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BizTechTalk Briefs 07/03/2009

  • Declaration of Innovation proposed by Secretary Gregory Bialecki, Executive Office of Housing and Economic Development - for anyone living and working in Massachusetts, this is a great step. Help sustain the innovation agenda - it takes far more than just the government to step up and state innovation is important.

    "We hold these truths to be self-evident:
    1. Innovation is our edge. For almost four hundred years, our economic prosperity and our quality of life have been advanced through technological and social innovation. Innovation has always been, and still is, our fundamental competitive advantage. Our innovations have benefitted the state, the nation and the world.

    2. Innovation is everywhere (Part I). Our innovation instincts show up in every industry sector, from manufacturing to digital technology to life sciences to the creative economy, and also permeate our nonprofit and government sectors.

    3. Innovation is everywhere (Part II). There are innovation success stories all over the state and indeed in our neighboring states as well. We must keep in mind that innovation knows no bounds.

    4. The only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Let’s face it, when it comes to innovation, we rock. That doesn’t mean we can’t improve (a lot) on what we are doing, but it does mean that we should stop wasting our time worrying about whether we are really in the big leagues. We are.


    5. Together we can. The keys to success for a Massachusetts innovation agenda will be local collaborations among business, academia and government and global collaborations with innovators from around the world.

    Here within the Patrick Administration, we strongly believe that the Commonwealth must have a deliberate innovation agenda as a core element of our economic development strategy. We will be using this blog to talk more about that agenda, but our objective is simple: To create and sustain what is widely recognized as the most effective collaboration of industry, academia and government in support of technol

    tags: innovation, massachusetts, declaration


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

BizTechTalk Briefs 06/11/2009

  • If Intelligence agencies, and now The Army can loosen up and allow viewing/participation in 2.0 - what's YOUR company's excuse for blocking? Hearing real stories from real soldiers is pretty radical transparency - yet with guidelines (not a bad idea).

    "The Army has ordered its network managers to give soldiers access to social media sites like Facebook, Flickr, and Twitter, Danger Room has learned. That move reverses a years-long trend of blocking the web 2.0 locales on military networks."

    tags: transparency, 2.0, web2.0, army, facebook, twitter, flickr, Del.icio.us, participation, socialmedia

  • Interesting - very interesting take on the failures of over automation and complex systems... Anyone with more experience than I in flying or designing such systems care to comment?

    See -> The Paradox of ‘Simplicity’

    "Air France Flight 447 went down in a giant, dangerous, violent storm that might not have been survivable under any circumstances. But as the Airbus A-330 penetrated that huge system of thunderstorms, sensors, systems and computers on the plane started failing in a rapid cascade that would make any pilot’s head spin – even if he was not in the middle of extreme turbulence flying blind in the night..."

    tags: simplicity, usability, complexity, failure


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

BizTechTalk Briefs 06/05/2009


Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Where Have the Podcasts Gone? Psst... Over Here...

information-architected-iam-talking-with-dan-keldsen

Out with the Old

For those readers and participants in the grand experiment of BizTechTalk over the last 3 years or so, you may recall I had launch a podcast series, titled, oddly enough, BizTechTalk. Greatly enjoyed the experience, and have had the pleasure of discussing a wide variety of topics in over 50 podcasts.

In with the New

As part of the ongoing investigations into what is happening in the business and technology world, I've re-launched the podcast series in my new (December 2008) company, Information Architected.

The series is "IAM Talking" - and is an interview-based series, talking with people from all industries, various roles, and on a variety of topics.

The graphic above shows the 5 most recent podcasts (find them all -> IAM Talking) that have been released and recorded, featuring topics such as:

  • Agile development
  • SharePoint
  • Tagging and taxonomies
  • Knowledge management and new business models
  • and User Experience

Coming up in the queue are interviews with:

  • Matthew E. May - author of "In Pursuit of Elegance" (and who I had interviewed in 2006 on his previous book, "The Elegant Solution")
  • Daniel Pink - author of "The Adventures of Johnny Bunko" (most recently) and well known for previous books "A Whole New Mind" and "Freelance Nation" among other work
  • and many others - on a roughly weekly basis, as scheduling allows.

Any topics that are of particularly burning interest - please let me know what YOU want to know more about, and if there are particular people or companies that you feel I should focus on.

If that focus should be YOU and YOUR company, book, product, service, etc., don't hesitate to pipe up. If there is a reasonable fit, and you can resist an outright product pitch in the interview, I'm perfectly willing to discuss and magnify the conversation.

Either comment on this post, or get in touch via LinkedIn and/or Twitter as a first pass.

In addition to this public exploration of topics, I am also at your disposal for private, targeted analysis inquiries - analysis being one of the three "touchstones" of our business of analysis, consulting and education focused on the business impact of process, innovation, content, knowledge and search.

For those who are in need of no-nonsense analysis, consulting or education services - please don't hesitate to get in touch.

6 Months Into Business - Update

Gone Dark? Not Exactly... Shifting Channels

For those who haven't been following me in the world of Twitter in recently (@dankeldsen), while I have not been nearly as active here on BizTechTalk, I've busy with client work, and most recently having the wonderful experience of being with some of the smartest minds I've had the pleasure of interacting with at this week's Front End of Innovation (#feiboston or #fei09) just a 10 minute walk from my office.

I was talking (as you can see in the YouTube clip above) on the topic of Enterprise 2.0 and Innovation, and had a great audience, and incredible and ongoing conversations before, during and after the session.

Full slide deck below - audio coming shortly:

The Business of a New Business

And for those who may have forgotten, or indeed, not known, Carl Frappaolo and I have been busy gents in our new (as of December 2008) company, Information Architected.

While the economy could certainly be in far better shape than it is, we have been quite busy with some attention getting SharePoint research, case studies and presentations (free subscription to the information - dripped over 2-3 weeks) out the door starting in January, as well as taking all that we've learned over the 15-25 years we've been doing work in the process, innovation, content, knowledge and search worlds, to provide very targeted educational offerings tied tightly to the consulting capabilities we offer.

Fantastic Clients

For those clients who have seen fit to work with us in the 6 months out of the gate, I sincerely thank you for the work (and would name you, if not for the NDAs, although I understand the reasoning, no worries).

Good to have new clients as well to have circled back to past clients to help continue the work we had begun from the Delphi Group days.

And for those who are in need of no-nonsense analysis, consulting or education services - please don't hesitate to get in touch.

Coming Up

Unless I am on the road, I look forward to seeing people at the Enterprise 2.0 Conference again this year (also a mere 10 minute walk from the office - sometimes being Boston-based is a very good thing), and otherwise, see you online and offline wherever we might next meet.

Don't hesitate to get in touch, and if I can help you at all in YOUR business, let me know, I'd be happy to see if there is a good fit, and if not, the cast of thousands in my LinkedIn and Twitter networks are likely to hold suitable candidates.

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