Creekside

No better time than now


Leave a comment

Legal Disrupted. A Case of the Innovator’s Dilemma

From the Mobile Helix blog

Maureen's avatarLINK App by Mobile Helix Blog

lawyer-450205_150 Scales of JusticeNo profession is immune from disruption. A business with a value of $400 billion per year is a attractive target for newcomers, ranging from financial institutions to startups. Can legal ward off its challengers? Not without changing.

“The Innovator’s Dilemma” refers to Clayton Christensen’s theory that successful companies are too focused on customers’ current needs and that they fail to adopt technologies that will fulfill customers’ future or unspoken needs. When the goose is laying the golden eggs, it can be challenging to focus on what happens after the goose is gone. Think of Blockbuster’s collapse to Netflix or Amazon’s decision to develop the Kindle. The question for the mammoth book retailer was whether they should dig in their heels and fight ebooks which threatened to cannibalize their hard copy book sales. Jeff Bezos was savvy to the Innovator’s Dilemma and chose to lead in ebooks. Today Amazon controls 67% of…

View original post 635 more words


Leave a comment

Pretty pink sunset glow over frosty Central Park

Spectacular view of Manahattan. Temps were in the teens on Sarturday.
Unfortunately, on the east side a fire has been blazing in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, for over 24 hours. There is a lot of ash in the air. Perhaps it contributed to these colors over Manhattan?
Headed to NYC for LegalTech this week. Today 4 to 8 inches of snow predicted. Highs this week below freezing.

Thanks to Inga for letting us reblog your gorgeous photos. Maureen

ingasardasorensen's avatarInga's Angle

Pretty pink sunset glow over frosty Central Park today.

TP Pink sunset sky over Central Park

View original post


Leave a comment

Best $159 I ever spent

I bought my first place in Mountain View in early 2002. It was not long after September 11th, 2001. The real estate market more or less froze after 9/11/2001. No one felt certain about the future. But I wanted to get into a house, or in my case, a townhouse. I found one in January and moved in a few weeks later.

In getting to know the shortcuts and access points to my neighborhood I ran across the Steven Creek Trail. It called for a bike. One of our engineering executives used to ride his bike to work everyday. He recommended that rather than start with an expensive bike that I go to The Cardinal on El Camino, across from Stanford, and buy a used one. Great idea.

The Cardinal is a long standing bike shop in Palo Alto. When I went in there were two very experienced guys working. I had no inking of what I wanted. We talked. We picked out a couple. I rode them around in the parking lot and chose the one which felt the best. Nothing fancy. One hundred and fifty-nine dollars.

That was eleven years and three houses ago. Still riding the same bike.


Leave a comment

Two for Two: “Citizenfour” and “Top Five”

For the past three years at the holidays I’ve made an effort to try to see a couple movies. A little change of pace for me. I’m glad that The Interview was released, but for me time is too precious to spend a couple of hours on that film.

First I saw “Citizenfour,” Laura Poitras’ film on Edward Snowden. Snowden contacted her in 2013. She filmed him in his hotel room in Hong Kong both before and while the story broke. I don’t see Snowden as either villain or hero. But what is clear from the film is that being a dutiful little whistle blower and working it through the system at the NSA or his local elected officials (as President Obama suggested that he should have done) would not have yielded results. Others in the NSA tried before him and they were intimated and ostracized. It is fascinating to watch Snowden planning the release of the data with Glenn Greenwald in that hotel room in Hong Kong over 8 days. He is articulate, polite, gracious, very knowledgeable. Likeable. He’s not a cowboy or a high fiver. Knows that he may well end up in prison. He appears genuine in his intent to reveal the extent to which the government is using millions of people’s personal data. I would not say that he has no ego – I think that some level of ego is needed to carry out a mission like his, but he’s not leading with his ego. In the film he says that for the government to be using this level personal data should be a matter of debate in our country. That’s correct. Is that debate taking place in the aftermath? I’m not certain that it is.

A couple of days later I saw Chris Rock’s “Top Five.” Rock has always struck me as a smart person. He knows what sells and he has delivered it. He can be darned funny to boot. So, I thought that I would see what Chris Rock is up to. From what I had read in recent interviews, I was concerned that he might be going down the Woody Allen path, throwing the baby (comedy) out with the bath water (wanting to direct real story which is more than cheap laughs). Good news – “Top Five” worked for me. It was funnier than I had expected, not a “Hannah and Her Sisters.” It’s a good story, if a bit “cute,” as in convenient, in a few places.There are some fun cameos, I won’t spoil the surprises. And Rosario Dawson is strong and beautiful. It’s good entertainment.

Next? I’m considering streaming “A Fish Called Wanda.” I’ve never seen it.


Leave a comment

Abalone at the Farmer’s Market

Image

We had a new addition today at the Mountain View Farmer’s Market today, abalone. As the abalone stall is a new addition, it was more like show and tell. And a good show. The abalones themselves are beautiful, rainbow-hued. The fellow working in the stall was displaying live abalone front and center. He was showing the children circled around the abalone’s eyeballs. Eyeballs?

Commercial abalones are all farmed these days. No commercial harvesting in the wild is allowed in CA. I believe that there is still an allowance for the amateur diver. One must be a very powerful swimmer to dive for abalone. Only free-diving, using one’s own breath, is permitted.

The Farmer’s Market is the last stop before home on my Sunday bike rides. Always something to revel in at the market, then head for home.


Leave a comment

Life expectancy

It’s not released yet, so we don’t know. Will people throng to shell out $59 for a Tikker watch which counts down one’s remaining life expectancy? If so, then I think that we are indeed in a bubble and it is about to burst.

(There’s nothing transcendental involved. Tikker uses a common algorithm used by the federal government to estimate a person’s life expectancy per @SusanDJames.)

Here is how to think about life expectancy:

go for a walk,

if you have children, take them with you,

breathe the air,

listen,

look,

maybe take in a wide vista,

remind yourself,

we are here for a very brief time.

Life is sweet and it is fleeting. I don’t need a watch to tell me that. 


Leave a comment

New Year’s Day

I was having such a fun/exasperating time getting this new blog setup that I had to make an effort to tear myself away to go for a ride. Good move. When I got to the bay the day was so gorgeous that I wanted to ride forever. The day could not have been more beautiful. Blue sky, sunshine. Always a scenic ride, today was remarkable in that I saw a great blue heron, white pelicans confused by the warm weather, and an elegant egret mere feet away. And me with only my lousy cell phone camera. Ach. On the trail, cheerful strangers wishing each other happy new year. A perfect day to slow down, appreciate our world and reflect.