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Monday, December 2, 2002
P2P Update
From InfoWorld: "P2P is moving beyond collaboration and file sharing to serve as connective tissue in virtual datacenters and storage, BPM (business process management), and composite applications." The article states that P2P is taking on several hybridized forms:
Competiton for Cisco
Thinking about Failure
Success and Failure are two sides of the same coin in business. A fine line separates the two. Failure too can be a great teacher - if we are preared to learn. Writes Michael K. Tanner of The Chasm Group:
TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: The Vision
To bridge the technological digital divide in developing countries, we need to look at disruptive innovations. These innovations are ideas and technologies which for the most part are already in existence. Each idea as a singularity may not be earth-shattering, but taken together, they can make a big difference. The whole is much greater than the sum of the parts. I have talked about most of these ideas here in the past, so I’ll summarise them briefly. Then, we will look at three markets which need to be targeted first in our efforts to build digital bridges. We will also consider marketing strategies which can be used to proliferate technology into these markets. Let us first begin by stating our basic objective. “A computer on every desk and in every home” used to Microsoft’s mantra. We need to think of an adapted version of this vision for the developing countries: “A connected computer accessible to every employee and family.” Let’s look at each of the phrases. Connected computer signifies the use of both the Internet and the computer. The Internet is crucial – it becomes the window to the outside world. At the same time, we want to make available a full-fledged desktop computer. It is hard to use handhelds or cellphones for many significant length of time. Accessible does not necessarily imply ownership. This is an important difference. Microsoft’s vision was about giving each worker and home owner a computer. In our world, we want to look at sharing of resources and community ownership to bring costs down. This is akin to the STD/PCO booths in India, where telephones are used by the neighbourbood, rather than owned by an individual. They have proliferated telephony to even the remotest corners of India. Every Employee needs to have access to a computer. This is what their counterparts in the developed markets have. Computing needs to become central to the enterprise. It needs to become ingrained into every business process. This is the only way we are going to see an increase in productivity. An enterprise may be selling its products and services locally, but it needs to be globally competitive with its product quality and pricing. Competition has no barriers. Competitive organisations imply a productive workforce. We need to use new software concepts to share information, collaborate better, communicate faster and manage customers and the supply-chain better. Every Family too needs to have access to computing. This will help in many different ways. For starters, it will take away many of the daily pains that are faced in some of the things that we have do – booking tickets, interacting with government agencies, paying bills. Next, it opens up new opportunities for both education and business for the younger generation. Just as the railways blew away the geographical limits in the world on the nineteenth century, the connected computer shatters distance in today’s world. Everyone – young and old – can expand their horizons through the Internet-enabled computer. At the heart of this vision is the promise of a computer-literate populace, which will serve as the underpinning for both the real-time society and the real-time enterprise. Information and knowledge will become the new rivers, whose flow creates fertile minds and competitive organisations. By empowering their people with technology, the developing countries can create the foundation for bridging the digital divide. Tomorrow: The Building Blocks Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: My First Computer: Scaling Up [December 20, 2002] TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: My First Computer: Economics (Part 2) [December 19, 2002] TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: My First Computer: Economics [December 18, 2002] TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: My First Computer (Part 2) [December 17, 2002] TECH TALK: Disruptive Bridges: My First Computer [December 16, 2002]
Tech Talk
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