PHOTO: JACK HIDARY COLLECTION
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Jack Hidary is
currently an entrepreneur and philanthropist,
through the Prism Fund and the Hidary Foundation,
respectively. As the former cofounder and chairman
of Vista Research, he continues as an advisor to
Standard & Poor's and Vista (now a McGraw-Hill
company). He has also served as the former CEO and
chairman of EarthWeb, an Internet software provider,
based in New York City.
Spectrum
Online: As a leading Internet entrepreneur,
how would you describe the current environment in which
those who would like to start their own technology
company find themselves?
Jack Hidary:
The environment for starting a company is
better than it has ever been. The fact is that you can
start up with far less funding than in the ‘90s, because
you can outsource and use hosted services for all your
technology, for infrastructure, outsourcing call
centers, and customer service—you can really start up a
company very quickly, and the usual time to market is
really cut by almost 80 or 90 percent. So, first, it's a
much better environment. In terms of funding, we may not
be as awash in funds, but there is still plenty of money
out there, billions of dollars looking for good
companies right now.
SOL: Where do
you see Internet technology going—where are the new
opportunities?
JH: In terms
of Internet technology, I would really have to answer
that in two parts. The first part would be about
technology that we see and the second would be about
technology that we don't see. More and more technology
is getting embedded in other devices, in other areas,
and the best technology is technology you never see.
Yes, there is technology that you do see, and eBay is
part of that, and Amazon and those many different Web
sites that make our lives easier, but there's a lot of
technology that is getting embedded in all sorts of
devices. I just read about a new oven that one can
direct via the Internet to make sure the meal is cooked
and prepared on time, and it actually is a refrigerator
as well. You put your meal into the refrigerator/oven in
the morning and make sure it's cooked by 7:15 that
night—you control it by the Net. So with Net-enabled
devices, WAP-enabled phones, the convergence of cellular
technology with the Internet is a critical development.
One example of that convergence is going to be MP3 with
cellular technology. The MP3 players such as iPod are
really a detour off the main highway. The main highway
is really cellular platforms that include MP3, because
that has four functions—download, purchase, playing, and
feedback (voting and things like that)—whereas an iPod
does only one thing: you can just play it. So the
cell-based mobile entertainment platform really is where
the Net is going.
SOL: What
makes the task of starting a new technology business
different from, say, a financial one?
JH:
Interesting that you should ask that. I've done both.
Any business today certainly needs technology, so
there's no escaping technology—that's a commonality. But
I would say that if you're in a technology business for
technology's sake, where you're actually producing
technology, there I think that the traditional cycle of
data and then product releases really is going away.
Even Microsoft is going away from that. The traditional
nomenclature of definitive dates and releases is really
something that I think will fade into history. I think
what we're seeing more are clusters of users, each using
products in different ways, each at different stages of
the product, and with the hosted platforms now becoming
the predominant form of software delivery. The idea of a
rollout (in terms of actually delivering software and
downloads) I think again is a vestigial portion of the
software industry.