It is a sign …

Yesterday was my last full day in Massachusetts after 30 years. I happened to be driving through Maynard, where I saw this sign leaning against a building on the sidewalk — an old Digital Equipment Corporation display advertising “Computer Based Word Processing Systems” featuring “LIST PROCESSING.” I had to stop and take a picture!

The photos of those machines are still crisp. The signs looked like they could’ve been made last week.

DEC was once the second-largest computer company in the world, headquartered right here in Maynard in a converted mill along the Assabet River. I worked in another of their buildings on Powdermill Road many years later when it housed Stratus Technologies. You could still feel the ghosts of minicomputer glory in those hallways. DEC defined an era. Then the world moved on. The company didn’t. Compaq acquired it in 1998, and the name disappeared entirely. But the signs — literal and figurative — are still here, propped up on sidewalks, remarkably well-preserved, advertising technology that predates the internet most people know.

Thirty years is a long time anywhere. Massachusetts gave me a career, a community, and more cold and snow than any reasonable person should endure. But there’s something powerful and ironic about finding a pristine DEC sign in 2026. In some ways, I think that tells you everything you need to know about a place and its relationship with time.

To me, it was a sign.

A Report from Boston’s First “Big Data Summit”

A short write-up about last night’s Big Data Summit appeared on xconomy today.

My thanks to our sponsors, Foley Hoag LLP and the wonderful team at the Emerging Enterprise Center, Infobright, Expressor Software, and Kalido.

What’s next in tech? Boston, June 25th 2009

Recap of “What’s next in Tech”, Boston, June 25th 2009

What’s next in tech: Exploring the Growth Opportunities of 2009 and Beyond, June 25th 2009.

Scott Kirsner moderated two panels during the event; the first with three Veture Capitalists and the second with five entrepreneurs.

The first panel consisted of:

– Michael Greeley, General Partner, Flybridge Capital Partners

– Bijan Sabet, General Partner, Spark Capital

– Neil Sequiera, Managing Director, General Catalyst Partners

The second panel consisted of:

– Mike Dornbrook, COO, Harmonix Music Systems (makers of “Rock Band”)

– Helen Greiner, co-founder of iRobot Corp. and founder of The Droid Works

– Brian Halligan, social media expert and CEO of HubSpot

– Tim Healy, CEO of EnerNOC

– Ellen Rubin, Founder & VP/Product of CloudSwitch

Those who asked questions got a copy of Dan Bricklin’s book, Bricklin on Technology. There was also a DVD of some other book (I don’t know what it was) that was being given away.

Show of hands at the beginning was that 100% of the people were optimistic about the recovery and the future. Nice discussion though after leaving the session, I don’t get the feeling that anyone addressed the question “What’s next in tech” head on. Most of the conversation was about what has happened in tech and a lot of discussion about Twitter and Facebook. There were a lot of questions to the panel from the audience about what their companies were doing to help young entrepreneurs.And for an audience that was supposed to contain people interested in “what’s next”, no one wanted the DVD of the book, everyone wanted the paper copies. Hmm …

There has been a lot of interesting discussion about the topic and the event. One that caught my eye was Larry Cheng’s blog.