Sunday, November 16, 2014

Brief history of time- Yes, everything, and time, is relative.

Now that I am stuck in an airplane w wifi for 6 hours.

-Interstellar.
Saw it in a movie theatre, dragged by my friend who suspected I dig sci-fi. A good attestment to relativity theory where three hours was far too long with too much packed of everything Hollywood suffers from. based on the theory that if you stuff it with enough science gibberish, folks will think you are smarter than them.
-uber ride with my Ugandan driver.
We agreed how expensive Nairobi and how bad Kampala traffic is; the Ethiopian politics today and that Chinese are taking Africa over. We both miss our sisters; he hasn’t seen her since 1987 when he left home as a refugee; and me only two weeks with the barbunya pilakisi she left in my refrigerator.
-I spoke at the alumni panel at the grad school I went to last weekend in SF.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

İstanbul’dan kalanlar

SALT Beyoğlu’nda ‘Yazlık: şehirlinin kolonisi’







Thursday, October 2, 2014

What will you MAKE?

Rome Maker Faire; transforming electronics—its all personal!


 I was with makers today in Rome at the opening ceremony in Rome maker Faire. It is our second year for entering into this space. And boy—what a year its been! We shipped two versions of Galileo board for Makers; we shipped Edison for promakers.
The most gratifying is to hang out with these incredibly creative techy people imagining wonderful things using technology. We demo’ed a motorcycle we prototyped with BMW which is smart, and you get all the information about the bike via a talking helmet! Our engineers did that in a matter of two weeks using an Edison chip… 7 billion people, 7 billion ideas to revolutionize how we think and how we make!!!!

I cant wait to wear that helmet on my headJ

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

‘By the way—I am an actor!’

The story of my week; how I managed to clear customs in Rome with Michael Madsen as his spouse and shared Gezi protest memories.

Arrived in Fumicino airport in Rome, the new terminal, majesticly large, but yet exactly three passport control officers. I am prepared for this everytime I come here, so quietly attended the very well organized que. Until when around 300 Russian speaking people swarmed around me, bypassed the entire que and lined up in a mass hysterical manner in front the by now invisible control points. I tried to hang in there for some ten minutes till I thought I was about to faint from lack of oxygen, smell of sweat and children bumping to my laptop bag. Then I decided to skip the whole thing and go back to find a chair alone and started stressing about how to make it the press meetings and rehearsal for my speech I need to deliver at the opening of Maker Faire tomorrow.

A very tall man came and sat close to me. We were the only two people who refused to stand up in the line or even take the chance, and as I was huffing and puffing and making frantic phone calls, he was doing the same. After a while we started chatting on solutions. We tried various options, appropriate and inappropriate which all proved to be not working. By this time stranger was looking all very familiar, he was wearing very peculiar snakeskin boots, many rings and certainly was fresh out of Los Angeles Melrose Avenue. I gathered he is some sort of actor that I have seen in my previous life but just could not gather who it was.

I was chatting with half of the Alitalia officers by then at the airport anyway to find a way out. We plotted on how we get assistance.. If he just could not walk… I said they wont buy it. He said ‘I am an actor’. He said just tell them you are my wife and I will say my knee popped out. I asked him his name, he said Michael Madsen. Then it all came to me… He was the man in my favourite ever movie Reservoir Dogs. He was the guy at Kill Bill. So there I went for some half hour, running around, convinced Alitalia that my husband who was coming from LA via London popped his knee out and could not walk and we needed assistance badly; and by the way he was a very famous American actor who came in for George Clooney wedding (not sure where that came from).

Friday, September 26, 2014

The New York Times / Intel and Opening Ceremony Collaborate on MICA, a Stylish Tech Bracelet

Tech, Meet Fashion
Intel and Opening Ceremony Collaborate on MICA, a Stylish Tech Bracelet
By NICK BILTONSEPT. 3, 2014
It’s time we stopped calling the current crop of gadgets “wearable tech.” Instead, I propose we start giving them a more appropriate name: “ugly tech.” Because let’s be realistic, most wearables today are really, really ugly.
Take the Pebble, a smart watch with a black-and-white screen, which first had its debut on Kickstarter in 2012. While geeks love the watch for its ability to show text messages and emails, the device itself looks like a small Kindle strapped to your wrist. Smartwatches made by LG, Samsung and Sony aren’t much better, with cheesy faux leather or rubber straps, and thick masculine watch faces that look as if they’re supposed to be paired with a pocket protector.
The Neptune Pine watch is so large, with its 2.4-inch screen, that at first glance it appears to be a joke product meant to poke fun at other gadgets. (Alas, it’s very real.)
But this genre of ugly could be on the precipice of change. On Tuesday, Apple, the venerable leader of cool, is expected to unveil a wearable iWatch that will, given the company’s track record, likely be the opposite of ugly.
The less-glamorous Pebble shows text messages and emails. CreditNatalia V. Osipova/The New York Times
While we don’t have much of an idea what the coveted iWatch will look like, I was able to glean one small detail from people at Apple who work on the company’s wearables.

I spoke at the TxT/The Details


I spoke in New York at the  Tech and Taste makers event on September 3 at New York Swiss Institute. I spoke on future of wearables and what internet of things will mean for consumers. It was organized by Details magazine, and brought a number of fashion, style, technology professionals from various industries.

I spoke at the re:MAKE


I got together with maker women in San Francisco on September 12 at Fort Mason Center. It was a very lively bunch and incredibly creative too! I spoke about the future of wearables as well as internet of things; and how these technologies will create an opportunity for individuals to be entrepreuners.

I also showed MICA! MICA is a bracelet which has is a jewellery piece with cutting-edge technology. And introduced Edison, our new platform to make all things smart!

Brit + Co is an online media and e-commerce platform that provides tools to teach, inspire, and enable creativity among women and girls. From traditional crafts to high-tech manufacturing, we connect millions of users with makers, designers, chefs, and inventors, together building a community of creativity.

You can find more on Brit here: http://www.brit.co/about/

Here is the Brit.co story on MICA from a few days ago as well: http://www.brit.co/opening-ceremony-intel-wearables/


Friday, September 12, 2014

Intel ve Opening Ceremony’den kadınlara hem şık hem akıllı bileklik: MICA


Intel ve Amerika’nın önde gelen moda evi Opening Ceremony, New York’ta gerçekleşen Fashion Week kapsamında düzenledigimiz Opening Ceremony İlkbahar/Yaz 2015 Defilesi’nde beklenen akıllı bileklik MICA’yı gün yüzüne çıkardi: “Benim Akıllı İletişim Aksesuarım”
Intel ve Opening Ceremony, New York’ta düzenlenen  Opening Ceremony İlkbahar/Yaz 2015 Defilesi’nde birlikte geliştirdigimiz akıllı bilekliği ilk kez sergiledik. Adını “My Intelligent Communication Accesory (Benim Akıllı İletişim Aksesuarım)” ifadesinin baş harflerinden alan MICA, Opening Ceremony tarafından tasarlandı ve Intel tarafından üretildi. Gelişmiş iletişim yeteneklerinin yanı sıra eşsiz tasarımıyla kadınsı bir aksesuar olan MICA, üretim sürecinin başından sonuna kadar bir moda tasarım markası ve küresel bir teknoloji şirketinin ortak çalışması sonucunda ortaya çıktı.

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Nolita/soho digs, New York City.


Places to eat: The General’s Jazz room Asian food. The Mercer Hotel bistro appetizers. Phebe’s IPAs. Chobani, prince street,  breakfast a la Turk! DBGB’s (old punkrock establishment CBGB’s replaced via giant city block and a restaurant), burgers, on Bowery. New York classic pizza at Lombardi’s. Isola café/bar at the Mondrian, spritz. No time left: Cuban at Habana café, and Nolita Taco café. Places to stay: The Standard, east village, on cooper square. Coolest: Bond street. Elizabeth street park. The New Museum.

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

What being home means.

Take one. The wind.
Take two. Long way down dreams with the best crew.
Take three. Catching up a million years in sixty minutes.
Take four. Bumping into adventurers.
Take five. Saying goodbye over and over.


Saturday, July 19, 2014

Ayse Arman Roportajim

Karşınızda Silikon Vadisi sakinlerinden Ayşegül İldeniz
Nefes kesen bir kadın. Yaptığı şeyleri sayarken takip edebilmek, hızına yetişebilmek bile zor. O hiperaktif değilse, hiç kimse değildir!




Sunday, July 13, 2014

Expedition into the wilderness ---of self and others


How I dealt with ‘years of myself’ in the Gobi desert

I am just back from a week in the Mongolian steppes and Gobi desert. With 12 countrymen, twelve motorbikes, and a Kazakh woman. Being a chronic solo traveller, this expedition had presented huge risks with thirteen people whom I knew almost none, had no idea on their experience of travel or life for that matter. I been immersed into creating a completely new business past eight  months in a new continent with a new team, probably eating up every ounce of risk taking, creativity, persistence, ambition and perseverance that existed in my veins. I been flooded with an adrenaline rush since November last year, getting up to a new day every day where every second every move every player had to be contemplated and executed from scratch. So how did this physical strenuous activity in mongolia that involved people I didn’t know and extreme conditions fit to that state of mind?

Sunday, June 1, 2014

My Tech Republic’s article about Wearables and fashion: Blending the two will be a key to succes


The wearable device market is evolving as tech manufacturers try to figure out what it will take to appeal to a broad audience. The connection between fashion and tech wearables is getting stronger as manufacturers recognize that people want to not only wear something that works well, but looks good, too.
Face it. Putting on a wearable makes a statement, whether it's to tell someone that you are into health and fitness, or that you're a techie and you want instant access to texts and emails.
"We're at the very beginning of wearables. People are finally waking up to the fact if you're going to be on someone's body, you have to at least be not unfashionable. With Shine, we were trying to be not unfashionable," said Sonny Vu, founder of Misfit Wearables, which developed the stylish Misfit Shine fitness tracking device.
Making wearables appealing
There is a problem with the drop off rate once someone buys a health and fitness wearable. A previous TechRepublic article focused on an Endeavour Partners survey that revealed more than half of the people who bought a health and fitness wearable had stopped wearing it, and a third of those had put it aside within the first six months of receiving it.
Dan Ledger, principal at Endeavour Partners, said that the appearance of a wearable is one of the key things that keeps someone wearing the device.
With this in mind, wearable manufacturers are looking toward the fashion industry to add style to their tech products, including Ayse Ildeniz, vice president of the new devices group and general manager of strategy and business development at Intel Corporation.
"What we have seen are the technology companies taking the lead on the wearable domain, and we believe it is time the fashion companies take the lead. They should be defining what a wearable aesthetic should look like and the kind of functions it should provide. There's a larger sensitivity in the industry toward that," Ildeniz said.
Fashion is an important consideration when designing a wearable. And yet, many of the wearables on the market have a uniform look that doesn't draw people into wearing them daily.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

United Nation’s 58th Commission on the Status of Women

I will speak at the United Natrion’s 58th Commission on the Status of Women in New York on March 12.
The Commission on the Status of Women “CSW” is a functional commission of the United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). It is the principal global policy-making body dedicated exclusively to gender equality and advancement of women. Every year, representatives of Member States gather at United Nations Headquarters in New York to evaluate progress on gender equality, identify challenges, set global standards and formulate concrete policies to promote gender equality and women's empowerment worldwide.This year’s theme is challenges and achievements in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals for women and girls: http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/

TurkishWIN Presents: Challenge or Opportunity

I will speak at the "Challenge or Opportunity" event, here are the details;

Turkish Women  's International Network of New York Wednesday, March 12, 2014 from 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM (EDT) & New York, NY


Thursday, March 6, 2014

Friday, February 28, 2014

What’s the Secret to Making Wearables That People Actually Want?

I spoke to Wired magazine on wearables… Wired article published on February 24 2014.…

Misfit Wearables launched the Shine, an activity tracker that can be worn almost anywhere on your body. Image: Misfit Wearables
Last September, right around spring/winter Fashion Week, an unexpected group of people gathered for a round table discussion at the main offices of the Council of Fashion Designers of America in New York City. Present was Steven Kolb, the CFDA’s CEO, a few higher-ups from Intel and a handful of CFDA members who also happen to be big names in fashion and accessory design.
Intel had called the meeting to discuss the idea of starting a collaboration between the company and the fashion industry at large, with the ultimate goal of figuring out a way turn their decidedly unwearable technology into something people—fashionable people—might actually want to put on their bodies.
‘Tech companies know what is useful, but do we know how to make something desirable?’

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Changing Lives Through Mobile – Innovation in Emerging Markets


On February 25, 2014, I had the opportunity to speak about:  “Changing Lives Through Mobile – Innovation in Emerging Markets” at the Centre for Contemporary Culture in Barcelona.  
Currently the average internet gap in developing counties is 23%, and Intel estimates that if we get an additional 600 million women online – global GDP would increase by $18B.  Beyond the obvious economic impact, it is really the improved standard of living for individual people that matters the most. 
So as we look to the future, it is important to think of how innovative mobile services can both build markets and change lives.  Through programs like “Intel Teach” we have trained more than 500,000 teachers in Africa; and “She Will Connect” is closing the technology divide for millions. Bringing a smartphone to Africa was an immense learning experience to see how users responded when a product is designed w their pain points in mind!

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Wearable Technology: What's Next?

Today I'm going to talk at Churchill Club about wearable technology; what's next?
New consumer wearable technology is becoming the next big consumer electronics market including products such as fitness monitors, smart watches, Internet-connected eyeglasses, wearable cameras, helmets, apparel, baby monitors and more. What will it take for wearables to continue to capture consumer interest? According to the recently released Accenture Digital Consumer Tech Survey 2014, which polled consumers in six countries, at least 52 percent of consumers are interested in wearable technologies—and there is the potential for major investments that could go into growing this market. Join us as Robin Murdoch moderates this panel of top wearables experts about the key challenges and most promising opportunities ahead.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Intel CES Fashion Wearable / Intel CES Giyilebilir Teknoloji


Intel is tapping into smart clothing &apparel trend with its latest partnership with Barneys New York, the Council of Fashion Designers of America and Opening Ceremony. The project aims to add fashion to wearable technology and also inspire cooperation between the fashion and technology fields.

CES 2014 & ShiftDelete.Net ile Söyleşim

Friday, January 3, 2014

Nicole Restaurant

Nicole, Paris'te eğitim görmüş ve Michelin yıldızlı restoranlarda çalışmış şefler Kaan Sakarya ve Aylin Yazıcıoğlu Sakarya'nın İstanbul'daki yeni adresi. Yerli ve taze malzemelerden oluşan mevsimsel menüleri, şato tarzı şaraplara ağırlık veren kavı ve deneyimli servis ekibi ile rafine damaklara hitap eden bir butik restoran. Tomtom Suites'in İtalyan Konsolosluğu bahçesi ve ardında Adalar'a kadar uzanan eski İstanbul manzarasına sahip terasında yer alan restoran, adını Fransisken rahibelerinin hastalara şifa dağıttığı  tarihi binanın yöneticisi Agnès Marthe Nicole'den alıyor. Daha fazla bilgi icin buraya tıklayınız.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Solution Bank / Çözüm Kumbarası


I am very excited to share with you the launch of the most inspiring social innovation project to date in Turkey! Intel’s Turkey team, together with Ashoka, Endeavor and Galata Business Angels, has created an all-in-one tool that will act as a platform for young entrepreneurs to create and launch projects aiming to solve basic problems faced by the people of Turkey. Imagine young people getting together and developing new solutions for problems faced in areas like education, health, environment, etc. How exciting!

Türkiye’de gerçekleştirdiğimiz farklı projelerle yıllardır gençlerin, kadinlarin eğitimine ve gelişimine katkıda bulunuyoruz. Bu calismalarimizin en yenisi Çözüm Kumbarası. Ashoka, Endeavor ve Galata İş Melekleri (GBA) işbirliği ile genç fikirleri destekleyecegiz. Çözüm Kumbarası, gençlere teknolojiyi kullanarak hayatı kolaylaştıran ve toplumsal fayda yaratan iş çözümleri geliştirme fırsatı sunan bir platform olacak.