1990s. These revolutionary communications tools have worked to keep rogue governments in check, spurred political revolutions and enabled countries without sophisticated, tech-enabled banking systems to able to flourish, thanks to smartphone computing and the advent of Bitcoin. In short, the disruptive power of technology can, and will, rock every industry as we know it on a global scale.

Still more industry-disrupting companies will be born in the Bay Area over the next decade, leveraging technologies via the Internet of Things (IoT) movement or, in true Valley style, creating an entirely new movement altogether.

Related: Mobile + Sharing Economy + Internet of Things = the Coming Economic Boom

As an investor, the best investments are platform solutions because they own the ecosystem and are technologies that have the ability to scale and grow. Facebook, LinkedIn, eBay and even YouTube (as a media platform) are great examples of platform-based approaches that have scaled, with skyrocketing numbers of users, but also content or applications that run on top of them. It starts as one platform and morphs into something much bigger. The healthcare industry is beginning to see the platform tectonic shift that will change the way we all give and receive medical services. Once we address cloud-based security issues, enterprise public cloud computing will also flourish.

Other regions have tried to emulate what the Bay Area has done with little success. The region’s technological prowess isn’t just due to great minds and high-quality schools like Stanford and UC Berkeley. If this were the case, then Oxford and Cambridge would make London a dominant tech center. Silicon Valley is a fertile technology crescent 50 years in the making. It is the product of Sputnik-induced competition, a 1960s induced cultural renaissance and an open-minded, risk-taking approach where failure is accepted. Silicon Valley cannot be replicated anywhere else, but the effects of its innovation will continue to be shared around the world.

Related: What Makes Silicon Valley Successful? Not What You Think


Sign in or Post as Guest

ChadT

mershe123

Special Comment
2 DAYS AGO
@mershe123 : "It is at this time that I now pronounce you 'Spammer' and 'SPAM.' You may now kiss your SPAM..!"

FlagShareLikeReply
Powered by Livefyre
VIEW COMMENTS (0)
117
275
116
Cloud Computing Innovation Health Care Technology Silicon Valley

INNOVATION
2 min read
Ralph Baer, Video-Game Pioneer, Dies at 92

Tech News for Your Bottom Line
Get the latest news and opportunities in tech each week.

Ralph Baer, Video-Game Pioneer, Dies at 92
Image credit: bitte8bit | Flickr
58
207
20
Comment
Nina Zipkin
NINA ZIPKIN
ENTREPRENEUR STAFF
Staff Reporter. Covers media, tech, startups, culture and workplace trends.

DECEMBER 8, 2014
Ralph H. Baer, the creator of the Magnavox Odyssey (known as the "Brown Box"), the first commercial console for home video games, died at the age of 92 on Saturday.

A pioneer in the now $93 billion gaming industry, it's likely you've played with the games and systems Baer invented or influenced. In addition to building the first light gun -- a gun-shaped controller that allows users to shoot objects on screen -- he created the forerunner to Atari's Pong game as well as the colorful electronic memory game Simon, which made its debut in 1978 at Studio 54 and continues to be sold today.

Related: Across the U.S., Bars Are Letting You Play Your Favorite Childhood Video Games

In 1971, while employed at Sanders Associates, a defense contractor in Nashua, N.H., Baer filed for the first ever video-game patent. His papers are now housed in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and he was awarded the National Medal of Technology and Innovation in 2006.

So, what can entrepreneurs learn from Baer's legacy? The biggest takeaway is this: he never stopped inventing. And, as is the case with the best entrepreneurs, his work has inspired generations of new innovators, with a promise of more to come.
Posted By: Christopher Alarcon
Wednesday, December 10th 2014 at 2:46PM
You can also click here to view all posts by this author...

Report obscenity | post comment
Share |
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
Forward This Article Entry!
News Home

(Advertise Here)
Who's Online
>> more | invite 
Latest Member Activity
maurice muhammad just edited his profile. 11:38AM
muhammed firat ozturk just edited his profile. 05:18AM
kyle dinapoli just posted a article entitled '8 entrepreneurial skills you should teach your kids '. 05:45PM
kyle dinapoli just became a new member. 05:37PM
adrienne lam just posted a article entitled 'eleven financial fundamentals every small business ceo must know'. 05:08PM
adrienne lam just posted a article entitled 'how to improve employee wellness'. 11:25AM
paarth garg just posted a blog entitled '4 steps to growing your business now'. 11:19PM
sarah fattah just edited her profile. 10:38PM
sarah fattah just posted a article entitled 'how the vc pitch process is failing female entrepreneurs'. 09:55PM
sarah fattah just became a new member. 09:48PM
shazim chaudhary just posted a video entitled 'what to include in a business plan for your app idea'. 08:34PM
shazim chaudhary just became a new member. 08:23PM
>> more | invite friends