
When I was born in 1972
- Intel’s first widely-available microprocessor, the 4004, had been in the market for less than a year
- The C programming language was introduced
- There were no pesonal computers, games consoles or any programmable electronics in anyone’s home
As I was growing up
- I was 3 when Pong came out. I did play a later clone at a classmate’s house some years later. Not frequently: he was very possessive of his little console
- I was 5 when the Apple II was launched, never heard of it at the time
- At 9, when MS-DOS came out, I did know. The music school bought an IBM PC and they let me use it once, mostly to see whether I could figure out what was it for
- The Commodore 64 came out on my 10th year. Later, a very good friend bought one and used it to compose music. He’s still at it, on a Mac and his wind instruments, all these years later
- I was 12 when the Mac was launched. I saw it on TV, I seem to remember. Didn’t think much of it
At 14 I managed to convince my parents to buy a home computer. It was an Amstrad CPC 6128, complete with floppy disk and green screen. It’s fair to say I spent quite a few hours on it – learning BASIC, playing games, trying to write music and writing a lot of school assignments and my own little attempts at creative writing
University
- I went to University to study computer engineering.
- We were taught using the PDP-10 as a reference, a 1966 mainframe
- Our programming lab was made up of 10 original Macintosh computers connected over AppleTalk to a central file server
- Photoshop was 3 years old, Mosaic was being developed
- The very first Web Forms were being developed using Perl/CGI. Java and PHP didn’t exist
Working
- When I started my career at the head of Nokia.com, Netflix didn’t exist, Amazon was 2 years old and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg was 12. 12!
- My qualifications: degree in technology, built webpages for personal project while at Uni. Side projects were important even then!
There was no such thing as the cloud: the entire global Nokia web estate was running on a computer under my desk. If the server slowed down, I just turned the computer off and on again
World firsts
Along the way, I have been lucky enough to introduce a few world firsts. It’s what you do, almost without noticing, when you’re blazing a trail and creating an industry that will take over the world.
- 1997 – World’s first graphical drop-down website navigation. Nokia.com homepage
- 1999 – World’s first WAP site. WAP was what phone manufacturers and telcos thought people wanted from the internet on their phones. You have never heard of it because Apple thought different…
- 2006 – Online check-in, speedy boarding, dynamic packaging, daily deals… Travel will never be the same again
- 2009 – First online insurance brand in key Eastern Europe markets
- 2012 – World’s first Picture Meter Reading app
- 2016 – World’s first Alexa Energy Company skill
While it’s nice to look back and see the road travelled, my focus remains on road to travel ahead. I’m looking forward to a few more world firsts!
At 14 I managed to convince my parents to buy a home computer. It was an Amstrad CPC 6128, complete with floppy disk and green screen. It’s fair to say I spent quite a few hours on it – learning BASIC, playing games, trying to write music and writing a lot of school assignments and my own little attempts at creative writing
There was no such thing as the cloud: the entire global Nokia web estate was running on a computer under my desk. If the server slowed down, I just turned the computer off and on again