
This is the fourth installment of a five -part series on global corporate leadership. This article focuses on Information Technology
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Economics (Debt)
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Environmental Factors
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Political Factors
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Technology
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Social Factors
- Who are the customers of the future?
- How will my company distribute its product or service in the future?
- Who will be my competitors in 10 years? 25 years?
- What will the source of my company’s competitive advantage be in the future?
- What skills or capabilities will make my company unique?
- What role will strategic alliances/ mergers/acquisitions play in its strategy?
- How will my firm alter the nature of competition in its industry?
- How will my organization redefine the boundaries between industries?
- What can my company do to create a new industry?
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The series taken as a whole should help you define the answers for your company to these nine questions:
The Opportunity
For many years, companies have devoted more than half of their capital budgets to information technology, and have acted under the simplistic assumption that ‘improved information’ results in increased productivity. The same companies have not based their computer investments on careful calculations of returns or added value, but rather on cultural and political concerns. Successful information systems must focus more on relationships and interaction than on the information itself.
The Solution
Tomorrow’s strategic technology investments will present more choices for organizations than they will know what to do with. Companies will be able to set up the technology that best fits their organization rather than the other way around. The value that organizations gain from these investments will depend on the foresight and intelligence that go into determining how their people will use technology.
There is a cliché that goes something like the following: If organizations only had greater quantities of cheaper, faster, and more useful information, they could increase their profitability and enhance their competitive positions in the global marketplace, etc., etc. On the surface, that seems to make sense. If you offer employees greater quantities of better information more quickly and at a lower cost, you should reasonably expect their performance to improve as a result.
Although in many situations where better performance resulted, even the improved information access often had little or no impact on people’s behavior. Most of us are aware of the risks of smoking. Yet millions of people still pick up the habit. Though there should be strong links between information and behavior in the enterprise, the real problem most executives face isn’t inadequate information, it’s the organization’s unwillingness to change behavior in the face of good information.
On an industry-wide level (micro level), some companies get strong returns on their digital technology investments. What seems true, however, is that on a macro level more money has been wasted on computerization than has been created.
No one denies that computerization and networking can add enormous value. But when we look at the numbers, it is clear that companies are not basing their computer investments on careful calculations of returns or added value. Other factors such as culture, politics, fashion, and competition also come into play. Best-practice methodologies often are irrelevant benchmarks for many companies investing tens or hundreds of millions of dollars in computers and networks.
There’s a fundamental difference between managing an information system and running a business on information, just as there’s a difference between operating a rivet gun and making airplanes. Managers intent on establishing technical systems subscribe to different values and practices than managers trying to set up productive business environments for their workers. Operating a business on information has a much broader array of interaction and interdependence than managing an information system.
When managers try to fit inflexible, mechanistic systems into organic contexts, they need new vocabularies to explain how people in organizations really use these systems.
Indeed, the word information loses its edge when redefined in business contexts; culture and politics and relationships may generally become at least as important.
Does the organization want to use its networks to centralize or decentralize responsibility? Does the enterprise want to make every bit of data accessible to everyone all the time? Or does it want to build a new information-access hierarchy into its intranet? Should individuals be rewarded for sharing information? Should people be encouraged to strike up electronic relationships with employees in other departments? Or should interdepartmental fraternization be deemed an inappropriate use of the network? For now, these rhetorical questions provide food for thought, however some of us encounter them in our daily business lives.
Conclusion
If an organization does decide to improve the way it shares information, it should focus first on changing the culture of sharing. Most information managers know little about designing incentives for enterprise collaboration, much less invoking it. That’s why responsible information departments have to insist from the beginning that effective enterprise computing and groupware don’t depend on transparency, replication, and semi-structured databases. They depend on how individuals are rewarded and punished for sharing and withholding information. They are about behavior, culture, and politics.
Watch the video related to technology
Members of the Transition’s TIGR team explain how technology can bring reform and transparency to the Obama Administration. change.gov
Help answer the question about technology
How has the emergence of technology in the last two decades affected our use of the English language?Does anyone think language in general has worsened or improved as time has gone by? Are standards of written and spoken language in decline and is the purity of the English language getting more distorted through the impact of technology?
Perhaps technology has aided the development of English or there may not be any relationship between the growth of technology and language at all!
Open floor, I'm in search of all sorts of opinions!




Oh, come on, it's just GOTTA be the transporter.
well if you think about it, technology makes experiments easy to be tested. You don't really want to wait all day to prove that your hypotheses was right, so technology really helps science. If your trying to prove something or test something, technology makes you life way easier. They're different because technology deals with making life easier and then there's the technical stuff about machinery and ya da ya da. Technology deals with more broader scale than science, it's like more hands on. Technology is cool too. While science is much cooler, Science is been around than technology. But anyway, science deals with everything, from testing an experiment to finding a cure for a disease. Science deals with explanations and experiments.
Pretty informative video! I never got to the theater to see ‘Avatar’ in 3D… wish that I would have set aside the time… purchased the Blu-Ray version on disc…absolutely a magical film! I can’t afford one of those expensive 3D televisions ( just bought a high-definition screen for Blu-Ray),but I sure hope that Cameron isn’t going to release the 3D version just for 3D TV owners… the rest of us would like the experience in 3D as well!
ellie roundtree if that ain’t a porn name nothing is
This is the most informative coverage about stereoscopic 3-D i have found from the internets that exist in a news site thus far. Rocketboom should try broadcasting news episode with Molly in 3-D. Seriously. Yes seriously indeed.
HEY LEAVE MY GIRL ALONE!!!!……..hahaha
I'm a new driver and my parents won't let me go anywhere without a cell phone for safety reasons. We have cut back on cable tv and we are also considering completely eliminating our home phone since my mom, dad, sister and I all have cell phones. Another thing we're doing is just trying to be conscience of simple things like turning off the lights, turning down the thermostat, using less hot water and car pooling. Haven't seen a huge difference yet but it's kind of taking the financial edge off. We can't eliminate our internet because I'm taking online classes and also do most of my work over the internet. We also haven't blown any money on video game systems and new games. We also got rid of one of our music programs since we were paying for two separate ones for our downloads.
I’d say autostereoscopic techniques (particularly multiview parallax barrier) will win out over the current trends simply because people would rather see 3D without needing to wear silly-looking glasses.
Plus, with the release of FujiFilm’s parllax barrier camera and the more media-saturated Nintendo 3DS, autostereoscopic displays will be getting much more press coverage very soon. And any business(wo)man knows more press equals more popularity.
-IMP
Move over Viewmaster! I think 3D will only go mainstream when it can be achieved without the need of special glasses or headgear. Until then it’s going to be a novelty.
Oh, there was that bit in the bible where Jesus turned dihydrogen monoxide into ethyl alcohol… or the part where he walked on surface tension… oh wait… its just a story…………….. P.S. please learn how to use grammar correctly.
@endocomar93 That was not a real hologram. That was digital CGI with a greenscreen. The only technological advance there was the synchronization of the cameras filming the “holographic” person with the digital insertion of his image. The people in the studio didn’t see the hologram, only the viewers at home. Because it wasn’t really a hologram.
-IMP
Someone needs to be doing their own homework, instead of looking to others to answer the questions.
It really does you no good if other people always answer your questions.
It's worse, some people cannot even spell "the" online without screwing up.
Thanks to my trusty companion, Hot Rod (an MX-400 Logitech mouse)
I never misspell when I post because of the auto-spellcheck and correction click and I am wise enough to know what word to use.
Poor education and texting is in my mind, the evil source of all this illiteracy. The phone companies should boost the memory capacity of their phones for typing in coherent english or parents should lecture their kids that this is not how you should write a book report and take their phones off them for a month or two.
On the other hand,
New words like "smart phone" "quantum computing" and "fanboy" are entering our language (I do not consider internet gibberish to even qualify for a dictionary EVER)
Communication is faster than ever, you can make friends who live in another country and tell them what hobbies you are into and they send a response in seconds.
I'm holding out hope for voice recognition software to replace the keyboard so that the computer types what you dictate in correct punctuation and spelling with a touch screen manual override in case you are sick with laryngitis or just don't feel like talking to a machine.
The english language is at a crossroads and it is up to us to decide if keeping it "pure" or letting slang and pop culture interact with it is for the best.
all the techanologies which invented in 20th or 19th centuries they are mostly improved in 21th century.
example; cars, computers, aircrafts,etc
I see big advancements in material sciences nanotechnology and the usual advancements in computers for the next 30 years or so: lighter planes, better medical treatments, cheaper stronger structures, faster and faster computer, etc…
One hundred years is a long ways off. I'm not sure but I think the whole doubling processing speeds every1.5 years will breakdown by then and we will be turning to quantum computers that uses the states of subatomic particles instead of binary. Moon bases, American flag on Mars, trans Atlantic subway, space vacations for the wealthy (not super wealthy), more renewable energy power sources, no ice caps, and a Starbucks in everyones hourse =)
You are correct: it is black light (ultraviolet light).
Check out the links below:
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@AquaInertia CHEERS MAN,HOW DID YOU REMEMBER THAT!!!!!