Cape Times

SILICON VALLEY

- Renee Sklarew

LIKE my college-age daughters, I am in love with my iPhone. And my ardour increased while I was researchin­g a guidebook. With my cellphone, I narrated each hike into the notes app, consulted Google Maps when I got lost and used the camera app to capture scenery. As I worked, I wondered how we got from room-size mainframes to this portable computer in my hand.

So when Southwest Airlines began offering daily nonstops from Baltimore-Washington Internatio­nal Marshall Airport to San Jose, I booked a trip with my husband, Eric. After an affordable transconti­nental flight, we landed at Mineta San Jose Internatio­nal Airport, in the heart of Silicon Valley.

Without a personal invitation from an employee, you can’t enter the offices of Apple, Facebook or Google, but you can visit each campus on your own.

Marvelling at San Jose’s Mediterran­ean climate, we waited outside the Fairmont Hotel for our tour guide, Sharon Traeger. Driving through morning traffic, she described key events in Silicon Valley’s history.

“In the early 20th century, this valley was full of blooming fruit orchards with cherry, plum and apricot trees. It was called the Valley of Heart’s Delight. Back then, electronic­s were manufactur­ed on the East Coast until an electrical engineer William Shockley and his team at Bell Labs developed the transistor.” After winning the Nobel Prize in 1956, Shockley decided to attach his transistor­s to wafers made of silicon, an abundant element and primary component of sand.

“Silicon has the possibilit­y to conduct or not conduct, so that’s the importance,” Traeger explained.

“All of a sudden, you can make gates for electrons and control electrons. This is how we became Silicon Valley.”

Shockley returned to his home town of Palo Alto, California, and hired eight engineers to operate his company. The group built integrated circuits on chips, but soon Shockley’s hires became disgruntle­d and left to build their own semiconduc­tors, naming their company Fairchild Semiconduc­tor.

“Fairchild becomes a powerhouse, not just for making money, but because it spins off lots of startups. These grew exponentia­lly, and with steady customers like the US space programme, scientists moved in droves to San Jose.”

Like a second California Gold Rush, engineers with big ideas partnered with academicia­ns and venture capitalist­s. Then in 1977, Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs debuted the Apple II, a groundbrea­king personal computer. About 20 years later, two Stanford University students developed a querying tool for the web, Google.

We chose to visit the GooglePlex campus, where we snapped selfies with plastic Android figures named after desserts, rode the colourful Google Bikes and bought Google merchandis­e. Self-driving robotic cars zipped by, and one of the Google Street View cars was on display. We didn’t make it to Facebook or lunch at the Samsung cafeteria, but we did stop by Jobs’s childhood home. Apple, as well as Hewlett-Packard and Google, began in a local garage.

Traeger recommende­d we visit two museums celebratin­g the digital age.

Seasoned tech users will marvel over the world’s largest collection of computer-related artifacts, including the IBM 1401 Demo Lab and the historic Apple-1 signed by “Woz”, both on display at the Computer History Museum.

We also toured the familyfrie­ndly Tech Museum, where visitors interact with 3D printers, build robots and learn something about cyber security. My surgeon husband was fascinated with the 3D interactiv­e operating table.

But the biggest draw is sure to be Apple Park, nicknamed the Spaceship, when it officially opens later this year.

The circular building, covered in panels of curved glass, will house 12 000 workers. “Apple is into design, and they want everything to be perfect. Inside and out, backwards and forwards,” Traeger noted.

Jobs envisioned this 21st century workspace to operate entirely on renewable energy. Tourists will be able to enter the standalone visitor centre, Apple store and café. The best views are said to be from its rooftop terrace.

That night we scored a table at Adega, the popular Michelin-starred Portuguese restaurant. Pastry chef Jessica Carreira longed to return to Little Portugal, her neighbourh­ood in San Jose, and convinced her Portuguese fiancé, David Costa, to open a restaurant. After one year, Adega earned accolades for its California twist on traditiona­l Portuguese dishes such as the Arroz de Pato, a heavenly combinatio­n of duck, chorizo and rice.

San Jose is a true melting pot. Mayor Sam Liccardo says nearly 40% of its residents were born in another country, “so we’re treated to an incredibly diverse selection of cuisine in many unique neighborho­ods”.

That’s evident as you wander through San Pedro Square Market, Spanish California’s oldest settlement, now a collection of 20 multicultu­ral eateries. Last year, the Japantown neighbourh­ood celebrated its 125th anniversar­y, and San Jose has the largest Vietnamese community outside Vietnam.

For our last technology stop, we drove up Mount Hamilton to inspect the University of California’s Lick Observator­y. The winding one-hour drive offers panoramic views of Silicon Valley stretching across the South Bay. Lick was built in 1888, and is still home to 100 astronomer­s searching the cosmos. Free talks describe the observator­y’s achievemen­ts, like verifying Einstein’s geometric theory of gravitatio­n. You’ll see the Great Refractor, the first giant telescope and dome built on a mountainto­p.

Back at the airport, three robots directed passengers, and I thought about Traeger’s musings: “Silicon Valley started with an electronic­s movement but now it’s mobile devices and self-driving cars.”

It all began with an electronic­s movement, now it’s mobile devices and self-driving cars in the Valley

 ??  ?? AT THE CORE The Apple II original computer developed by Steve Jobs and Stephen Wozniak at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.
AT THE CORE The Apple II original computer developed by Steve Jobs and Stephen Wozniak at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.
 ??  ?? CHILD’S PLAY: Kids do hands-on experiment­s at the Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, California.
CHILD’S PLAY: Kids do hands-on experiment­s at the Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose, California.

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