This was the announcement of a talk I gave to the 'Club Qualimetrie' in Paris on March 9 2010. One of the topics was a new way to isolate a computer software threat with some new techniques I recently developed and in the process of publishing. The approach uses both graph theory and set theory to subset the exact fault edges along a entire end to end fault path. I am hoping and anticipate this will have a timely and significant impact on the current software security crisis.
This was the first time presenting this and it always amazes me how much I learn presenting new ideas --- all the reseach in the world seems incomplete until presenting it to practioners involved in everyday software nuts and bolts. Everone was excited and thought it a 'killer' app.
It was equally exciting to be with my gracious French associates who I now call friends. There were fascinating discussions with fellow French computer scientists of a different nationality --- so much alike yet so different. On these trips it's always me that learns the most ---- me the teacher!
This trip and lecture I considered more of an artistic expression than a business trip --- unlike the many lectures I have given previously in Paris while I was a CEO making things happen. The fact is that my technology, company, and work has always been more about something I created, my art form; my presentations are more about self-expression than tpical business issues. It was always that way and in fact that's what gave me the energy and drive to succeed. Instead of talking about the business bottom line I had a passionate enthusiasm for my mathematical breakthrough and how that could solve many of the problems. A business man talking of the bottom line is scant competition for an artist creating a top line .... On this trip it felt energizing and liberating to fully embrace that spirit.
Irony would have it that my hotel and the presentation were in the Paris District of Montparnasse, south of the Latin quarter. When Paris was the artistic center of the universe in the 1920s Montparnasse was the home of the 'lost generation', world renoun artist and philopsphrs ----John Paul Sartre, Henry Miller, Ernest Hemingway, James Joye -- -- a nurturing enclave of creative self-expression. I stayed several extra days and visited their haunts --- Luxenberg Gardens, cafes of Clôserie des Lilas, Le Dôme, La Rontonde. The environment and culture was much more suited for artists than businessmen.
Irony would have it that my hotel and the presentation were in the Paris District of Montparnasse, south of the Latin quarter. When Paris was the artistic center of the universe in the 1920s Montparnasse was the home of the 'lost generation', world renoun artist and philopsphrs ----John Paul Sartre, Henry Miller, Ernest Hemingway, James Joye -- -- a nurturing enclave of creative self-expression. I stayed several extra days and visited their haunts --- Luxenberg Gardens, cafes of Clôserie des Lilas, Le Dôme, La Rontonde. The environment and culture was much more suited for artists than businessmen.
Paris has always had a unique charm and this trip was no exception.
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