Episode Transcript
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Host (00:09):
rewired an entire industry and helped give birth to broadband that we take for granted now. So
Rouzbeh, thank you so much for joining us. Can't wait to dive in.
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (01:17):
Thank you so much. Yes.
Host (01:19):
You're widely known as the father of the cable modem, but what exactly are we talking about
when we say that? What specifically is the cable modem and its function and what existed before
that?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (01:30):
Thank you so much for your question. If you go back by early 1980s your
audiences would remember beeps and the burps of when you connect your phone modem. In order to have
computer connectivity, that was the methodology we used from a remote location to get to the
computer as such, you had to have a phone line and a phone modem and a dial in numbers. The AOL
methodology was a very good model. So up to know that computer connectivity was we are the phone
modems. The reason I was called the father of the cable modem by CD magazine, which is Communication
Engineering and Design Magazine 1999 was because of the vision I came up with earlier in my careers
in 1987 by then, I was lucky enough to have two solid experience, one about the televisions and
cable television working with General Electric understanding how TV signal works and how people
receive their favorite programming on TV. And the other one was the computer networking to see how
(02:35):
the corporates are connecting people who come to a place called workplace together. And by 1987 Iasked myself, Why shouldn't we have one cable instead of two separate cables, in order to be able to
have people connected from the home, why should we come to the place called the workplace connected
to the our computer to a network? At that time, of course, was a funny matter. Everybody was
laughing at it and and the idea was that there is no such a device, there is no such a cable that
can work both for the data networking and TV signal. And I said, Well, based on my background, the
cable TV does a very good job with the TV distribution as well as the data networking for the
computer works very well. I bet you we can make the data voice and video works over coax, which was
the media the cable TV was using that idea of a 1987 led to the innovation and creation of the cable
modems by 1996 on the four different stages, and then become to be global standard by 1999 so I got
(03:45):
the label of the father of the cable modem for babysitting an idea from 1987 to 1999 with my team ofthe excellent engineering group to be able to develop such a product that now allows you to Be on
the network all the time from a place like your home and with your everyday communication.
Host (04:06):
And we understand that some good, homemade Persian food had a hand in making that all happen.
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (04:11):
You're so kind to remember that part of the book. Yes, indeed, before Silicon
Valley was Silicon Valley and companies providing food for the employees, and we already had that in
a place in our little company called land city, thanks to mom, was able to get some good Persian
cook tomorrow into the office all the times and the people would naturally stay to work from first
shift to the second shift and sometimes to the third shift. In order to meet the deadline we had. We
were a small group of entrepreneurs that believe in our vision, and nobody else believe what we can
accomplish the dream that we have. So the Persian Foods was a touch on that.
Host (04:50):
When people hear the term broadband, that's something that we're very used to hearing
nowadays, so much to the point where it's just kind of always been there. A lot of people might not
really know what that refers to. Can you just explain kind of what broadband is, what that really
means.
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (05:07):
Think about your life this way, everything you do in a given day is ambient
and works by itself. So you don't do anything specifically to turn your computers on, to connect
your computer to other devices or so on. Broadband is always on. Highest speed connectivity always
on. Basically means, when you turn your computer on and you're working with that, you're
automatically connected to the entire network of the computing devices and sources in the world. So
a broadband is a digital highway that is always on, always connected, always available, all the
resources at higher speed where you would not differentiate. Oh, can I receive this content? Can I
receive that video? Can I receive this type of a file? In fact, the reality tells you that with the
broadband and always on, you are part of the ingredients of the data networking around the globe,
and you have access to anything, anytime, anywhere, that is your life. Now think about yourself this
(06:14):
morning. You got up this morning, you probably touch broadband four or five different way, withouteven knowing you were touching it, or you had to do a special connection. You might have talked with
your parents. You might have been able to do your banking. You might watch a video video. You might
have seen some news, or, more importantly, you might have an interactive meeting with number of the
people all those are using now broadband infrastructure without even knowing it.
Host (06:41):
Obviously now, it's like you said, in everything. When these technological innovations were
first made back in the 80s and 90s, how did that creation impact consumers, the economy and Silicon
Valley at that time? What was kind of the immediate impact closer to the beginning?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (07:02):
So let's take them, one at a time. This is a very excellent question, because
impact humanity at its best. How did it impact consumers? Consumer as the word indicated to be
consumed, receiving at home, but only consuming information. They were never producer. They never
could create. You're creating these podcasts from your place, so you are not a producer. Doctors can
look at the x ray. A variety of the teaching can be done in that nature. So what broadband did the
consumer made the consumer to be producer at the same time, not just consuming information, but you
also could contribute and be able to provide number of influencers in social media and so on so
forth. That's one. Now let's look at the Silicon Valley. Almost every corporation in Silicon Valley,
or, for that matter, Austin, Texas or Boston, needed to have a always on broadband infrastructures
in order their social media networking or the services that they provide to work all the way from
(08:03):
our friend in Ubers, all the way from our friends in the Facebooks and so on so forth, to theNetflix those companies would have not been able to really take advantage of the dial up and provide
the type of services they do. So the Silicon Valley got its life by having an information highway,
which was empowered by the broadband Now let's bring those Silicon Valley companies and the producer
together. All of a sudden, we have built this global economy now as a result, because now you have a
toolbox. Your toolbox is beautiful, software services made by all the corporation innovators around
the world and Silicon Valley and other places, then you have the producer and consumers now taking
advantage of this toolbox, and as a result, everything comes together. And now you have a global
economy. You also have a global infrastructures where companies and countries are talking together
daily, where the languages are translated live for the people at the same time. A good examples on
(09:06):
this one, if you really consider going back about 30 years ago, 40 years ago, we could not evenimagine to be able to learn and distribute the knowledge within the second globally, the individual
would come to the Western countries, educated, get some listen, and then 20 years later, they go
back the home country to be able to contribute something. Now you'll instantly be able to do that.
Here in the Mass General, for example, we can see the doctors who get an X rays at the night time
because of an accident, and the professional might not be able to look at that x ray. But back in
Australia, is a daytime and that doctor can look at that x ray and provide comments and a feedback
to the emergency room in a Mass General that what that are. So we really have seven by 24 global
economy all in power now because of it.
Host (09:58):
You say something really interesting in the book, which is that you say along the way here, an
entire industry lost and then rediscovered its purpose and its momentum. What do you mean by that?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (10:11):
I'm glad that you're bringing that up. Cable infrastructure was all known for
TV distribution only before that basically means get the video content and bring us to the living
rooms of the people and appear. And the TV was positioned for one way communication. You sit in your
sofa, you have your potato chips in your hand, and you watch programming and TV that was it. We used
to call them couch potato, if you remember. So what happened is this, that the power of the cable
TV, the infrastructure they put in a place, was so powerful, but only being marginally used. And as
the video become to be less important, and time goes on, you will find out that cable industry,
because of regulation from one side and the cost on the other side was becoming to be irrelevant to
the people, just to be a distribution of their TV programming. So at that time, when we injected the
data delivery through the cable infrastructure, it actually gave the cable industry the Second Life,
(11:20):
where it became to be instead of a TV programming distributor, a telecommunication pipe. In fact, in2022 the revenue that cable Industries was receiving from high speed data on a broadband was more
than the revenue they were getting from distribution of the video signal. So what had happened was
the transformation of cable industry from being video only system to a telecommunication system
where you really don't mind if it's a voice, if it's a data, if it's a video, everything was coming
together very nicely to be able to provide that contents to the consumer. So consumer now is
extremely happy because they have one pipe, and that pipes deliver to them the contents, the video,
their voice, their data, they do their banking, watch the any programming they want at any given
time, and also do the health cares, do education and do more that we have never been enabled to do.
So that's the transformation we saw from cable industry becoming to be a telecommunication pipe.
Host (12:26):
Now, typically, when we think of companies that launch big ideas, big products, there's often
private investment, there's venture capital, there's corporate interests. In your case, government
entities actually played a big role. Can you explain how
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (12:39):
I'm glad that you bring in this one up, because the standard venture based
companies are created based on external financing from VCs known as the venture capitalists, and
they invest in the company to go on, we were so early with our technology in order to be able to
provide the broadband that most venture capitalists didn't want to take that risk. A, because they
didn't believe in cable industry. B, they never believed that we could actually put data over a
cable system. What happened, which most American don't really appreciate, the government has done a
very nice job to be able to be moving some of this technology well in advance, it happens in the
middle of the Mississippi River. There is this place called Rock Island. Arsenal. Is actually a
little island in the Mississippi River where they do for their military works. And they had chosen
in early 80s to use the cable TV as infrastructures for their computer connectivity, voice
(13:38):
connectivity and data connectivity. So we were able to actually work with them and provide ourtechnology to them and and make sure the connectivity between the mainframe computer at that times,
as well as the personal computers and others to work for the global services they had to provide
that private company, Mined Land city and that public infrastructure, rocketland, military, working
together over the cable TV infrastructure, help us to mature the product, bring the cost of the
product down and also be able to add the network management and tools that is necessary to have a
larger scale. 100,000,002 100,000,300 million customers working together. So I love the private,
public relationship that we had at the time. And the government really should be credited with the
taxpayer money that they actually were much earlier than anybody else to use the cable
infrastructure as a telecommunication pipe. And my land city company happened to be the beneficiary
(14:39):
of that type of a private public company. And I'm very proud of that, because that really shows tous, America, that private company, public company, working together, we can actually do better thing
for humanity. Guess what? Today, everybody's using broadband for all the good things they are doing
because of that type of relationship that we had in early, late 1980s.
Host (15:03):
And speaking of that, usually after creating groundbreaking technology, people profit off of
it, or people, you know, really hold the technology close. You decided to distribute it to the
broader industry free of royalties.
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (15:17):
You know, there are time in your belief that you think what you innovate
sometimes has far better value if it's distributed globally for everybody to utilize. And I still
remember that moment very effectively. That why we decided to be able to do that, because we felt a
technology that we had brought from $18,000 per cable modem to less than a $30 per cable modems. It
really better serve the entire globe than for somebody trying to make money into it. We decided that
if we make our technology global standard, everybody will be connected faster, cheaper and
seamlessly, and all the connection will work exactly the same, where the interoperability and
connectivity among all the peoples around the world would become to be seamless, but really made
perfect sense for that technology to be gifted to the cable industry with the royalty free and then
becomes to be global standard, because that's how we got 4 billion people around the globe
(16:18):
connected. Now, if I would have not distributed my technology royalty free, would that happen, ofcourse, but it would have taken much longer time, and would have taken a lot more efforts to be able
to do so. So we expedited the process and and if you go backward to year 2020, with the unfortunate
co Ed solution problem that we face. Think about that. What was the role that broadband played?
Everybody was connected from any part of the world. So our foresight really worked very well. And
when a natural disaster like covid showed up, the broadband was our rescue factors for the global
humanity, global economic and global connectivity. So I really felt very good then, and I still feel
even better now, because you shouldn't measure yourself by the number of the zeros in your bank, but
you should measure yourself with how many humans are now, using that technology effectively.
Host (17:15):
You mention two secret superpowers for success, which are determination and diligence...
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (17:23):
Yeah. So I'd like to take a step back on this one and think about it. How many
people told us this would never work? How many people told us there's no way you can bring this half
a size refrigerator device to a small size that can fit in the people's home? There were people who
said, There's no way you can put a cable infrastructures in middle of that. In fact, some people
were referring in the universities to the cable system as a sewer pipe that a good thing goes in it
and bad things comes out of it. So the two awards that you are referring to was really the field
behind my team, we believed in one thing, should the data over cable TV work yes or no? And we have
accepted it should Yes. So we kept peeling the onion, layer by layer, solving their problem, solving
the issue, technically, marketing wise, business wise, and we were able to really accomplish our
goal. If you didn't have that determination, we would have given up the ideas and the hope that
(18:26):
these vision we had back in 87 would ever work. So in summary, they were really the guiding factorfor us to stay in the track and keep on going and keep on going until we get to the objective that
we had, which was really a ubiquitous cable modem connectivity, now called broadband services
everywhere at any given time.
Host (18:51):
You know, for a lot of entrepreneurs, after having a great and groundbreaking success like
yours, it's difficult for them to maintain momentum. How do you keep yourself motivated and
constantly innovating?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (19:05):
My motivation has always been the stuff that I'm innovating. Does it help
humanity? Most venture capitalists and venture companies and founders like to say, can I make money?
I have never been motivated with the money yet. I'm a good capitalist at the same time, if I really
work hard and create something, I think it should be a rewards on that, because that's the best
system we have in the world, and works very productivity, productive for everybody. So my innovation
has always been around whatever I innovate, it needs to help the humanity, and it needs to make the
planet Earth's a better place than what we found it before as such, that has been my way of the
growing my company, online city, and all the other companies that I have founded after that. But the
other side of the issue also is on the startup company. Is that how well can you really focus on.
New technology and new innovation always try to focus on existing problem. Means find a problem that
(20:07):
needs a solution, where go design something and innovate something, then try to see what fits in inorder to do that. So the combination of focusing on solving a problem and also focusing on making
sure what I'm doing helps humanity has been the guiding factors for me, and has helped me
tremendously in my last 20 plus years to be able to innovate more company after we did the cable
modem technology, what am I working now? I really believe the elder is that staying at home with the
loved one have a far better chance to enjoy life and the sunset of their life becomes to be a more
powerful by being near their loved one and their home, and be able to have the children, the
grandchildren surround them. So using the broadband infrastructures, working with a number of
medical doctors, I'm working around the technology to be able to see how we can provide the quality
of a life and the details of the healthcare information that elders can share with their doctors and
(21:10):
nurses outside to be able to monitor them just as they were in the hospital or just as they were inthe nursing home. This allows the elders to stay home longer live betters, have better quality of
life, and then we will be able to monitor them effectively and openly and dynamically to be able to
provide them a better assistance and a better input. For example, with the using the technology, you
could almost predict the mobility of elder person at home is the mobility of that person requires to
do something different for them. So we will be able to manage that, and before the person falls down
and break a legs or arm, you could actually prevent those elements of happening. So healthcare at
home for elderly is my next passion that I'm pursuing right now, and I think that's a very good way
of to be able to appreciate our elderlies, to be around the grandchildren and enjoy the life at the
environments that they have at home.
Host (22:12):
You know, our audience is made up of entrepreneurs and inventors and small business owners,
and they're all listening to you talk about motivation and impact and determination. If they're
stuck in a rut or if they're working on their first big thing, what would be a piece of advice you
would give to them, something they can do today, literally today, what's the next step they should
make? Where should they start?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (22:36):
You know, that's very interesting, because it impacts every one of us. So I
think the number one for any entrepreneurs today that can make an impact for them is to make sure
they believe in what they are developing, first internally, if they believe in that number one, then
make sure that it fits in a problem that exists. And if it fits in a problem and they believe on it,
then they should make sure to work in environments to be able to prove to their consumers or their
customer base that this thing does do something good for them, and if they focus on those three
elements, you will see that the product will start doing the talking versus a PowerPoint
presentation or some marketing advertising, about it. So my my advice to them is make sure as fast
as you can let the product does the talking for you, and let the product speak on the value and the
benefit that bring for the consumer, that will do a great job for any entrepreneur to be able to
(23:38):
move forward faster.
Host (23:40):
That's very good advice. So where can our listeners get a copy of the book? And where can they
connect with you?
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (23:47):
Of course. So the amazon.com. Just look for The Accidental Network in Amazon,
and they should be able to get the book through that distribution system. There's other wide
distribution as well, like a Walmart that you can also get the book order through their website. And
most importantly about the book is the book really does two good things. From One Hand says how we
believe in ourselves and how we transform industry to become to be the broadband pillar of the
society, and the other one says how small group of the people are able to make that change without
external financing, which I think it brings to value to the entrepreneurs and the industry, that as
long as you believe in your vision and your technology, keep on going and deliver what the product
should do and the best is yet to come.
Host (24:39):
Fantastic. Well, look Rouzbeh. Thank you so much for making some time for us today. We've
really learned a lot.
Rouzbeh Yassini-Fard (24:44):
Thank you so much. I really appreciate the time you have given me. Thank you
so much.