Jeff Hawkins
Jeff Hawkins
Jeffrey Hawkinsis the American founder of Palm Computing and Handspring. He has since turned to work on neuroscience full-time, founded the Redwood Center for Theoretical Neurosciencein 2002, founded Numenta in 2005 and published On Intelligence describing his memory-prediction framework theory of the brain. In 2003 he was elected as a member of the National Academy of Engineering "for the creation of the hand-held computing paradigm and the creation of the first commercially successful example of a hand-held computing device."...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionInventor
Date of Birth1 June 1957
CountryUnited States of America
We played today with unbelievable energy. This was the toughest week of the year. We needed a win to get us out of a funk of our two losses.
We've got our minds so much on basketball stuff and practice, I forgot it was New Year's Eve. Thanks for reminding me, though.
I swear my heart stopped. I was so happy when he was able to come back.
That was the turning point right there. That's when we knew we had them.
That was the biggest game we played all year. Our young players didn't know what to expect. Now they know what's going on and be a little more calm and focused. I think we'll be ready for the challenge.
We weren't as aggressive against their zone as far as moving the ball quickly and getting it to the high post. I think we'll do a better job of it. We've been practicing.
The real story is about how these modules work. It's a subtle one because people don't understand how they work. I think what we've done here is created the first true plug-and-play expansion capability.
We are in limited production. We will not have a lot of units. That's why we're not in broad distribution today.
Guys are figuring out their roles. My key role is not turning over the ball. When I come in the game and come out, we shouldn't be worse off than where we started.
Visor Edge still supports all Springboard modules. You can add the Springboard slot as an option.
The reason the Palm is so successful is the simplicity of using them. They kind of just work.
We had to get on it every time we turned it over. There was a point we had to run a sprint for 80 seconds on the highest level of speed. That's a killer. My hamstring is still tight from that.
It would be great if a city could take only what is desirable to the city. But it?s there, and it?s not going to get any better until it?s in the city.
The show was a big success for Hustler/VCA and Vivid. I think we had more traffic at our booth than in years past.