Your information on: ‘AGB2009’ Category

The Future of IT – 04/04 Itinerary

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Few weeks ago, when I published the article “The Future of IT”, I was planning to write something about technology.

But, as most bookworms turned practitioners, I know that a white page is tempting.

Most writings about the future are actually the typical side-effect of an attempt to find order within chaos- notably when it is an unknown chaos that you are trying to describe.

This article is published in four parts (no more than 1000 words each).

Of course, I tried to keep it readable- no more than 150 to 250 words per section.

This is the fourth article: itinerary.

You have read about my target future and the present. How do we move from the present to the future? It depends from where you are now. Therefore, I will outline an example, i.e. monitoring online positioning, that could inspire other applications.

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The Future of IT – 03/04 Starting

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Few weeks ago, when I published the article “The Future of IT”, I was planning to write something about technology.

But, as most bookworms turned practitioners, I know that a white page is tempting.

Most writings about the future are actually the typical side-effect of an attempt to find order within chaos- notably when it is an unknown chaos that you are trying to describe.

This article is published in four parts (no more than 1000 words each).

Of course, I tried to keep it readable- no more than 150 to 250 words per section.

This is the third article: starting.

IT systems are obviously not a one-size-fits-all. The current trend is toward standardization, and this chapter will summarize some current trends and issues. The common thread? Tailoring the response to the needs (and budgets), while allowing future expansion.

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The Future of IT – 02/04 Destination

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Few weeks ago, when I published the article “The Future of IT”, I was planning to write something about technology.

But, as most bookworms turned practitioners, I know that a white page is tempting.

Most writings about the future are actually the typical side-effect of an attempt to find order within chaos- notably when it is an unknown chaos that you are trying to describe.

This article is published in four parts (no more than 1000 words each).

Of course, I tried to keep it readable- no more than 150 to 250 words per section.

This is the second article: destination.

My approach to change is: ask what the customers aim to achieve, understand where they are, assess the resources available, propose an itinerary, and, if needed (e.g. due to lack of resources), identify a realistic alternative target.

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The Future of IT – 01/04 Introduction

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Few weeks ago, when I published the article “The Future of IT”, I was planning to write something about technology.

But, as most bookworms turned practitioners, I know that a white page is tempting.

Most writings about the future are actually the typical side-effect of an attempt to find order within chaos- moreover, when it is an unknown chaos that you are trying to describe.

This article is published in four parts (no more than 1000 words each).

Of course, I tried to keep it readable- no more than 150 to 250 words per section.

This is the first, introductory article.

I will start with the concept of forecasting, then the logic of building forecasting models, to finally land on the key issues: the experience I used to develop the forecasting framework, and the conceptual model.

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AGB2009: Bridges

Sunday, November 1st, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: BRIDGES

BACKGROUND

I know what some of the locals would say.

But, on an overall “helicopter view”, it is irrelevant.

ABSTRACT

Mixing change in politics and business is always a risky affair- and I am not referring to the tulip craze.

Just read the enclosed bibliography.

I might be wrong- but changing a culture requires a long-term view, that sometimes requires more real-politik and less short-term results.

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AGB2009: Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: QUIS CUSTODIET IPSOS CUSTODES

BACKGROUND

Look around: you will see an increasing role in our complex society for various forms of “oversight”, “audit”, “watchdog”, “rating” entities.

ABSTRACT

The first issue is certainly related to authority and initiation.

If, by consensus, established authorities set up a watchdog, the line of authority is clearly inherited from the source, and the initiation contains also the framework for the potential evolution (or dissolution) of the new watchdog.

But what about some of the pre- and post-Internet self-appointed watchdogs?

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AGB2009: the future of IT

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: THE FUTURE OF IT

BACKGROUND

It has been a long time since IBM supposedly said that few computers would be enough to forever satisfy all the computing needs of humanity.

Do not worry: this is not a technical article.

ABSTRACT

My suggestion? Well, I still hold an Italian passport.

Therefore, I suggested an idea inspired by another industry: segmenting the market by building standardized elements, and then offering different levels of “tailoring”, but with an option to then re-insert, after sometime, the custom-designed services into the basic portfolio.

But, in my view, the issue is becoming even more nuanced. And more complex. And still actual.

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AGB2009: technological disintermediation

Monday, October 19th, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: technological disintermediation

BACKGROUND

Technology and tecnological innovation are not anymore what they used to be.

ABSTRACT

Most of the publications on the “new” or “soft” economy talk only about the positive side-effects of this “crowdsourcing” of innovation, but..

In the past, user-generated innovations required skills, or money, or both, e.g. in “tuning” the engine of you car.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

For this article, not really a bibliography, but a “mini-library”.

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AGB2009: a creative workplace

Friday, October 16th, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: a creative workplace

BACKGROUND

Over the last few decades, creativity, or its development, became an industry in itself.

ABSTRACT

I have a systemic (or “holistic”, if you prefer) approach to change: no initiative lives in a vacuum, and is constrained by time and environment.

The starting point has therefore often to be the end: in our case, why do you want to introduce creativity in the workplace.

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AGB2009: evolving alliances

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

This part of the AGB2009 series (see the presentation)
AGB2009: evolving alliances

BACKGROUND

In business, alliances are often a matter more of opportunity than choice- the lesser of two evils.

ABSTRACT

The lifespan of an alliance? Have a quick look at the European alliances since the French revolution: few alliances lasted more than a generation.

Also if we are now used to see NATO as long-term relationship, slightly more than 60 years ago the first seeds of the alliance, during the African side of WWII, didn’t seem promising: a coordination nightmare.

The old joke, that NATO was created to keep the Germans in and the Russians out is but part of the reason why, in the end, the bloc was able to operate also beyond its original purposes.

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