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One Last Lesson Steve Jobs Can Teach the Solar Industry

By Tor 'Solar Fred' Valenza
October 12, 2011   |   5 Comments

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5 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 5
October 13, 2011
Jobs had working class parents. Money is the reason he dropped out of college in 1972 during a recession. I too, dropped out due to several reason, money and health, but later finished a degree in CS. 1972 was during the spike in oil prices and the economy was getting hit hard because of imported oil.
Comment
2 of 5
October 13, 2011
Thanks Fred. Sure thing, "Be bold for solar. Stand out and educate. And, of course, as I always say, UnThink Solar." I think this MUST SEE VIDEO FOR THE ENTIRE RE INDUSTRY :: "Putting the Sun to Work for Minnesota" does the trick.

Seriously, if you have not seen this video, you should. I think the RE industry as a whole needs to garner the talents of #SolarHotDish for future, prospective adverts for the renewable energy industry if we aim to challenge the misinformation and myths. If you haven not seen this video, I HIGHLY recommend the time investment. Mr. SolarHotDish nails it! http://www.youtube.com/user/SolarHotdish
Comment
3 of 5
October 13, 2011
One Major contributor to Steve Jobs success was that he thought outside the box.

Sadly this quality is clearly evident in the Solar Industry, where every one is chasing the bubble thereby missing the Bucks.
Comment
4 of 5
October 13, 2011
On 'law' that we IT workes know well is Moore's law which states that "The number of transistors that can be placed inexpensively on an integrated circuit doubles approximately every two years." Is there such law applied to PV technology? Interesting to look at this. Jobs and Apple surely used this to advantage.
Comment
5 of 5
October 13, 2011
A solar company with departments is probably beyond start-up stage and immune to pivoting ideas from the ranks. What was amazing about Jobs was his nimbleness captaining a large "ship."

Regarding the Moore's law comment, until multi-junction PV becomes cost-effective, the upper limit for SI is about 25% efficiency. I think distributed solar thermal is a good baton pass, at least for buildings. It can do the heavy lifting for a building's energy needs at much higher efficiencies.
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