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  • Epoca de Entrevistas con Empresarios, Autores y CEOs

    Mi impresión es que muchos piensan que para tener un blog hay que saber mucho.  Soy ejemplo que comprueba que esto no es cierto. :)  Digo esto porque he estado fascinado estos días con las conversaciones que he podido sostener con personas impresionantes.  Solamente en este periodo he podido hablar con dos jóvenes de Argentina con logros impresionantes de innovación digital, dos CEOs exitosos de la industria de software y la autora de uno de mis libros favoritos, “The Company of the Future.”

    Para la mayor parte de mi vida he leído sobre y analizado tendencias de la tecnología y solo es ahora que me lance como empresario dentro de este ámbito.  De pronto por eso me estimula tanto interactuar con personas que comparten esta misma pasión ya sea porque lo están ejecutando o porque lo han estudiado a fondo.

    Lo surreal de esta época en mi vida es que, al mismo tiempo que estoy hablando con estas personas exitosas (de America Latina y por fuera), estoy dictando unas conferencias para la Presidencia de la Republica de Colombia a unos jóvenes.  Por falta de tiempo, he estado dictando las conferencias y saliendo tan pronto termino y es difícil saber si mi mensaje le llega a algunos de estos jóvenes.

    Tengo que ser honesto y decir que mi impresión ha sido que la mayoría de estos jóvenes tienen  otras cosas en sus mentes que los impide entender el mensaje.  Sin embargo, tengo que creer que una fracción de los que escuchan nuestras charlas, logran captar que con pasión e interés en algún tema, tienen el potencial de lograr grandes cosas gracias a los cambios generados por el avance de las tecnologías de Internet.  Por lo menos eso es lo que yo me digo a mi mismo. J

  • Want to Produce Great iPhone Games? Argentina has the Tools You Need

    My conversation with Ricardo Quesada, creator of Cocos2d iPhone Games Development Platform

    Ricardo Quesada of Cocos2dIt’s not every day that you get to talk to a top iPhone tools developer who also is a unicyclist.  Ricardo Quesada is unique Argentinean who’s made digital innovation part of his professional life for more than 10 years. After leaving his post at a top security software firm called Core Security Technologies (founded in Argentina), Ricardo decided to jump into something he had always found fun, creating games.

    After some jam sessions with some buddies who shared his passion for the Python programming language as well as creating games, a game development platform called Cocos2D began to take shape as an open source project.  Though their initial focus was creating games for the PC, when Apple released the production version of the iPhone Software Development Kit (SDK) by 2008, Cocos2D had already been ported for that platform and was rapidly gaining fans all over the globe (e.g., US, Europe, Japan, China, Korea, etc.).

    By the end of 2008 at least 40 iPhone games developed using Cocos2D were available with some of these hitting the Top 10 list.  Around May of 2009, Stick Wars, developed with the Cocos2D framework was the number one selling app on the Apple App Store for three weeks making it one of the best selling apps.  Fortunately, such successes have resulted in donations to the open source project from grateful developers.

    Thanks to improvements that Ricardo and the active Cocos2D community continue to make, this framework continues to add functionality on top of an already impressive OpenGL graphics engine and developer-friendly design. In January 2009, The Registered voted Cocos2D the number one open source project for the iPhone.

    All of this is a testament to Ricardo, a talented developer committed to following his passion, as well as a growing community of professionals (technical and otherwise) in Latin America who understand that the world has changed.  The Internet is an instant onramp to a global marketplace of ideas and opportunities no matter where you happen to reside. Entrepreneurs like Ricardo realize that old paradigms of emerging world professionals being content with less interesting challenges are no longer necessary when you can instantly have access to the global marketplace.

    Though is only at version 0.8 with the Cocos2D framework, he is working feverishly to get it to level that he feels will deserve the 1.0 designation.  From a business perspective, it will be interesting to see where he takes the business model, which today consists of selling some sample code that he developed when he was creating his own games with the framework.  For the moment, he is intelligently focusing on making sure he is attending to the needs of his developer users.

    Nevertheless, one can’t help speculating the possibilities for creating a commercial version with strong collaborative features that could enable developers and non-developers at disparate locations to quickly brainstorm, prototype and develop new games.   Another target audience, in the future, may even be digital agencies without deep game development expertise looking to quickly and collaboratively prototype game concepts for their clients within new marketing initiatives. Whatever develops, one thing seems to be assured: Ricardo will have a lot of fun.

  • Innovacion Digital en America Latina

    Recientemente, tuve la oportunidad de hablar con dos empresarios Argentinos enfocados en innovación digital.  Aunque uno de ellos,  Emiliano Kargieman, lleva años como empresario exitoso como fundador de varias empresas innovadoras y el otro, Ricardo Quesada, comienzo su empresa recientemente, ambos tienen algo en común: compiten a nivel global.  Escribire una articulo mas largo sobre esto que aparecerá en Dinero.com. Sin embargo, tengo que decir que es increíblemente estimulante hablar con personas como Ricardo y Emiliano y saber que la innovación digital en América Latina es una realidad que cada dia crece en su impacto.  También, sus ejemplos serviran de modelo durante mis conferencias de estas semanas que estoy dictando para los jovenes de algunas instituciones educativas en Bogota.

  • Digital Innovation is on its Way from Latin America

    A Conversation with Emiliano Kargieman, Argentinian, digital innovator and founder of Core Security Technologies


    emilianoWhen you start a blog, everyone tells ya, it’s important to choose a topic that you’re passionate about.  I’ve got a number of hobbies (none, very healthy) such as smoking stogies, watching movies and laying on the beach.  However, I’m passionate about digital innovation in Latin America and that’s what I want to write about.  Part of the reason may be because I like thinking out of the box or I just like the underdog storyline and believe that something like creating world-class hi-tech firms in Latin America is possible.

    This theory is all well and good, but there’s nothing like feeling of talking with and/or meeting someone who’s actually accomplished it.  That’s the sensation I got while talking with Emiliano Kargieman the other day.  Emiliano, a mathematician by training, wanted to focus on big challenges to flex his math and programming skills so, in 1996, he decided, at the age of 19, to get together with his buddies and build a security software company focused on the international market.  Though that age might seem young to some, Emiliano had already run three companies by this time and had been programming for nine years.

    Emiliano’s self-deprecating humor belies a passion for competing in the global marketplace and half-jokingly adds that, thanks to the fact that none of the founders had an MBA, enabled them to break existing paradigms in Latin America and build a global software firm from Argentina.  I didn’t delve too deeply into this experience during my conversation with Emliano, but suffice it to say that Core Security Technologies today is a company with sales headquarters in Boston, millions of dollars in revenue, hundreds of customers around the globe and millions of dollars in Venture Capital investment.

    The focus of my discussion with the Argentinean entrepreneur was more on the future.    As a result of his success with Core Security Technologies, he decided to create an early-stage VC firm, Aconcagua Ventures, with some of his colleagues.  One of the ventures that have come out of this initiative is Popego, Inc. a 12-person company focused on filtering the information on the web through the use of Artificial Intelligence and other technologies.   The company was recently named one of the most innovative start-ups of 2008 by Techcrunch.

    Though Popego certainly has some challenges ahead of it particularly in the realm of customer acquisition, it has a lot of sharp minds behind it as well as a backer with demonstrated success in the marketplace.  The pain point that Emiliano is attacking is a real one (accelerating clutter and noise on the web) and quite ambitious.  Basically, its all part of a realization that is more obvious today than it was in 1996 when Emiliano started: emerging markets such as Latin America have a role to play in terms of global digital innovation.  It’s no longer a question of access to the global stage, but more a matter of whether Latin American entrepreneurs decide to participate.

    As he mentions, in a world where cloud computing is placing enormous processing resources at the disposal of start-ups and the internet at as medium permits global access in an instant, the old paradigms in Latin America (and other markets) of focusing exclusively on local markets are obsolete.   Indeed, I believe that, although he represents an exception today in Latin America, as he and other entrepreneurs in emerging markets continue to prove themselves, they will provide validity to the thesis that the distinction is not so much one of geographic location, but more, as Emiliano explains, risk adversity.

    As a mathematician, Emiliano sees no reason to expend the same effort for little return.  He admires entrepreneurs such as Jeff Bezos who didn’t just focus his efforts in offering a percentage more books than his competitors, but thought in terms of orders of magnitude of improvement.   Along these lines, he believes in organizing Latin American talent around solutions that offer orders of magnitude more value.

    True to his philosophy, he is focusing on a big, challenging problems.  As he elucidates, IBM won the hardware wars, Microsoft the software wars and Google the information wars.  The next space up for grabs is what he calls, “Information Contextualization” or making the web more meaningful for each user and this is where Popego is making every effort to clear a space for itself.

    Similar to the opinions expressed by the CEO of Zoho, Emiliano sees definite advantages to creating start-ups in Latin America and particularly in countries such as Argentina.  In these countries, risk is part of daily life and the vicissitudes of that countries economy only increased the ranks of entrepreneurs looking to create new value.  Also, he, as well as myself, is a fan of the initiatives that Chile is implementing to drive entrepreneurism.  The specific programs were recently detailed by UC-Berkely professor Vivek Wadhwa.

    In the end, with entrepreneurs such as Emiliano in Latin America’s ranks, I’m assured to be writing about Digital Innovation in Latin America for quite a while.