|
Thursday, February 24, 2005
Job of a Great Manager
800-CEO-READ Blog points to a quote from Marcus Buckingham’s next book "The One Thing You Need to Know : ... About Great Managing, Great Leading, and Sustained Individual Success."
Five Across and Bubbler
SiliconBeat writes about a new web publishing tool:
Interactive TV
Technology Review writes about how IP-TV works:
Blogs in Business
Dave Pollard writes:
Enterprise Software
| PermaLink
| Comments (1)
True, true. One thing I'm not so sure about is the thing about budget cuts though. Even though I could potentially subscribe to the belief that the drivers for business blogging are all "nice-to-haves", the cost of blogging is not so high that this should directly translate into relatively few corporate bloggers out there. There must be other things holding companies back. Posted by Steve Shu
The Top 100 Gadgets of All Time
Mobile PC has compiled a list. Here is how they define gadget:
The top 5: 1. APPLE POWERBOOK 100, 1991 2. ZENITH SPACE COMMAND TV REMOTE CONTROL, 1956 3. SONY WALKMAN, 1979 4. MOTOROLA STARTAC, 1996 5. CDI MECHANICAL MOUSE MODEL 4-101, 1970
TECH TALK: Best of Future Tech: Part 4
Two columns in August 2004 (11 and 25) discussed the notion of the computing Kumbh Mela. “Every twelve years or so, the world of computing sees major breakthroughs which transform the landscape. Think of this as the computing equivalent of the Kumbh Mela. The last major breakthrough was during 1992-94 when the launch of Microsoft Windows 3.1, Intel’s Pentium processor, SAP’s R/3, and the web browser Mosaic heralded an unprecedented period of all-round growth until the slowdown in the early part of this decade. The next computing Kumbh Mela should be just around the corner. What will it be?” My answer: “The next big thing in computing will be about building a platform which makes the two most important creations of the past – the computer and the Internet – available to the next users at a fraction of today’s prices. What emerging markets like India need is the equivalent of a ‘tech utility’ which makes available ‘commPuting’ as a utility to the masses. A centralised platform that makes available computing as a service and accessible via thin clients over a high-speed broadband infrastructure, neighbourhood computing centres that provide access on a pay-per-use basis, a community-centric content platform which makes available local information and helps small businesses connect with each other, and investments in education and healthcare to make sure they reach rural people – these are the elements of the tech utility.” The September 8 column discussed the characteristics of the New and Next Net -- Always-on, Ubiquitous, High-speed, On-demand, Multi-format, Two-way, Personalised and Not Free. “This New Internet will make possible path-breaking applications and services. From voice-over-IP which will allow phone calls anywhere in the country for a flat fee to video-on-demand which can provide education and entertainment to users when they want it, from software-as-a-service for businesses to automate all their processes to multi-player gaming platforms which will transform leisure time, the New Internet will create new opportunities – as well as threaten conventional business models. It will force players in computing, entertainment, consumer electronics and entertainment to tread into each other's territories.” Innovation in India was the subject of the September 22 column. “India needs to build an ecosystem of innovation and entrepreneurship to build upon its success in services to occupy centrestage in the world of technology in the years to come… First, we need entrepreneurs willing to take risk… Second, we need early-stage venture capital and mentoring for the start-ups… Third, entrepreneurs with the initial capital will need mentoring… Fourth, we need talent willing to join start-ups… Finally, there is a need to focus on the ‘middle of the pyramid’ market.” Tomorrow: Part 5 Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Best of Future Tech: Part 5 [February 25, 2005] TECH TALK: Best of Future Tech: Part 3 [February 23, 2005] TECH TALK: Best of Future Tech: Part 2 [February 22, 2005] TECH TALK: Best of Future Tech: Part 1 [February 21, 2005]
Tech Talk
| PermaLink
| Comments (2)
Indians should set up an organization like SCORE in the US www.score.org. SCORE has nearly 11,000 retired executives acting as volunteer counselors to entrepreneurs and small businesses. They offer face to face and electronic counseling. All FREE and confidential. Posted by Som KaramchettyWhen I think of what *foundational elements* India needs to go to the next level, I think of the following: 1. Flow of physical goods and services: made a good start with upgrading the highway system in the past few years. Should the govt take on big highway building projects like what was done in the US in early part of the 20th century? 2. Flow of ideas: the communications infrastructure has undergone a transformation in the past decade with the advent of mobile communications. However, the computing and broadband infrastructures are way behind times (although the ramp-up seems to be happening). 3. Flow of capital: there are some international VC firms that have set up shop in India...and some swadeshi ones are coming up too. Organizations like SCORE would be great... One potential way would be to have charter members of TiE peform this role, as a starting point. 4. Flow of intellect: while colleges are churning out huge numbers of people with degrees, conventional wisdom is that the "a big title job at an MNC with supervisory responsibilities over a group of people" is viewed as a success, not someone who is risking himself and going the entrepreneurial route!! What we need to change things here are "good poster children" successes (Sanjay, you are a poster child!) so that people can "dream" about what is possible. While the foundational elements are to have the infrastructure, *leveraging* the flows is what creates ultimate value! Cheers |
Great point Rajesh! I believe that in businesses relationships are the most important.. the rest of the things automatically follow.
Its instructive to know that in Good to Great also the author talks about Level 5 (highest level) leaders who are not flashy but who ensure that the success is always shared by everyone in the firm!
desh
Posted by desh kapoorwww.deshkapoor.org
diazepam | carisoprodol online | hydrocodone online
Posted by linda