Archive for March, 2008

Hal Varian: analysis is the long-term value play

March 18th, 2008 | Bob

Raw data is an increasingly abundant and inexpensive commodity. Intelligently filtering, analyzing and visually understanding data is where the value is. Palantir invents technology and products that enables human analysts to harness the power of computers in an intuitive way to quickly and deeply analyze large amounts of data.

The value of data analysis as a career was recently emphasized by Hal Varian in the Freakonomics blog in The New York Times. Hal is an internationally known economist who is currently serving as Google’s Chief Economist while on leave from his three professorships at the University of California at Berkeley.

Q: Your job sounds extremely interesting. What jobs would you recommend to a young person with an interest, and maybe a bachelors degree, in economics?

A: If you are looking for a career where your services will be in high demand, you should find something where you provide a scarce, complementary service to something that is getting ubiquitous and cheap. So what’s getting ubiquitous and cheap? Data. And what is complementary to data? Analysis. So my recommendation is to take lots of courses about how to manipulate and analyze data: databases, machine learning, econometrics, statistics, visualization, and so on. [emphasis added]

James Gosling comes to visit

March 11th, 2008 | Ari

james gosling as a south park character

Following the discovery that our offices were the birthplace of Java (or least the place where it had its childhood), I invited James Gosling to come visit. For those that don’t know who James Gosling is, he’s more-or-less the father of Java. Java started as a project of James Gosling’s in 1991; today, 17 years later, he’s still at Sun, in charge of guiding the Java platform into the future.

How does one invite such a luminary to come visit one’s offices? One guesses what his email address is and sends him an email out of the blue:

James,

My name is Ari Gordon-Schlosberg, an engineer at Palantir Technologies. I recently became interested in the storied history of our current facilities at 100 Hamilton Ave. in Palo Alto. As Java programmers, our engineering team is really excited to be working in the same place that gave the world Java.

You may not have heard of Palantir, but we’re working on some pretty interesting problems, using Java to build large-scale analysis applications that really push forward the state-of-the-art. We’ve won some accolades for our use of Swing by Romain Guy. If you felt like dropping by the next time you’re in the valley, we’d love to have you come by, see your old digs, and take a peek at what we’re working on.

Sincerely,

Ari Gordon-Schlosberg

To quote the Microsoft Program Manager’s book of proverbs: 90% of making things happen is sending email.

So James dropped by one Thursday for demos, lunch, and schmoozing with our engineers.

The first order of business was to demo our software to James. We got a bunch of the senior engineers together and showed him an abbreviated demo of both Palantir Government and Palantir Finance. We focused less on the problem-space aspects of the software and more on how we’re using Java to build the application. We went over how both of our apps are completely written in Java and that our GUIs are built with custom Swing components.

The most memorable part of the conversation went something like this:

LEAD DEV: So… what do you think of our applications?

GOSLING: It makes me want to weep.

LEAD DEV: Uh… ?

GOSLING: Yeah, we’ve been working on this infrastructure for years to be able to build applications like this and finally someone is doing it.

jag.jpg

The rest of the visit was spent talking about Java, its history and its future. Topics ranged from why it’s hard to get dinosaurs like cable companies and mobile carriers to use modern technology to some of the complication in building an optimizing JIT compiler.

After lunch, I walked him to the elevator to see him off. We said our goodbyes and he stepped into the elevator, which was already occupied by the mailman making his rounds. As the doors closed, I hear the mailman say to James:

“Well, I haven’t seen you around here in a while.”

Our offices: the birthplace of Java

March 4th, 2008 | Ari

100 Hamilton Ave., Palo Alto

Palantir started in a very small office on Sand Hill Rd. For a time (while between offices), all work was done in a founder’s bedroom. In late 2005, the Palantir moved to medium-sized, nondescript suite on Page Mill Rd., just across the street from Hewlett-Packard in south Palo Alto. I joined a few months later, as the fifteenth employee. Since that time, we’ve sextupled in size and we’re currently pushing a triple-digit headcount!

We almost ran out of space last year, but managed to find a fantastic office space in downtown Palo Alto, at the intersection of Hamilton and Alma. At the time we acquired the space, we were told that it had been the home of Digital Equipment Corporation’s Western Research Lab. I mentioned this to an acquaintance of mine who mentioned, offhandedly, that this same set of offices was where Java was developed.

A few weeks ago, I got curious about this potentially dangling reference and decided to see if I could transmute it from rumor into fact. It sure would be neat if the fundamental technology that underlies our software was first developed in the very offices in which we work.

Some quick research confirmed the rumors and they’re all true! After the jump, the history of 100 Hamilton Ave.
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