madison

The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Kai Krause speaks: Not that mysterious (well, maybe a little)

By | August 27, 2010, 8:55am PDT

Summary: After I posted a piece about Kai Krause — the most mysterious man in the world — Kai reached out to say that he’s not a not a recluse hermit, as some have implied.

On Wednesday I posted a piece about Kai Krause, the most mysterious man in the world. Long time Mac users will remember the fantastically psychedelic interfaces that he designed for Kai’s Power Tools (KPT) — a set of powerful image tweaking filters for Adobe Photoshop.

Despite researching the post and hunting for his contact information I wasn’t able to reach the mysterious interface guru since he appeared to be “hidden in a towering castle in Germany working on a mysterious project.” A wee bit of hyperbole? Probably.

Kai reached out after seeing a link to my post.

If I may say hello from afar… before this thread spirals towards unnecessary flame wars: this is a greeting from Kai, with hatliftinggestures to Jason.

Not all that mysterious, really - I am not a recluse hermit, (and no, don’t really see myself as part of the “mega-rich” set. And certainly I am not retired, sitting by some pool with umbrella drinks is just not my thing ;)

The intro text you quoted, Jason, was written over ten years ago, not five - and at the time I simply wanted to say “we are not doing some quick startup web thing” but rather just quietly work and design and think and play and live…. It was meant as the opposite of Hype, really.

But I fully understand how it can seem odd from the outside - all I wanted to say is: there was a little more to the story, once you look closer.

I would probably read that today just like kwabinalar and get a bit cynical - but at the time it was nothing more than an honest wave “hey they are some people who are NOT in this for a quick buck, will not sell their soul just to be on Nasdaq, but really like to think about where this is all headed…”

When I found this old place above the river, the first visitor was Douglas Adams - we were on each others boards at the time. And lots of plans were made for projects - not just software (he had moved next to us in Santa Barbara to do the Hitchhiker script)…and when he died soon after, that was just one of many changes in focus and goals which led me to morph my initial idea of a small incubator and focus on longer time cycles and deeper issues.

In other words: I lost interest do do “one-more-software-thing” and I never looked back :)

I did write an essay about that very topic: the fleeting nature of software, on the Edge site you mentioned at first:

P.S. Thanks Astra for the suggestion on Google Translating my writings in German, but that is a little bit like reading Woody Allen autobotted into Mongolian - all the wit and fun will be mangled out of it…puns become nuns… : See, it starts when they take my name “Kai Krause” and it comes out transliterated as “Dock Ruffle”…lol ( Kai = quay = dock, krauses Haar = ruffled hair.. All true, but…. Such is the plight of technology in the early third millennium, eh ;)

Some more writings in English are here.

As it turns out, Kai is a lot like Thomas Panchon and rational and sane human being. And you can tell by his classic smirk that he doesn’t take this “business” too seriously. He’s got several projects brewing and I can’t wait to see what he comes up with…

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Jason O'Grady is a journalist and author specializing in mobile technology. He has published six books on Apple and mobile gadgets and his PowerPage blog has been publishing for over 15 years.

Disclosure

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady is the creator and editor of O'Grady's PowerPage, which has been publishing mobile technology news since 1995. He maintains an advertising relationship with the following legacy advertisers on the PowerPage:

  • Amazon Associates
  • Google Adsense
  • Tekserve
  • Advertising on the PowerPage is brokered by a third-party agency (BackBeat Media) and he recuses himself from these negotiations.

Biography

Jason D. O'Grady

Jason D. O'Grady developed an affinity for Apple computers after using the original Lisa, and this affinity turned into a bona-fide obsession when he got the original 128 KB Macintosh in 1984.

He started writing one of the first Web sites about Apple (O'Grady's PowerPage) in 1995 and is considered to be one of the fathers of blogging. He has been a frequent speaker at the Macworld Expo conference and a member of the conference faculty. He also co-founded the first dedicated PowerBook User Group (PPUG) in the United States.

After winning a major legal battle with Apple in 2006, he set the precedent that independent journalists are entitled to the same protections under the First Amendment as members of the mainstream media.

O'Grady is the author of The Nexus One Pocket Guide, The Droid Pocket Guide, The Google Phone Pocket Guide, and The Garmin nuvi Pocket Guide (Peachpit Press), the author of Corporations That Changed the World: Apple Inc. (Greenwood Press), and a contributor to The Mac Bible (Peachpit Press). In addition, he has contributed to numerous Mac publications over the years, including MacWEEK, Macworld, and MacPower (Japan).

When he's not writing about Apple for ZDNet at The Apple Core, he enjoys spending time with his family in New Jersey.

Talkback Most Recent of 9 Talkback(s)

  • ZDNet Gravatar
    dasilvagm
    27th Aug 2010
  • meta
    i was a huge fan of kai krause and his software back in the days. heck, i even had shares of his company metacreations before he abandoned it. (and kai, hypocrisy much? i know someone who made a quick buck on the nasdaq and his name starts with a K.)

    but besides from telling us that you're super rich (but of course not one of the usual super rich, but unique and special and such) and living next door to d.a. when he wrote his life altering novel (name dropping? common, that is really weak) what did you actually DO in the last decade? is this one big secret? something that when revealed will change the world forever?

    i'm afraid not. i am afraid kai krause has no big secret. he is just a retired guy who once made a difference and now writes fancy essays. in german we have an expression for that kind of behavior: "sich interessant machen."
    ZDNet Gravatar
    banned from zdnet
    27th Aug 2010
  • Sigh
    @banned from zdnet

    Hi 'banned',
    I read your comment and have often heard similar lines over the years - and I certainly understand how it can easily seem like that from the outside.

    Frankly I would probably say the same thing about "that guy Kai", if all I knew was what I read about myself in places like this. But there really is another side to a lot of it. Usually one sighs and goes on, but maybe it is fair enough to try to communicate a little bit.

    For one, I surely did not "abandon" Meta, on the contrary. It was a very complex situation, but I left peacefully.
    As for the "quick buck" - computing began for me in 1977, the first company in 1982, business graphics and charting, when the IPO happened in 1995 - 15 products later - I would hardly call that quick.
    And all that talk of the 'super rich' - it never came from me, those are often implied and assumed, much like in this blog piece, without Jason wanting to do any harm, the language re-perpetuates all those myths.
    Meta was great - but I shared with a partner, the employees, the first investors, then Paul Allen as he came in, several company buys and mergers as well as the public : I had under 3% of it by that time. Which was just fine.
    And my point: this was not some quick Web IPO as was common then, we had virtually no internet angle yet. There are many multi-millionaires and billionaires in the years that followed, I was certainly not part of that. And no regrets either - it was one heck of an adventure...

    Where it gets a bit sad is that mentioning an old friend of many years would be interpreted in such a way. I toured for years with Douglas, stayed in his homes in France and London, did keynotes, conferences, Macworlds in Paris, Tokyo with him, Milia in Cannes, hosted the NewMedia roadshow, had him onstage for an hour as my guest in my last TED appearance - even arranged the dang memorial, sat on the board of Digital Village and had endless discussions and musings about the future of technology, hopeful plans what to do about it... and then the man drops dead at 49. That had a great effect on me in 2001 and I surely did not mean to inject it here as 'name dropping' - it was part of the story on how and why I changed my path from pure software development to the next level of trying to make a difference. And that could not just be "one more PS filter set"...

    Not sure you read any of the Edge things, but I realize that one cannot please all readers and if some reject my work as "fancy essays" there is little I can do to un-fancy them.... But the question "what did you DO in the last decade" is answered to a fair degree in those writings.
    I never claimed there was "one big secret" or "that mysterious huge project that will change the world" - culminating in "the most mysterious man in the world" now... wink all not my words but writers, journalists and often in fair spirit, like Jason, a little tongue in cheek, a caricature of the person -and I understand and respect how that process works.

    But it takes a life of its own, you see. I literally wrote : "And certainly I am not retired, sitting by some pool with umbrella drinks is just not my thing wink and still get the reaction "he is just some retired guy"...
    I can insist that I rather NOT talk about any of the work and keep it quiet, the opposite of Hype - and still get "he just wants to make himself seem interesting".

    Again, you probably -despite your fun 'banned' name wink - did not mean to just troll outright for the heck of it. I believe you probably feel in earnest that "that guy is probably like that". And all I can do is to appeal a little bit for some "benefit of the doubt".

    Kai
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Kai K
    27th Aug 2010
  • RE: Exclusive: Kai Krause speaks: Not that mysterious (well, maybe a little)
    I hope he isn't scared off by your questions! don't see it happening, notoriety don't seem the object. if i'm wrong...

    oh yeah,
    Thanks for the input "banned" how's the hair doing?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    fozzel
    27th Aug 2010
  • RE: Exclusive: Kai Krause speaks: Not that mysterious (well, maybe a little
    When people most people say things like reclusive, disappeared, cashed-in, or wonder what is in the skunkworks....I think they really are saying when will we be able to play with such magical toys again Kai! I still can't understand how Metasyth did what it did on my 233 MHz PPC! It was simply a beautiful piece of musical technology and vision.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    soniqfreq
    27th Aug 2010
  • yikes
    I worked with Kai's plugins for photoshop way back when and loved the tools he provided us.
    This article really made me think WAY less of the man. He seems like pretty full of himself and really all honesty he only gave a couple dozen good filters for us to use. But he seems to think way to highly of himself.

    If I made that kind of money I would probably retire but this wouldn't be the type of interview I would give and the view I would give of myself.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    webstalkers@...
    27th Aug 2010
  • RE: Exclusive: Kai Krause speaks: Not that mysterious (well, maybe a little)
    I'm so glad and excited to see that Kai is alive, well and kicking! I often wondered what happened to him in the last few years. I, too, sometimes thought of him as a mysterious man who went underground after being extremely successful and in the spotlight of the world.

    I sometimes wonder the same about some of my old techy friends and colleagues who once were very involved, active and visible in the early days of the Internet but then disappeared from the face of the earth (or, well, of the Internet at least).

    Occasionally I'd stumble across something about Kai on the web...a honorary doctorate here, a ui-design paper there, a book release to which he contributed... and, of course the Byteburg. But rarely something new.

    I just want to thank him for all the inspiration he provided in my early computing days -- life-changing inspiration, in the truest sense of the word. It was the set of Kai's Power Tips & Tricks *.wri documents and HSC's Kai's Power Tools that taught me Photoshop in an era of chirping modems and bbs-systems far from the web as we know it today. His tools not sparked a huge interest in the more obscure functions Photoshop had to offer and learning how they worked, they also invited me to become more open and creative than I ever could be as a technical draftsman before - first involved as hobby artist for a demo-group, ultimately leading to a change in my career to work as a web-designer in the mid 90s.

    Bryce was a huge inspiration to me as well. I was already interested in 3d-graphics (and programming), but Bryce opened a whole new perspective on 3D landscapes and terrain visualization. It was Kai again who inspired me to explore usgs-datasets, learn more about gis, programming, graphics, image processing theory -- and then to pause my career to study comp-science... four years in a technologically so fast-changing period, that almost seemed like a jump through time. When I wrote my thesis I picked up my old Bryce-inspired 3D-terrain hobby again and worked on a client-/server-based 3d geo-visualization system, for which I had basically the same idea that Google brought to life with Google Earth soon later. I dumped my own project, but I will never forget the great and exciting journey I had in all these years because a few of Kai's papers and tools invited me to explore new possibilities.

    But coincidently I ended up following his footsteps and leave Germany to work and live in the US. But I guarantee this time it was not Kai who inspired me! happy Hm, was it?

    Some critics may think he's overrated and reduce him to a bunch of funny user-interfaces, but it's really just about a spark of inspiration Kai's work provided in my early days.
    Just imagine, first stuck working all day at a drawing board, programming in my spare time and playing with bbs-networks. With graphics reduced to ASCII-art, or the Windows 3.1 program manager -- how could I not be thrilled and excited to suddenly find Kai's colorful user interfaces that invited you to play and explore? He was so ahead of his time. It wasn't about productivity, but about a once-in-a-lifetime eye-opener, view into the future, and a message that there's so much more to discover and learn.

    Now this may all make me look like a stalker happy But this was and still is Kai's brilliance to me.

    Thank you!
    Gerrit
    ZDNet Gravatar
    celeph
    28th Aug 2010
  • Dear Kai,
    There are no small parts.
    Only small actors.
    ;-)
    ZDNet Gravatar
    schnoofi
    15th Oct 2010
  • RE: Exclusive: Kai Krause speaks: Not that mysterious (well, maybe a little)
    Peculiar but only 50% the submit is opening up for me. Is that this the net website or my above cyberspace reebok nfl jerseys browser. Will need to definitely I restart my internet browser?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jackson1984-24316069205748857739440257893812
    11th Oct

Talkback - Tell Us What You Think

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]
Click Here

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources