March 26, 2008 5:46 PM PDT

Silicon Valley and the Zen way

by Elinor Mills
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We're all familiar with the notion that Silicon Valley's roots lie in the Bay Area's adventure-seeking gold rush history and the mind-expanding experiments and hippie culture of the 60s.

Drue Kataoka of ValleyZen.com wields her family's 400-year-old samurai sword in a video.

(Credit: ValleyZen.com)
But you may have not realized that there are strong links between the tech start-up mindset and the Buddhist philosophy of Zen.

A blog called ValleyZen is exploring that connection.

"We believe there is a strong link between Zen and technology. The Silicon Valley spirit is incredibly Zen," says Drue Kataoka, a master Sumi-e Japanese brush painting artist who launched the blog in January with Bill Fenwick, a founder of the Silicon Valley lawfirm Fenwick & West.

What does being Zen really mean? According to the blog, it is exemplified by simplicity and elimination of clutter, naturalness, asymmetry, and tranquility. Other aspects include living in the present moment, acting spontaneously, being free of self-consciousness and fear, having discipline, being loyal, and moving fast, according to Kataoka.

I asked Kataoka recently how Zen she thinks Google is. She laughed before answering, in a roundabout way, that the most counterculture tech firms have been Netscape, Apple, and Google.

One of Kataoka's Zen-inspired Sumi-e paintings.

(Credit: Drue Kataoka)
What about Microsoft, and Yahoo? On those firms the blog has more to say: "While Yahoo was never Zen, Microsoft arguably had some Zen aspects in its early technologies (many through copying Apple): intuitive graphical interface, common relatively simple menus in its Office applications. Its recent foray in search, however, has been far from Zen. AdCenter, MSN's Search Advertising product, has the least intuitive and slowest user interface of all major search players as well as the most cluttered and inefficient API...The question is, will the Yahoo acquisition somehow trigger MicroHoo to find its Zen? Or not?"

The blog features video interviews with Fred Turner, the Stanford professor who wrote From Counterculture to Cyberculture and VC Samurai, and Tim Draper, among others. So far, nothing on Oracle's Larry Ellison, a notable Japanophile.

Elinor Mills covers Internet security and privacy. She joined CNET News in 2005 after working as a foreign correspondent for Reuters in Portugal and writing for The Industry Standard, the IDG News Service, and the Associated Press. E-mail Elinor.
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Zen and the art of word choice
by ldva March 26, 2008 7:24 PM PDT
Sinophile is Chinese. Doesn't Elisson think he is a reincarnated Japanese ninja warrior in Japan. That would make him a Japanophile, right?

I think there is a lot of Zen in silicon valley though. Just think of all the old businesses that were drafted on cocktail napkins at the old Lion & Compass in Sunnyvale or over breakfast at Buck's in Woodside. If you could describe them on a napkin, it had to be simple.
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Ellison as Japanophile
by elinormills March 27, 2008 9:03 AM PDT
I see your point and have changed it to Japanophile. Thanks for the feedback.
Subsuming dualities
by hutchike March 26, 2008 8:10 PM PDT
Zen is about subsuming dualities, e.g. by being what you are not. Google's a perfect example - it's a popular web site that has no self-content - it just links you to sites associated with words. Windows and web browsers are similar - computer programs to simply give you a dialog with other "useful" computer programs (Office, Expedia, etc). The most Zen technology of late is virtualization - a program to host programs running programs. In the Valley, real power comes from doing nothing better than the rest.
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If You Be What You Ain't
by Len Bullard March 27, 2008 6:44 AM PDT
"If you be what you ain't then you ain't what you is." - old hippie poster

Silly Valley just gets sillier.
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