All posts by johncohn

Thursday night – Huffington Post

Insane day.. not a moment free.. way too busy.. but enjoying it somehow. My day was full of future possibilities..

Most of which seem impossible given the curret stuff I’m trying to do.. I need to clone myself.. or go crazy..

John Clone… I like it..

One cool thing that did happen is that I got a piece on education outreach published in the Huffington Post today.

It’s part of a series on Science Technology,Engineering and Math (STEM) education.   It’s part of a series that the government

is running called Change The Equation.  Most of it is around a Video Contest where companies enter short video’s about engineering

promotion. The IBM entry is here (Take a look at those and ‘like’ them if you like them)   They’re running a few blog entries from

folks (like me) to help promote the ‘Changing the Equation’ agenda on science and engineering promotion.

One of my friends challenged me on the corporate part of this.. Ie. Is it OK for uss companies to be promoting engineering careers

while they are moving jobs oversees.  I think it’s a good question. For me.. it’s an easy answer. I think  jobs will move across international boundaries with supply and demand.. those trends will naturally change with time. For the long term we need to encourage kids to consider engineering for the good it can do in the world. I truly believe that in the coming decades there will be increasing demand for math, science and technology savvy people to help change the energy and sustainability balance of the world. I believe those jobs will be more localized.. and will need to be spread out across the planet. ..

What do you all think ?

nite all, nite Sam

-me

ps. here’s the text of the Huffington Post article I wrote.

John Cohn

John Cohn

IBM Fellow

Posted: December 9, 2010 01:30 PM
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So there I was, standing naked in a parking lot in Los Angeles in the rain — on a Discovery Channel reality program called The Colony. How did I get there? Believe it or not, it all began with my love of science technology, engineering and math (STEM).

It all stated as I was growing up in the 1960s in Houston. I was completely surrounded by the space craze. I vividly remember sitting in the living room as a 10-year-old and watching the moon landing with my family. I decided then and there I was going to study engineering… and I’m really glad I did.

I ended up studying chip design at MIT, which led to a job at IBM. In my 30-year career at IBM I’ve had the chance to use my math and science skills to make chips like those used in the Playstation, Xbox and the Wii. Now I’m an IBM Fellow figuring how to use the chips we build to save electricity and manage water as part of our Smarter Planet initiative.

So how did that lead me to being naked in the rain in that parking lot scene in Los Angeles?

Well, even though I was having fun and doing well at IBM, it bugged me that fewer kids were going in to engineering. I wanted to find a way to spark the same love of science, math and engineering in today’s kids that the space program of the 1960s did in me.

That’s what got me started volunteering in local schools. Pretty soon I was doing a mad science shtick in schools all over the country. I noticed is that students were starting to connect the idea that fixing the world’s environmental, sustainability and energy problems was going to require people with science and math skills. All of a sudden I started to get pull where I once had to push.

It was about that time that I got a call from a casting agency in Hollywood about The Colony. I jumped at the chance to share my love of engineering and demonstrate sustainable science on TV. My co-Colonists and I got to show folks how to apply engineering and science concepts to survival situations. We did this while living in a dirty old warehouse for 58 days surviving on river water and rat meat. Showering meant standing out in the rain, which is how I came to be in that particular parking lot.

So that’s where my STEM education has taken me; from “one small step for man” to a parking lot in Los Angeles.

Thursday night – old friends

Tonight was our annual fathers night out.. one December night for at least the last 15 years, I’ve met up with the members of my old dad’s group for a night of not-shopping. Our original goal was to meet for dinner and beers.. then go out shopping for our wives.. Somehow in the last decade and a half.. the shopping time has decreased while the beer time increased. Tonight I don’t think any of us really did any shopping. It’s a comfortable tradition. Same place, same time.. generally the same week. We all catch up , talk about kids, work,… the weather.. the kind of small talk that you can stretch ot for 15 years.. Most of the guys I see around all the time.. some.. I only see on this night…

The group has been there for each other over some really tough stuff..   family troubles, work troubles, …9/11… Sam…  I rmember that our night out in 2006 was the first time I left the house alone after Sam died.    I remember trying to shop.. it was so , so surreal

Even now, I just cant get my head around buying stuff for xmas.. It’s not that it’s too sad….. I like christmas now.. It’s just that I don’t like the idea of aquiring more ‘stuff’

Tonight .. I did a little window shopping then gave up/ .. still it was fun to try.

We all knocked off early.. I was home befor e9…

another yearly ritual ticked off.. The calendar reminds of two other milestones… It was tonight 2 years ago that I walked outside with my glass of wine and asked the cosmos what I sjould do next.. The next day I got the call from the makers of The Colony..

Diane also reminds me that it was 30 years ago today that John Lennon was killed..    I remember standing in a museum .. not believing what I had just heard..

OK not much else in my head for tonight.. the last night (I thik) of Chanukah..

Hope everyone is staying warm…

nite all.. nite sam

-me

Tuesday night – family tree

Home again.. quiet night with family. Gabe is doing a family tree project for school . For that he had to find pictures of our family back to his great grandparents. It’s been fun talking about all the family members.. where they we’re from. where they lived, what they did, etc..

Here’s Gabe….

His folks.. looking a little grubby..

My folks

Diane’s folks

My dad’s folks..

My mom’s folks.

Diane’s mom’s folks

Diane’s dad’s folks.

Nice to have them all here with us on our kitchen table..

nite ancestors

nite all, nite sam

-me

Monday night – cloistered

Greetings from my tiny cell at the IBM hotel in Armonk NY. This is my favorite hotel in the world. The rooms are tiny.. 10 feet by 15.. I just measured. The rooms are functional, small and spare. one of the walls in each room is made of stone. Everything has a minimalist utilitarian design.. It says..’you come here to work.. not to play.. not to rest’. There;’s a scratchy bathrobe hanging on the bathroom door. You’re supposed to put that on while you work. it’s your hair shirt. your penance.. for not working harder. The whole place  reminds my of a medieval monastery.. a hundred people.. all f the IBM employees, scribbling in their journals.. typing in their laptops.. slaving over whatever they need to present tomorrow.. like me..

It’s purifying, really.. to work in this small cell.. knowing that 10 rooms on either side are doing the same thing. I feel like knocking on all their doors and asking them to come out for a midnight game of ping-pong.. ut then, I don’t like ping pong.. and I suspect they don’t either…

We’re all kindered here..  .. it’s kind of sweet and sad …

gnite all. nite sam

-me