Monday, June 27, 2011

Middle school girls jump start passion for math and science

Last week, 28 girls gathered at IBM Research - Almaden, some having no idea how interested they were in math and science until they built a PC, had fun with liquid nitrogen, and checked out a homemade robot by local high schoolers that can play soccer. IBM rockstar volunteer, Rick DiPietro, was able to win over a handful more with his "cool chemistry" session where they extracted the DNA from a strawberry. The homemade slime they created was too cool to forget about, and seeing a cotton ball explode was also something many of the girls talked about after the event.

"I learned a whole new side of me that I never knew I had," exclaimed 8th grader Lauren Miller as she tested circuit boards and made her LED light shine. Her fellow camp friend Alice Chu was also surprised at "how fun science can be."

Led by IBM Outreach Program Manager, Bob Martinez, and Corporate Citizenship and Community Affairs Manager Jennifer Hernandez, 42 IBMers volunteered their time throughout the week to help the girls navigate through several science projects. While at Almaden, the group also got to learn about the A/V field with leader Alex DeLuca, how to give an effective business presentation, and a tour of the site which included visits to the computer rooms, telepresence videoconferencing rooms, and the lobby's latest addition, the OmniGlobe. In the middle of the week, the girls were treated to a field trip to San Francisco's California Academy of Science, where the living roof and the 4 story rainforest were favorite exhibits.

Bob Martinez, who has been running this program with the help of his core team for the past 6 years, credits his IBM colleagues for the time they spend volunteering, not only during camp, but throughout the year. Because of the active engagement in youth outreach by IBM employees in the Silicon Valley, Bob and team have developed partnerships with several schools in the area - most with a high concentration of minority students. Additional programs such as Traducelo Ahora and MentorPlace, help give young kids exposure to math and science, which according to experts, is crucial in helping develop the next generation of high-tech professionals.

"The kids get exposure to science and technology during the camp, but they also learn other things that help them prepare for their future," says Martinez. "Creating their project presentations using a manuscript versus conversational method, different teambuilding exercises, and being able to talk intelligently about what they've learned are all things they can take away from this camp and help them excel no matter what career they choose. But when you see the spark in their eye, that's when you know we've done what we set out to do."

A look inside the girl's technology camp from last year:



Picture Captions (Top to Bottom):

The girls participate in cool chemistry with liquid nitrogen.

A MedEvac helicopter, which landed right on-site, gave the girls a chance to learn about air ambulance services, go inside the helicopter, and experience the medical, technical and communication devices used in transport.

A popular project with the girls is soldering wires together to create their own individual LED light box.

The 6-foot OmniGlobe in the building's lobby shows girls the different areas of technology that computer scientists are working on, like 3-D visualization.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Creeks, a Cessna Cardinal, a Time Capsule and Cake: Almaden Celebrates 100

On the last day of IBM's 99th year, hundreds of thousands IBMers around the world volunteered their time and talent in support of smarter planet initiatives. Recognizing the importance of water as a resource in the city of San Jose, researchers at Almaden have been working over the past year on a number of different water-related projects: improved membrane filtration techniques for safer drinking water, solar powered water desalination and most recently, an iPhone app called Creek Watch that allows every day passers-by to report crucial information about local creeks and streams to water authorities. Fueled by the notion of crowdsourcing, anyone with a smart phone can now be a "citizen scientist" and help improve local waterways without having a background in biology.

With water in mind, almost 50 IBMers from the research lab at Almaden set out to their designated zones on June 15th, equipped with their Creek Watch smart phone applications in hand as well as water monitoring kits provided by the city. The kits allowed volunteers to monitor temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, and turbidity, while Creek Watch allows users to report the flow rate, water level and trash presence into a central database. Collecting data at over 31 streams in San Jose, IBMers were able to provide the city's staff with valuable information to protect natural resources, and become stewards of their watersheds.

A news clip from CBS explains why it's important that IBM dedicates its volunteer efforts to this important resource in San Jose:


Having such a dedicated focus on water, the Almaden lab extended its services by offering the city social media analysis for community outreach messages, business models to understand the effect that our natural waterways have on other systems in the city, and data warehousing solutions to efficiently store and aggregate the data collected. Volunteer Renu Tewari said, "We really wanted to make an impact. Instead of going out individually to complete our service hours, we focused all of our efforts on water, and we hope that we make a difference." (Morgan Hill Times)

Photos collected from volunteers can be viewed in an online album here.

The following day - June 16th - in recognition of IBM's official 100th birthday, IBM Research - Almaden gathered for a commemorative lab photo, taken from a small Cessna plane thousands of feet above - looking down to see "IBM 100th" spelled out by over 500 IBMers donning their IBM globe logo t-shirts and celebratory "Silver Centennial" medallions. Here's another one of the crew waving.


Over 60 IBMers continued the fun by being present for the official groundbreaking ceremony for Almaden's 25 year time capsule, set to be buried near the lobby's flagpole, and not opened until 2036. Several employees contributed artifacts and items to the time capsule including: Blue Gene/L compute card, Gaussian 92 tape and manual, IBM 3420 magnetic tape drive, STM gold writing, Li-Air battery test cell, Tivoli Storage Manager timeline, cognitive computing chips, Almaden Views brochures and magazines, press clippings, lab photos and more. IBM Research - Almaden vice president and lab director Josephine Cheng took the first 'dig' and passed the shovel along to a few other researchers.







The lab was treated to a musical performance by Alex De Luca and Kevin Roche, performing an original piece to the tune of "In the year 2525 (Exordium & Terminus)" by Zager and Evans - in their rendition cleverly named "In the year Almaden 25," the duo took us through 25 years of innovation at Almaden, complete with lasers, glow in the dark costumes, fog machines, live guitar and vocals.



Four volunteer contestants were then invited down to the stage to participate in an IBM Centennial Trivia Game Show. After 4 rounds of questions and a final question, in which they waged their decided number of points to capture the big win, George Rhoten came out on top. The fun continued outside of the auditorium, where all IBMers, still clad in their black IBM logo shirts, gathered for cake and spirits for the rest of the afternoon.

Now begins IBM Century 2.0! Thanks to all who participated and contributed to these events.

Check out Alex and Kevin performing "In the year Almaden 25" on YouTube:



Here's a fun video dedicated to IBM's 100 years and Almaden's 25:



Photo captions (top to bottom):
  • IBM Research - Almaden manager Sandeep Gopisetty uses his Creek Watch iPhone app to snap a picture of Los Alamitos Creek
  • Over 500 IBMers from Almaden spelled out "IBM 100th" for an aerial photo
  • IBM Research - Almaden vice president and lab director Josephine Cheng kicks off the time capsule burial ceremony
  • IBMers taking part in the groundbreaking ceremony for the "Almaden 25 year time capsule" to be opened in 2036
  • Alex de Luca and Kevin Roche providing live musical entertainment to commemorate Almaden's 25th anniversary
  • Four IBMers playing the IBM Centennial Trivia Game Show
Additional photos featuring the June 16th activities at IBM Research - Almaden can be found online here.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

IBM100 Celebration of Service: IBMers take to the streets to improve waterways in San Jose

To mark IBM's Centennial, hundreds of thousands of IBMers worldwide will participate in a Celebration of Service Day, slated for June 15 - the last day of IBM's 99th year. In San Jose, teams from IBM Research - Almaden are contributing volunteer hours to the city's watershed protection agency by going out to creeks and streams all over the region and reporting on water conditions. Back at the lab, research teams are applying their knowledge and expertise to help the agency glean better insights from their data, through the creation of a new database as well as leveraging a smarter cities model developed here at IBM Research - Almaden to better understand how water affects other city services.

Using the Creek Watch iPhone application developed by computer scientists at Almaden and water monitoring kits provided by the City of San Jose Water Board, at least 100 IBMers will take to the streets to snap pictures of waterways to upload to a central database and submit information about water flow, trash and water levels. Meanwhile, teams of IBMers from the services research, storage and computer science areas at Almaden will contribute data analysis solutions and business models that the city can use to easily aggregate useful information and apply programs where they are needed the most.

IBMers at Almaden will contribute in the following ways:

Android-version of Creek Watch application
  • To broaden the number of volunteers that can use the application to contribute data about their local water shed, an Android version of Creek Watch will be available to IBMers on June 15 (an official version will be perfected for the Android market later this year). A software group out of IBM Korea is helping develop this for a similar project in their region, while also using the day as a means to teach kids about environmental protection.
Transformational Data Warehouse
  • The City of San Jose water authorities have been struggling with how to manage all the creek status data collected by individual storm water programs. The data comes in in many different formats -- even in paper. They need to convert the data into a standardized form and consolidate into a regional warehouse database, which would then be reported to the Water Board. IBM Research - Almaden's computer science team will build a pilot solution for the city.
Social Media Analytics
  • Leverage IBM social media research in analyzing the general public's view on water-related topics
  • Suggest effective ways of using social media to maximize the impact of community outreach
  • Use DeepQA technologies to develop interactive, engaging knowledge system
Business Model Analytics
  • Leverage IBM business modeling and analytics research in analyzing and improving the multi-stakeholder Sanitary System Overflow processes
  • Identify gaps in existing key performance indicators and develop new metrics to measure hard-to-measure things (e.g. amount of trash dumped in the creek)
  • Analyze and explore existing data for trends, relationships, abnormalities, and more
Good Old-Fashioned Volunteering
  • Teams will be disbursed to locations where the water board has little or no data to collect water samples, clean up trash and collect data using Creek Watch.
From IBM's beginning, it's founder Thomas Watson believed that business had a societal responsibility, expanding upon the belief that the sole purpose of a corporation was to serve the interests of its shareholders. Now nearly 100 years later, the world will receive millions of hours of service from IBMers.

Photo Captions:

Top: IBM Research - Almaden lab director and vice president Josephine Cheng collecting water samples from Fisher Creek for the Centennial Celebration of Service
Middle: IBM Distinguished Engineer Jane Xu with IBM Research computer scientist in public health research, Stefan Edlund
Bottom: Stefan Edlund, Josephine Cheng and Jane Xu at Coyote Creek collecting water samples for the City of San Jose on IBM's Day of Service

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

IBM's Centennial and Almaden's 25th Anniversary Celebration

IBM senior vice president and director of research, John Kelly poses with IBM Research - Almaden vice president and lab director Josephine Cheng, and former lab directors, IBM Fellows, Distinguished Engineers and Academy of Technology members to celebrate IBM's Centennial and Almaden's 25th Anniversary.

With nearly 100 years under its belt, IBM's vision for the future has given scientists here at Almaden and around the world the freedom to work on long-term exploratory research to push the boundaries of science and technology, along with the responsibility to help make IBM succeed today. During Almaden's 25th Anniversary and IBM's Centennial celebration at the research lab in San Jose, California, an audience of over 300 current and former IBMers reflected on some of the discoveries that put IBM's San Jose Research division on the map, and learned about the projects of today that will change the way the world works.

San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed: "IBM was in San Jose and the Silicon Valley before there even was a Silicon Valley."

The celebratory event, held on Friday, June 3rd, featured esteemed speakers from inside and outside of IBM. San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed shared opening remarks to kick off the program, beaming with pride over IBM's 70+ years of technological achievements in San Jose that ultimately led to the creation of the Silicon Valley. Beyond the hard disk drives and relational database inventions, Mayor Reed pointed out IBM's role as one of the top 10 largest employers in the city - and commended IBM for allowing the creation of jobs to the communities and revenues to the city. "There is no better corporate citizen than IBM," Mayor Reed said. "IBMers contribute to the community far beyond their job, helping in many other ways."

IBM Historian Emerson Pugh: Building the Information Age at the first IBM San Jose Laboratory

Beginning with a description of IBM's post World War II Efforts - like using punched card equipment to maintain personnel records for the armed forces, predict weather conditions over the English Channel, break enemy codes, calculate trajectories of artillery shells and analyze airframe designs - Emerson captivated the audience with a historical journey through IBM's early days in San Jose. He included some interesting anecdotal references; for example, during the war, the word 'computer' referred to men and women that spent their days doing calculations (computing) with pens and paper and books. The audience found it amusing that back in those days, Thomas J. Watson Sr. felt that to call an IBM product a computer would suggest that it could replace people and their work, resulting in bad publicity.

When the first IBM site was built in San Jose at 99 Notre Dame, Reynold B. Johnson was selected to manage the laboratory and doubled his staff of 30 employees to 60 over the course of a year. Over time, Johnson developed a lab concept that the number one priority of each engineer was to help other engineers in the laboratory. The second priority was to work on one’s own assignment. Johnson’s policy has been given credit by many engineers for the laboratory’s rapid technical progress.

The one project that captured the minds of the entire lab population was the invention and development of the world's first magnetic hard disk drive. At over 3 tons with 5 total MB of storage, the first delivery to a customer was in June 1956, with an estimated purchase price of about $160,000.

IBM Senior Vice President of Marketing & Communications, Jon Iwata: "It is a pleasure to be back home."

A graduate of San Jose State University, with his first IBM job being in the communications department at Almaden in 1984, Jon Iwata is very proud of his roots in San Jose and proud of his roots in this part of the company. Jon reflected on the contributions of IBM Research - Almaden that are represented across the world in IBM's 100 Icons of Progress.

"To think about IBM at 100, what is the significance of this company after a century?," Jon asked. "It isn't an easy question to answer. There aren't too many technology companies that have been around for 25 or 50 years, let alone a century."

"It's easier to measure the contributions of an oil company or a car company or a bank, but for IBM, there isn't one thing. We think there are 3 different perspectives or lenses to use to look at IBM's history."

To understand what the contributions of our company are, IBM reflects on those areas: pioneering the science of information, making the world work better and inventing the modern corporation. Taking the audience through 100 years of iconic milestones that represent each of these areas, Jon pointed out Almaden's significance in marking progress in the scientific and technical fields not just in the Silicon Valley but around the world.

IBM Senior Vice President and Director of Research, John Kelly III: "IBM believes that Research is fundamental to the success of our company, past, present and future."

The grand finale of Almaden's Centennial program featured the Senior Vice President and Director of Research, John Kelly. He posed a challenge: What will be the next RAMAC or the next microdrive; the next great discovery in San Jose that will change the world and lay the groundwork for the next 100 years of innovation?

Improvements in the performance of technology, John said, are due to continuous improvement mixed with disruptive innovation - which occurs through changes in computing paradigms and breakthroughs that overcome previous technological and physical barriers. Dr. Kelly believes the four disruptive technologies that will take us into the future - led by IBM Research on a global scale - are learning systems, big/fast data, exascale systems and nanotechnology.

"Discontinuities allow the industry to build. I believe that many companies are good at either continual improvement or disruptive innovation but few, if any, companies are good at both," John stated. "You must be good at both or you become one of the thousands of companies in our industry that have died." IBM Research in the Silicon Valley has sustained, with the Almaden lab celebrating its 25th year, while many companies in that span of time started and ended.

"We are the only company that's made it through industry phases like mechanics, electro-mechanics, vacuum tube technology, discrete transistor, integrated circuitry and nanotechnology," he said. "We are now transitioning from the integrated circuit to the nanoworld. Citing examples such as the recent MRSA treatment breakthrough and cognitive computing advances, Dr. Kelly expressed his gratitude and pride for the work Almaden is doing that will shape IBM's next 100 years.

Almaden Open House

During an open house event in the afternoon, IBMers brought their children, parents, spouses and friends through different lab tours, demonstrations and project presentations to learn all about what IBMers at Almaden are doing today. There was also a historical artifact display, which included a full section of the newspaper announcing IBM's new San Jose laboratory. At that time, a one-story home in the Willow Glen neighborhood was being offered at $14,500. A team even mocked up a 1980's office for people to check out, equipped with a Selectra/Wheelwriter Typewriter, technical notebooks from researchers in the 1980's, dot matrix printouts, floppy disks, a NOVUS calculater, a vintage PS2 monitor and computer, Rolm phone, the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy game, a Motorola cell phone from the 1980's and much more.

Research teams showed the younger crowd a cool way to make music with punched card "musical notes" and also created ice cream using liquid nitrogen, with samples for everyone. IBM Fellow John Cohn, shared his experience as a Discovery Channel reality television star, as a member of "The Colony" cast - a group of selected industry experts, challenged to live life under post-apocalypse conditions - only given a few trinkets and tools, from which the team assembled gas powered vehicles, solar panels, water filters and a means to prepare food.

An overall entertaining day for IBMers, IBM alumni and retirees, and friends and family, IBM's Centennial celebration and Almaden's 25th Anniversary was a truly historical event that will be remembered for years to come. You can view more pictures from the event here. Also, you can download a historical timeline highlighting IBM Research accomplishments in San Jose here.