I’ll be celebrating my birthday in Pittsburgh

I’ll be in Pittsburg on January 20, celebrating my 41st birthday (which is on January 18) with a bunch of geeks at the Pittsburgh Indus Entrepreneurs (I’ll be a panelist and Bob Evans of Information Week will be the moderator — funny enough I once interviewed for a job with Bob). I wanna get together a road trip to Clevland to see the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. What other trouble should we get in? The Pittsburgh Webloggers are sure excited!

DotNet Rocks on the road

Carl Franklin just wrote. He took Dotnet Rocks on the road. You can follow along. It’s an Internet radio show for .NET programmers. Pretty fun and informative too.

Ajay’s car revealed on TechCrunch

Remember when I was bragging about getting a look at the technology in Ajay’s Juneja’s car? Damn it’s the coolest car I’ve ever ridden in (my son thinks so too, he got a look at it recently too). Well, today Michael Arrington of TechCrunch got a look and brags about the car too. His natural language speech processing system is really superb. I hear Microsoft has something similar in the works. I wonder how it compares? Is this stuff important? Oh, yeah! Bill Gates has been promising this kind of stuff for years. We’re about to see an explosion of voice recognition systems. Ajay says his is lightweight enough that he could run it on a small MP3 playing device, for instance. Oh, now you’re starting to see the commercial value of voice. “Play Black Eyed Peas Shutup” you could say. And it’d start playing.

The Fellini geek dinner, iPod version

Hey, Steve Jobs, stick THIS into your video iPod! Done by Enric Teller. Hey, it works on other things too (I watched it on my TabletPC). But cool video. I like the format of putting little URLs into the video stream.

Sitting here with Buzz talking about Google’s Zeitgeist conference

I’m sitting here with Buzz Bruggeman, CEO of ActiveWords. He picked me up from the airport tonight. I have spent the last few hours telling him all about the Google Zeitgeist conference.

They asked me not to blog about it, mostly because some of the executives that spoke there from Google competitors asked to have it be off the record and not for blogging. The speakers were pretty open and I could see why they might not want to be quoted.

I just wanted to send a public message to Larry, Sergey, Eric and the rest of the Google team: thank you! Thank you! Thank you!

I have to say that everyone at Google treated me extremely well. They didn’t tell me any secrets (although I picked up a few hints) but they were, to a person, nice, smart, and fun to be around. I felt like I was at Microsoft. In fact, if it weren’t for the color logo on the building, I wouldn’t know that I had left Redmond. My head hurt. Being around 450 smart people for two days does that to you.

When I presented to them this morning I stepped off the stage and into the audience. Why? You should have seen who was in the audience. Folks who run the world’s greatest media properties in the world. The librarian of congress was sitting in the first row. Many of the world’s top CEOs and VPs (a VP from GE followed my talk). I was struck by how much better the conversations I was having around the event were than the presentations (and there were some awesome presentations - the kind you’d see keynoting at the SXSW or PopTech! or “D” conferences). If I had a suggestion for the Google’ers it’d be to make the format more conversational. This thing needed an unconference format in the worst way. The expertise that was sitting in the audience was awe inspiring.

I’m very honored that Eric Schmidt (and Gary Boles, who was the planner) invited me to speak to this audience. We might be hard core competitors, but I certainly admire Google a lot and have ever since that day in 1998 when I did my first search on Google (it was for the word “NetMeeting” and the result set that came back was so much better than all the other engines out there that I switched immediately).

Having Vint Cerf come up to me after my speech and say “great speech” is one of the highlights of my life. I will never forget that. I hope I get to return the favor someday.

It’s actually a good thing they asked me not to blog because if they didn’t limit me from talking here I would have added onto the Google hype pile. Some of the relationships I made, though, will definitely show up on my blog in the future.

MTV presents ‘notorious B.G.’

Bill Gates on MTV? What the heck? I’ll record that on my Slingbox!