MIKE
LAZARIDIS the GREEK EMIGRANT AUTHOR
of MOBILE BLACKBERRY and also AND
ONE of the MORE IMPORTANT INSTITUTES
of PHYSICS IN the WORLD.
www.Apodimos.com
Because all Greeks should know
the work of our Emigrant brothers,
them we present the work of
Michalis
(Maik)
Lazaridis,
because they are not only the
emigrant politicians that deal
with the publics, are also the
scientists and the
businessmen that produce
remarkable work, as
Michalis
Lazaridis.
Michalis
(Maik)
Lazaridis
is one still charismatic Greek of
dissemination that excels in the
abroad. What makes separate the
case of 47 years old fellow
countryman is that even if it
distinguished already as
businessman international world
around, it is the sector of
science where it appears that it
will be judged mainly to
remember him
always.

Mike Lazaridis
Michalis
Lazaridis,
that was given birth in
Kontantinoupoli (Istamboul)
in 1961 and after with his family
went in Canada as emigrant, when it
was five years. Mike
Lazaridis
is founder, President, and Co-CEO
of Research In
Motion Limited (RIM). He is the
recipient of many technology and
business awards, and led the
research and development efforts of
various technological innovations
including the BlackBerry, the first
complete wireless email solution.
RIM it
is seated in
Waterloo
of Ontario, and created and it
produces the wireless appliances
of mobile telephones BlackBerry.
From the other, in 1999 founded
independent - international
already fame - Canadian Institute
of Theoretical Physics Perimeter,
the called and
«greenhouse of new physics»,
that resides also in
Waterloo.
Bigot of reading by small child,
Lazaridis
is said that in his 12 years it
gained already the reward of
municipal library of city
Windsor of Ontario, where it lived,
because it had read all her
scientific books! Now that it
grew, it has made and it
realises
his children's dreams, with
the foundation of Perimeter
Institute for Theoretical Physics,
making a initial donation 100
millions dollars from his
personal fortune. This year the
summertime gave
a additional donation 50
millions. dollar, beyond other
aids of tens of millions of dollars
in the
neighbouring university of
Waterloo, where also the
himself studied as electrician
mechanical engineer, but
abandoned him little before the
acquisition of degree, in
in
order to she deals with the
enterprises.
The emigrant Greek
Michalis
(Maik)
Lazaridis
created Perimeter Institute for
Theoretical Physics world around
knows, and that it is. The institute
was initially
accomodated
in the historical building of
post of quiet city
Waterloo,
which abstains an and half hour from
cosmopolitan Ontario, until in
2004 it acquired his own impressive
installations, that were
rewarded in 2006 from the
governor of Montreal for their
architectural originality.


Perimeter Institute
began in the summer of 1999 when
Mike
Lazaridis,
founder and Co-CEO of Research
In Motion
(RIM) — maker of the successful
BlackBerryTM
— found himself in a position to
help foster research and innovation
in Canada.
Howard Burton, from the
University of Waterloo, was hired
by Mike in August of that same
year and, as the Founding
Executive Director, was
instrumental in determining how a
world-class organization devoted
to theoretical physics would
take shape.
Since research operations began
in the fall of 2001, the Institute
has grown to include over 60
resident researchers who are
involved in day-to-day operations.
Additionally, the vigorous
Visitor Program has enabled PI
to host hundreds of international
researchers each year for
collaborations and workshops. The
current areas of cross-disciplinary
research include:
1.
Cosmology
2.
Particle Physics
3.
Quantum Foundations
4.
Quantum Gravity
5.
Quantum Information Theory
6.
Superstring Theory
In addition to research operations,
Perimeter Institute also shares
the importance of critical inquiry
and scientific discovery
with wide cross-sections of society.
This is accomplished through
specifically crafted educational
outreach programs for three
constituencies — students,
teachers and members of the
general public.
Financial support
for all activities has been
made possible by generous
philanthropic donations and
funding from many levels and
branches of the Canadian
government. Today, Perimeter
Institute stands as an innovative
and successful example of
public-private partnerships in
scientific research and educational
outreach. More info you can locate
in
www.perimeterinstitute.ca
We should know
all Greeks and Greek emigrants
brothers what we reported for
Michali
they are few however his work it
is big and for that reason we will
present to you what wrote
Report
on Business Magazine for
Michali



Leaps of faith
For 25 years, Mike
Lazaridis
has been perfecting the technology
behind Canada's most popular
invention:the
BlackBerry. Now he's using his
curious mind—and his money—to help
discover the next Einstein
DAVID FIELDING
From Friday's Globe and Mail
April 25, 2008
When he knows he's on to something,
his small blue eyes light up behind
Benjamin Franklin-esque
bifocals. The founder and co-CEO of
Research In
Motion is trying to explain the
importance of pure research in the
realm of theoretical physics and,
sensing that the subject matter is
difficult to grasp, Mike
Lazaridis,
eyes alight, launches into a one-man
skit starring none other than Albert
Einstein.
"Let's go back to 1905," he says, "a
record year for Einstein." That was
Annus
Mirabilis for the physicist, who
published four major papers
detailing, among other things, his
theories on special relativity and
the particulate nature of light.
"Here's a guy going into the grants
department"—and here
Lazaridis
drops into a German accent. "I
vish to
have a small stipend to pay for my
blackboard, my house, a supply of
tobacco for my pipe and for a few
trips I'd like to make and the
letters that I send." "Because I
have this idea that light is an
absolute speed limit and that it's
made up of these little corpuscles
that I call quanta." "They're
gonna
go, 'What is this guy talking about?
So how is this going to help with
horse production?'"
Lazaridis
bangs the table with his left hand.
"It's 1905. What is the current
imperative? Horses! We needed
horses. We were trying to figure out
how to make more stagecoaches! Think
about it!" He pauses.
"Quanta, that breakthrough that
Einstein got the Nobel Prize for,
that's
semiconductors, that's
lasers, that's fibre optics, that's
everything," he says. "Relativity
theory—GPS wouldn't work without
that," he says. His lesson
concluded,
Lazaridis sits back in his
seat and spreads his hands as if to
say, "Think about that."
"Um, why?"
It's not the kind of impassioned
speech you'd expect from the co-CEO
of one of Canada's biggest
companies. Even compared to his
notoriously media-wary counterpart,
Jim Balsillie,
Lazaridis
is known as "the quiet one." He'd
much prefer sitting down for Q&A
with an irreverent science journal
like New Scientist than with a
business magazine. In his mind, he's
the guy behind the scenes, the guy
whose singular mission is to make
sure RIM keeps pumping out more of
its highly addictive
BlackBerrys
(as the magazine went to press,
rumour had it that the company would
soon release a
touchscreen version to go up
against Apple's
iPhone).

Mike Lazaridis
at the Perimeter Institute for
Theoretical Physics in Waterloo,
Ontario.
So, outbursts, especially in front
of journalists, are rare. It's just
that the pervasiveness of short-term
thinking—worrying about building
better stagecoaches instead of
dreaming up satellites, or pandering
to earnings-obsessed analysts rather
than laying the groundwork for
future innovations—gets him fired
up. Lazaridis,
more than anyone else, knows that
nothing he has achieved in the past
25 years—certainly not the invention
of a handheld e-mail device such as
the BlackBerry—would have been
possible without the pioneering work
of theoretical physicists like
Einstein.
That's why he's here at the
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical
Physics in Waterloo, Ontario, a
haven for some of the world's top
minds in scientific research and a
place that may well harbour the next
Einstein. It's
noon, and the blackboard-lined
hallways are eerily quiet (most of
the staff and students are nocturnal
by nature).
Lazaridis is seated in one of
the few enclosed corners of the
open-concept building. Down the
hall, in the Black Hole Bistro, a
tableful of young physicists are
discussing matters of light, energy
and atoms over bowls of
onion-and-pear soup. Most of the
lounges show no signs of life, save
for the alien
scratchings of the world's
hardest math problems on the
blackboards. In the Mike
Lazaridis
Theatre of Ideas one floor down, the
muted applause following a
presentation can just barely be
heard.
Lazaridis, in his blue shirt
and tie, is smiling. His snow-white
hair is, as always, combed into an
immaculate wave.
Whenever he can,
Lazaridis
likes to roam the halls and talk
with the math whizzes who work
here—guys like Rob Myers, one of the
nation's foremost experts in string
theory, and Lucien Hardy, whose
contributions to quantum
teleportation are known around the
world.
Lazaridis is not looking to
glean any scientific tidbits to take
back to his headquarters—most of the
pure research going on here will
never lead to any practical
commercial applications. "He wants
to see the activity," says Myers,
the institute's interim scientific
director. "He's a fan of science and
excited by it."
That's one reason why, in 1999,
Lazaridis
donated $100 million of his nascent
fortune to seed the institute.
Another, he says, is "because people
take theoretical physics for
granted." No kidding. This world of
equations and chalk dust is about as
far away as you can get from the
world of commerce. Why anyone would
hand over such a massive amount of
money—at the time, close to
one-fifth of
Lazaridis's net worth—to a
collection of wild-haired math
freaks is lost on most of the folks
on Bay Street. Sure,
Lazaridis
knows that quarterly earnings are
important. (In its most recent
quarter, RIM posted a
higher-than-expected profit of
$412.5 million and shipped 2.2
million new
BlackBerrys, the first time
in the company's history that it
broke through the two-million-mark
in a quarter.) But he also knows
that without the kind of work being
done at Perimeter, chances are slim
that someone will develop another
world-beating technology like
RIM's 60
or 80 years down the line.
"There's a tendency to say, if this
stuff isn't practical, why
should we
fund you?" says
Lazaridis. "It becomes an
issue of faith."
Mike Lazaridis
knows a thing or two about faith.
When he left the University of
Waterloo in 1984, just shy of a
degree in engineering, he could
hardly have predicted what the
future had in store for Research
In
Motion, the company he was preparing
to launch with Doug
Fregin,
a childhood friend from Windsor,
Ontario. They were each just 23
years old. With a small government
grant and a family loan of $15,000,
the pair knew only that they were
pretty handy with a circuit board,
and that their talent had to be
worth something.
RIM's
first contract was with General
Motors: For $500,000, the two-man
outfit delivered a networked display
system that scrolled messages across
LED signs at GM's factories. It was
a neat project, but hardly
revolutionary. "You have to
understand, the BlackBerry didn't
happen overnight; it happened over a
decade," says
Lazaridis, now 47. "It's not
like one day we woke up and said,
'Eureka!'"
Lazaridis isn't a fan of this
notion of "aha" thinking. It doesn't
work that way, he says. Rather,
innovation is iterative, one thing
built on the back of another. Were
it not for the seemingly
disconnected contracts RIM was
picking up in those early days, the
technology that would one day power
the BlackBerry might not have come
together.
This is especially true of
RIM's
contract with Rogers
Cantel
Mobile Communications in the late
'80s to design connectivity products
for a data network called
Mobitex.
The deal made RIM the first wireless
data technology developer in North
America to do this. And while
wireless technology would eventually
become the singular vision for the
company,
Lazaridis was busy designing
all manner of products: One of the
most surprising was the
DigiSync
film reader, a device used in
motion-picture labs. (For this,
Lazaridis
snagged both an
Emmy and an Oscar in
technical achievement.)
By the early '90s, RIM was rolling
out a steady stream of wireless data
management products: wireless
point-of-sale terminals, wireless
modems, even a system and method for
"pushing" packets of information
across wireless networks, called
RIMgate,
which grew out of the
Mobitex
contract. The tools needed to create
something like the BlackBerry were
slowly coming together.
Along the way, a fundamental shift
in the company's structure took
place.
Lazaridis, realizing he was a
better engineer and dreamer than he
was a finance guy, decided to hive
off the financial duties from his
R&D role. In 1992, Jim
Balsillie,
a chartered accountant from a
Kitchener-based customer of
RIM's,
was hired as co-CEO. (Fregin
assumed the role of vice-president
of operations.)
Balsillie would deal with the
day-to-day business and the
shareholders, and
Lazaridis
would provide the overall vision for
the company. In other words, the
co-CEO structure not only allowed
Lazaridis
to focus his time on development and
engineering—the kind of stuff he
really loved—but it signalled that
precisely one-half of
RIM's
mandate would be innovation.
And, boy, did
Lazaridis have something big
up his sleeve. RIM had developed a
prototype of a two-way messaging
pager, and soon he noticed that
employees were taking the prototypes
home with them to stay in touch at
the shopping mall or as they picked
up their kids from soccer games.
"The more we interviewed them, we
noticed that, even when the battery
life was only a few hours and the
device was the size of a hamburger
and had wires sticking out of it,
they still carried it everywhere,"
remembers
Lazaridis. "When you see
something no one else is doing that
your employees find that addictive,
you jump on it."
He focused his nearly 100 employees
on perfecting the pager technology.
Its big moment wouldn't come until
he decided they had everything they
needed, says
Lazaridis. Once they did, "we
bet everything on it." In 1998, RIM
released the
Inter@ctive Two-Way Pager. A
year later,
Lazaridis dropped the
BlackBerry on the world (the
Smithsonian has permanent exhibits
for both devices).
Dozens of models later,
BlackBerrys
are RIM's
sole focus. More than 14 million
customers twiddle their thumbs over
the device's miniature keyboard, and
Research In
Motion is now the sixth-largest
cellphone
manufacturer in the world. Last
year, it had revenue of $6 billion
(U.S.) and a market value of some
$67 billion (U.S.). As for
Lazaridis,
he's one of the richest people in
Canada, with a personal fortune
estimated by Forbes to be $3.6
billion (U.S.). Not a bad payoff for
the $15,000 gamble he made in 1983.
The way
Lazaridis sees it, the key to
the BlackBerry's success rests in
large part on the fact that RIM
relies on the device to keep its own
operation running. "There are two
types of companies," says
Lazaridis.
Once again, his eyes twinkle behind
the bifocals. "There's one company
that makes products that other
people use, but they don't actually
use them themselves. Then there are
companies that make things they
actually use and depend on. We fall
squarely in that space—we build
things that we use every day." The
BlackBerry is the real-time nervous
system by which RIM managers and
engineers collaborate, trade ideas
and monitor customer feedback—just
like it is at companies the world
over. That means self-motivation is
the key to
RIM's innovation process: Its
employees are driven to dream up
bigger and better products, in part
because there's a personal payoff at
the end—a cooler, more powerful
BlackBerry.
Even as the company has grown—from
less than a dozen employees in those
early days to more than 8,300 today—Lazaridis
has kept all of its operations
squarely in his sights. From his
office on Columbia Street in
suburban Waterloo, it's a pebble's
toss to the engineering facility;
another building houses customer
support; further down the street is
the manufacturing plant. (RIM has
other manufacturing and sales
facilities around the world, but "we
have a microcosm here," he says.
"That's the core.")
Lazaridis
could make a tour of his entire
organization in an afternoon.
On foot.
And he does. Once every couple of
weeks,
Lazaridis holds what he calls
"vision meetings." With so many
research groups each working on
their own cog—the display group, the
software group, the standards team,
the radio crew—the meetings are key
to keeping them on task. They're by
invitation only, and
Lazaridis
uses the time to rally the troops
and let them know how the battle's
going.
Jim Balsillie
is fond of saying that
RIM's
product pipeline extends about a
year to 18 months out. Actually,
says Lazaridis,
"it's longer than that." But what
there is to glean about future
handsets resides in the world of
blogs and rumours. There's a
prototype 3.5G BlackBerry that
Lazaridis
has previously admitted he's played
with. As well, a patent has
allegedly been filed for
RIM's
touchscreen
answer to the
iPhone, which analysts
predict will be directed not at the
company's business-oriented core but
at the more casual consumer. You can
be sure that whatever
Lazaridis
is planning, it will be researched
meticulously. "We have people making
sure we choose the right
technologies three years out, four
years out, and so on....People say,
'Well, don't you have a five-year
vision?' And I say, well, not
really. That's a long time, and at
the rate we're going, things change
a lot."
The hundreds of scientists,
physicists and mathematicians at the
Perimeter Institute are on a
slightly longer schedule. Most of
the research they're doing—whether
it's formulating a new theory on
quantum gravity, trying to prove
whether teleportation is possible
(it is, sort of), or looking at what
happens when matter enters a black
hole—will have to be published, peer
reviewed, edited, revised and
supported before it even gets to the
experimental stage. And that's
supposing the tools needed to test
their hypotheses have even been
invented.
For Lazaridis,
this place is the fulfillment of a
dream he's had since his university
days. As a student of engineering,
there wasn't a lot of theoretical
physics on
Lazaridis's curriculum, and
what little there was had much more
to do with history than with actual
research. "I had an amazing physics
teacher,"
Lazaridis remembers. "He
said, 'During the day, I'm going to
teach you the curriculum, but I'm
going to hold a night course once a
week, and I'll talk about the latest
developments.'" The result was a
sort of Dead Poets Society, a
close-knit group of Waterloo
students who spent their evenings
learning about the latest
developments in string theory—guys
like Alain Aspect, who was by then
working with crystals to produce
entangled photons. "I couldn't
believe my ears,"
Lazaridis
says. "We really got turned on
during that time."
An idea began to take shape among
the group: What if Canada had its
own dedicated centre for theoretical
physics?
Nearly 20 years later,
Lazaridis
had amassed a large enough fortune
to make it happen. He'd already
helped transform this sleepy college
town into the nation's largest tech
cluster, attracting attention from
major U.S. companies. There were
dozens of small companies orbiting
Lazaridis's
mothership,
those that were either started by
RIM alumni or were dedicated to
providing services and applications
for the BlackBerry. Now, at last,
the stage was set for
Lazaridis
to help turn Waterloo into one of
the premier destinations for future
thought in the world.
But what would make the best
physicists in the world come to
Waterloo? There are no oceans or
mountains to gaze at. Income taxes
are high,
and the weather—well, it's Canada
after all. The answer, as
hokey as
it may seem: If you build it, they
will come. "It was the fastest, most
affordable,
brandable thing we could do,"
says Lazaridis.
"The building is the brand."
In October, 2004, a few dozen
scientists and mathematicians moved
from a temporary facility in an old
post office into the new Perimeter
building, which looks like a massive
blackboard plunked down in the
centre of suburban Waterloo (or
maybe it's supposed to mimic the
monolith that appears among the apes
at the beginning of 2001). Inside,
the staff found everything they
needed: a peaceful collection of
light-filled offices, each equipped
with a floor-to-ceiling blackboard;
comfortable lounges where groups
could meet to hash out solutions;
long hallways to roam and courtyards
to sit in; and a cozy café.
Meanwhile, across Waterloo's Silver
Lake, plans for yet another
world-class research facility were
unfolding. For a number of years,
the University of Waterloo had been
trying to get an Institute for
Quantum Computing off the ground.
Lazaridis
was just the guy to make it happen.
Unlike Perimeter, a place where
mathematicians could operate in the
untethered
realm of pure thought, the
university wanted to provide
students and scientists with a
facility where they could test some
of the quantum predictions being
generated at places like the
Perimeter Institute.
In 2002, IQC opened in a temporary
facility on
RIM's main campus, with a
modest (by comparison) personal
donation of $50 million from
Lazaridis
and a provincial endowment of $50
million. Thanks largely to
Lazaridis,
Waterloo is a kind of end-to-end
innovation hothouse, from the very
conception of theoretical ideas, to
experimentation and
refinement,
culminating with the companies that
will one day provide new
technologies born from those ideas.
But to say Mike
Lazaridis is expanding his
empire is missing the point. The
idea is to apply the same kinds of
strategies that have made RIM so
successful to the task of expanding
our knowledge of the universe. If
this happens to spark a quantum leap
in technology along the way, well,
that's just a bonus.
If there's one area of research
Lazaridis
is watching,
it's quantum computing. All
the advances in computing made so
far revolve around the digital bit,
a tiny electrical pulse that can
either be recorded as a one or a
zero—a system we know as binary.
According to Moore's Law, every two
years we'll figure out a way to
double the number of transistors on
a computer chip. This explains the
shrinking nature of your BlackBerry
and the fact that Apple now makes a
laptop that slides into a manila
envelope. The problem is, if Moore's
Law is followed to its natural
conclusion, in as little as 10
years, those bits we pack into our
iPods will be the size of atoms.
This is where quantum computing
takes over.
Quantum computers employ quantum
bits, or qubits,
that behave in very strange ways.
For starters, unlike bits, they
don't have to be recorded as either
a one or a zero—they can be both at
the same time. So with only 40 or 50
qubits
(we're talking the size of
molecules), a quantum computer may
one day perform the same tasks the
world's most powerful machines now
perform with hundreds of megabytes.
If you could just jam that kind of
power into your BlackBerry...who
knows what it could do? "Think about
the Industrial Revolution," says
Raymond
Laflamme, director of the IQC
and one of the pre-eminent scholars
on the matter (he's actually
credited with changing Stephen
Hawking's
mind about the nature of time).
"Suddenly, people see steam and they
are able to harness it, control it
and make machines. Locomotives
changed the landscape of cities and,
at the same time, the fabric of
society itself...when we think of
quantum computing, that's the vision
we have," says
Laflamme.
It's a tall promise, and one that is
unlikely to pay off—at least in any
tangible, commercial sense—in
Lazaridis's
lifetime. But
for him, when those results happen
is irrelevant. Rather, it's
about providing a solid foundation
for a future generation of
innovators. And it's about faith.
"If I were to say, 'Tell me right
now what this stuff is going to be
used for in the future before I give
you another dime,' that would be the
biggest mistake I could ever make,"
says Lazaridis.
"You have to remember, it can never
be predicted. That's a fact of
theoretical physics."
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