By
Mike Ricciuti
Friday, September 30 2005 11:41 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39271436,00.htm
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--Bill Joy is putting his money--or, more accurately, his
VC firm's money--on the Web as the platform of the future.
Joy, co-founder of Sun Microsystems and a driving force behind the creation of
Berkeley Unix and Java, among other technologies, said the explosion in devices
like cell phones, PDAs and other wireless gadgets connected to the Web is
radically changing the technology industry.
He calls that phenomenon the "here" Web, because the Internet is always "here, because you access it through a device you
always carry." Joy, now a partner with the venture capital firm of Kleiner
Perkins Caulfield & Byers, made his remarks at Technology Review's Emerging
Technology Conference here this week.
It's been more than five years since Joy originally laid out his model of the
six ways people interact with the Web, ranging from the "near" Web (a PC at
arm's length) to the "D2D" or device-to-device Web, where systems arrange
themselves into mesh networks.
"The here Web will be the most important, going forward," Joy said. "People
have many devices."
Joy also speculated that such an extended Web will favor companies such as
Google that are betting on the Web as the
future platform for the most interesting and important software
applications.
He indicated that development activity on the current reigning platform--the
PC-- is beginning to stagnate. "Maybe Google replaces Microsoft at some point,
with the Web as a platform. What are the hot, interesting PC apps? Nobody's
saying anything about that."
On his switch to becoming a VC, Joy said, "I'm enjoying Kleiner. It's a more
modern organization. Sun was very hierarchical. Kleiner is very flat. We're all
peers.
Joy said he believes that the most successful ventures, whether in the
technology world or elsewhere, will be those that avoid rigid hierarchies. He
used the volatile PC business as an example. "We see that in the open-source
world. Organizations that have hierarchical structures won't be able to adapt as
quickly as these new companies. Just like when Compaq's network of dealers
couldn't compete with Dell's direct model," he said.
On the growing popularity of voice over Internet Protocol technology such as
Skype, Joy said there's still plenty of room for improvement. "Personally, I'm
very frustrated by voice. If you leave me a voice mail, it's not likely I'll get
around to answering it. But there is a warmth to voice. It's a media that has
been difficult to integrate with the Web experience. I have a friend who holds
his notebook up to his head to use Skype. We need new formats."