Derek

Male

Honolulu, HI

United States

Profile Information:

Occupation:
Analyst, Blogger / Vlogger / New Media Writer, Project Manager, Other
Company:
Ka Huli Ao Center for Excellence in Native Hawaiian Law
Areas of Interest (Robotics, Software Architecture, Green Energy, Web 2.0, etc.):
Intellectual Property Law, new media, podcasting, the intersection of technology/new media with social and political activism. I'm also interested in the evolution of the law when it comes to technological innovations.
About Me:
I'd like to learn A LOT more about coding and design, I know relatively little but find it fascinating.

I met Dan and Mika and learned about their fascination with lemurs.
Website:
http://moiliilimatters.com
Secondary Website:
http://KaHuliAo.com
Twitter Username
DerekKauanoe

Comment Wall:

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  • Alyssa K

    Hey what's up
  • Daniel Leuck

    Mahalo for mentioning us in Ragnar's Honolulu Weekly Article: The mighty Mo‘! We look forward to meeting Nathaniel today.

    Good luck with your studies! I know you will kick ass on exam day.
  • Kimo Watanabe

    Right on. Got too excited and found Keith Johnston's contact info and just sent something to him. hahaha Really, I think that what you folks are doing is an incredibly worthwhile project and would be interested in talking through what we might be able to help bring to the table in terms of enhancing the offering while reducing the fixed operational costs needed to support a large data archiving project. We're just coming out of testing with one of the largest data storage, archival, and recovery companies in the world, and have been able to show that our out of the box search technology will not only give them a much more powerful and precise search solution, but that it will reduce the number of search servers needed by 90%. The energy savings alone on this phase one project will be just shy of $1 Million the first year. I'm very very excited about this technology, and motivated to find opportunities back in Hawai'i where we could be of use, and with energy costs being what they are, I have to believe that there are some opportunities somewhere.

    Aloha no,

    Kimo