<Collaborative.Work.Environment/>

Why Work Sucks and How To Fix It

<ed.note>As irony would have it I'm currently undergoing the challenge of rightsizing so I would appreciate you're passing  any leads for techie (webmastery or tech writingish or suchlike) opportunities in the Nashville MSA (or for anywhere in the off-chance you're a ROWE employer and you don't care where I live). Please just send them along to blog@conmergence.com. Thanks in advance.

Cali Ressler and Jody Thompson, the creators of the Results-Only Work Environment, have written a book, Why Work Sucks and How To Fix It, to describe the paradigm which they pioneered at Best Buy. Instead of commenting on the book I'm providing an excerpt from the free sample because it does an excellent job of framing the directions the book discusses. It is foreworded by Brad Anderson, CEO, Best Buy.</ed.note>

This book is based on a simple idea: Our beliefs about work—forty hours, Monday through Friday, eight to five—are outdated, outmoded, out to lunch. Every day people go to work and waste their time, their company’s time, and their lives in a system based on assumptions—about how work gets done and what work looks like—that don’t apply in today’s global, 24/7 economy.

We go to work and give everything we have and are treated like we’re children who, if left unattended, will steal candy.

We go to work and watch someone who isn’t very good at their job get promoted because they got in earlier and stayed later than anyone else. We go to work and sit through overlong, overstaffed meetings to talk about the next overlong, overstaffed meeting.

We see talented, competent, productive people get penalized for having kids, for not being good at offi ce politics, for being a little different. We go to work in the Information Age, but the nature of the workplace hasn’t fundamentally changed since the Industrial Age.

But most of all—most tragically of all—we play the game. We play the game even though we know in our heart of hearts the game doesn’t make any sense.

Why do you think Sunday night is tinged with dread? That is you telling yourself that the way we work is unhealthy. That life isn’t meant to be lived this way. The modern workplace makes people physically and mentally sick, undermines families, and wastes precious time and energy. Everybody knows work sucks and yet we do nothing. If the dismal nature of work weren’t the norm; if our assumptions and expectations about work weren’t so ingrained; if, for example, work were some kind of new disease that suddenly appeared and cost businesses billions and ruined people’s lives, you can bet that we would be marshaling our collective resources to find a cure.

So why doesn’t it change?

Maybe because we assume that work has to be drudgery. (If it were fun it would be play, right?)

Maybe because we have been brought up to believe that by definition work is unproductive, political, and unfair.

Maybe because no one has proposed a reasonable, effective alternative.

Everywhere there are solutions that are not solutions.

The solution is not fl extime. Flextime is a joke.

The solution is not work- life balance. Under the current system, balance is impossible.

The answer is not getting better organized, or No-Meeting Wednesdays, or setting your alarm fi fteen minutes early to beat the morning rush, or spending a Saturday making all your lunches for the month.

There are no tips or tricks or helpful hints that are going to solve this problem.

There are no answers in the employee handbook.

The only solution is to change the game entirely.

We’re starting a movement that will reshape the way many things in this country, and across the world, get done. We’re offering not a new way of working, but a new way of living. This new way of living is based on the radical idea that you are an adult. It’s based on the radical idea that even though you owe your company your best work, you do not owe them your time or your life. This new way of living is practical and simple (though not necessarily easy), and while it’s a sweeping change from how we live life now, it requires only a basic adjustment in your thinking.

We are talking about a Results-Only Work Environment or ROWE™.

In a Results-Only Work Environment, people can do whatever they want, whenever they want, as long as the work gets done. Many companies say their people can telecommute or work a fl exible schedule. But these arrangements often still include core hours, or can be dissolved should business needs change, or are doled out stingily as a perk for the privileged few. In a ROWE, you can literally do what ever you want whenever you want as long as your work is getting done. You have complete control over your life as long as your work gets done.

2008 Fiber To The Home Conference & Expo September 21 - 25, 2008 Gaylord Opryland® Resort & Convention Center, Nashville, TN

<ed.note>The conference's theme is "Linking Communities at the Speed of Light" but more intriguing to me is the the scheduled appearance of Don Tapscott (The Naked Corporation: How the Age of Transparency Will Revolutionize Business, Digital Capital: Harnessing the Power of Business Webs, Creating Value in the Networked Economy, Blueprint to the Digital Economy: Creating Wealth in the Era of E-Business, Growing Up Digital: The Rise of the Net Generation, The Digital Economy: Promise and Peril in the Age of Networked Intelligence, Who Knows: Safeguarding Your Privacy in a Networked World, Paradigm Shift: The New Promise of Information Technology)  adreessing his latest work, Wikinomics How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. Implicit in Tapscott's writings is management's buy-in of the distrubuted digital enterprise-enabled results-only collaborative work environment. If you happen to be one of those creatures (especially if you are from Nashville), I invite you to join the Linkedin.com Project Net-Work group and Technology Nashville.</ed.note>


Sunday, September 21, 2008
1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.                                   Registration Opens                                                                               
Monday, September 22, 2008
7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Registration Opens
8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Developer Panel Workshop  *Additional fee*
8:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. Home Networking Workshop  *Additional fee*
1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m. Track Session - Series 100  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
1:00 p.m. - 1:45 p.m.

FTTH Executive Summit *By invitation only*
Moderated by:
Don Tapscott, Author

2:00 p.m. - 2:45 p.m. Track Session Series 200  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
3:00 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. EXPO Grand Opening & Opening Reception *Open to all registered attendees*
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
7:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Registration Opens
7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Continental Breakfast *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
8:00 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.

Opening General Session    *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
Keynote Speaker - Don Tapscott, Author
Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything
Sponsored by: Corning logo

FTTH Council Awards
Sponsored by: FTTH Council

FTTxcellence Awards
Sponsored by: Corning logo

10:00 a.m. - 10:15 a.m. Refreshment Break    *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
10:15 a.m. - 11:30 a.m. Global Carrier Keynote Panel   *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.

EXPO Hall Opens   *Open to all registered attendees*

12:00 noon - 2:00 p.m. Luncheon in EXPO Hall  *Open to all registered attendees*
3:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. ITCo Panel  *Conference Pass attendees only*
3:15 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. Track Session Series 300  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
4:15 p.m. - 4:45 p.m. Track Session Series 400   *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
5:00 p.m. - 5:45 p.m. Track Session Series 500   *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. International attendee Reception   *By invitation only*
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
7:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Registration Open
7:00 a.m. - 8:00 a.m. Continental Breakfast  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
8:00 a.m. - 9:00 a.m. Government and Regulatory Panel
8:00 a.m. - 8:45 a.m. Track Session Series 600  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
9:00 a.m. - 9:45 a.m. Track Session Series 700  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
9:45 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Refreshment Break  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
10:00 a.m. - 10:45 a.m. Track Session Series 800  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
11:00 a.m. - 12:15 a.m. Panel Session Series 900  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
12:15 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. On Own for Lunch
1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m. EXPO Hall Opens
4:15 p.m. - 5:45 p.m. Closing General Session with Keynote Speaker  *Conference Pass and Day Pass attendees only*
7:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.

EXTRAVAGANZA - Closing Reception with Entertainment *Additional fee*
"Don't forget your dancing boots!"

Thursday, September 25, 2008
8:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.

Post Conference Workshops 

Father Google and Mother IM: Confessions of a Net Gen Learner

Carie Windham, Student Relations Specialist, EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative

The rise of the Millennials has spawned new conversations about engagement and learning on today’s college campuses. But what do these Net Gen learners really want? And what do they need to survive in a Web 2.0 world? From the mouth of a confessed Net junkie, learn what makes these students tick, what ticks them off, and what faculty and administrators need to know to bridge the generational divide. Carie Windham spoke at MSU on Jan. 10, 2008, sponsored by the MSU Teaching and Learning Committee.

IBM Opens New 3D Virtual Healthcare Island on Second Life

Interactive environment displays IBM’s vision for consumer-driven healthcare

ORLANDO, FL - 24 Feb 2008: IBM (NYSE: IBM) debuted at HIMSS®08 its newest island in Second Life: IBM Virtual Healthcare Island.  The island is a unique, three-dimensional representation of the challenges facing today’s healthcare industry and the role information technology will play in transforming global healthcare-delivery to meet patient needs. 

The island supports the strategic healthcare vision that IBM released in October 2006, entitled, Healthcare 2015: Win-Win or Lose-Lose, A Portrait and a Path to Successful Transformation.  The paper paints a picture of a Healthcare Industry in crisis – of health systems in the United States and many other countries that will become unsustainable by the year 2015.  To avoid “lose-lose” scenarios in which global healthcare systems “hit the wall” and require immediate and forced restructuring, IBM calls for what it defines as a “win-win” option: new levels of accountability, tough decisions, hard work and focus on the consumer.



The IBM Virtual Healthcare Island is designed with a futuristic atmosphere and provides visitors with an interactive demonstration of IBM’s open-standards-based Health Information Exchange (HIE) architecture.  Working with project leads in the U.S., the island was designed and built by an all-IBM-India team.

Starting from the patient’s home, they create their own Personal Health Records (PHRs) in a secure and private environment and watch as it is incorporated into an array of Electronic Medical Record (EMR) systems that can be used at various medical facilities.  As they move from one island station to the next, they experience how the development of a totally integrated and interoperable longitudinal Electronic Health Record (EHR) is used within a highly secured network that allows access only by patient-authorized providers and family members.

Patient avatars arrive and are welcomed at the Central Park and then visit a Central Information Hub, where IBM’s view of the healthcare industry and the power of information technology to transform it are presented.  An amphitheater on the Hub’s second floor provides an area that can support virtual meetings, complete with a large video screen and accompanying slide presentation on IBM’s HIE architecture and the positive impact that this technology can have in the transformation of the Healthcare Industry.

Visitors can then walk, fly or use transporters to visit the various island stations:

  • The Patient’s Home:  In the secure environment of a private home, patient avatars can initiate a PHR and populate it with their personal health characteristics and clinical history, accessed and downloaded from physician EMR data.  They can also establish privacy and security preferences as well as health directives.  The ground floor demonstrates secure messaging with providers and activates the initial PHR.  Using a transporter to move upstairs, patients use home health devices to take weight, blood pressure and blood sugar readings in the privacy of a bedroom, further incorporating this information into the PHR, which is shown on presentation screens. 
  • The Laboratory: This stop offers laboratory and radiology suites to help avatars extend their understanding of the benefits of  HIE.  Here, patients can check in at a Patient Kiosk and have blood work and radiology tests performed. The use of EHRs – revealing only appropriate portions of the PHRs -- shows how consumers can also benefit through cost and time savings.
  • The Clinic: Patient avatars transport or walk from the Lab to the Clinic, where a welcome from their primary-care physician awaits.  A combination of scripting and information screens supports simulation of a patient exam, after which an electronic prescription is generated, and the continued development of the EHR is explained on nearby screens. 
  • The Pharmacy: Here, avatars can check in at a Patient Kiosk that simulates the verifying of drug information.  They then receive their prescriptions and update their PHRs/EHRs with new medication data.  The HIE architecture demonstrates how use of PHR/EHR technology can prevent consumers from purchasing medications that are contra-indicated given the medicines they presently require, as well as alerting them about potential drug-to-drug interactions.  The PHR/EHR is again updated.
  • The Hospital: In this futuristic, three story structure, avatars arrive for a scheduled visit with a specialist.  Physicians’ offices, patient rooms and exam rooms are all simulated here. 
  • The Emergency Room: Avatars can chose to experience a virtual emergency by “touching” a specially scripted control.  This engages a medical episode and a ride on a fast gurney directly into the private and secure emergency treatment area, where a special screen is programmed to reveal the full incorporation of the PHR to ensure proper treatment.

“We are pleased to offer our IBM Virtual Health Island as a tool for our healthcare customers and our worldwide sales force.  The island allows each healthcare stakeholder to envision how the total system can be affected by intercession at each juncture of the healthcare delivery process,” said Dan Pelino, General Manager, IBM Global Healthcare & Life Sciences Industry.  “We believe that the use of our new virtual world provides an important, next-generation Internet-based resource to show how standards; business planning; the use of a secured, extensible and expandable architecture; HIE interoperability; and data use for healthcare analytics, quality, wellness and disease management are all helping to transform our industry. “

IBM’s Healthcare & Life Sciences (HCLS) Industry will continue to develop the new island in months to come.  The island can perform as a virtually “always on” demonstration tool for IBM’s sales personnel.  A video version of the island is also under production.

IBM believes in the significant promise of virtual-worlds technologies far beyond today's usage: the next evolutionary phase of the Internet. IBM is helping clients and partners to conduct business inside virtual worlds and to connect the virtual world with the real world through a richer, more immersive Web environment. 

Second Life is a 3D online world created by Linden Lab, a company founded in 1999 by Philip Rosedale, to create a revolutionary new form of shared 3D experience.  Last October, IBM and Linden Lab announced their intent to jointly develop new technologies and methodologies based on open standards that will help advance the future of 3D virtual worlds.

RE: Finding Resources for the Innovation Plantation

<ed.note>One of the topics of the upcoming Eighth Annual Technology Nashville Conference (Thursday, May 22, 2008, 7:20am - 2:30pm, Franklin Marriott Cool Springs) will be "Workforce Development - Solving the IT Shortage in Middle TN". Setting aside the fact that there is no IT shortage in Nashville, only possibly a shortage of IT folks who reside in Nashville (which is not the same thing when management ceases the geo-locking of work tasks and adopts distributed digital environments, results-only collaborative work environments) IT firms would do well to pay attention to the Asperger's-IT connection and make it part of their recruiting networking strategies.</ed.note>

The Bottom Line for Nonprofit News [Updated]

<ed.note>Miller-McCune has launched a print magazine which had an interesting article concerning shifts in journalism. Since CNN has begun soliciting viewer contributions as part of their news gathering model, it seems the distributed reporting paradigm (a la IndyMedia, OhMyNews, Wikipedia) is growing.</ed.note>

Ryan Blitstein is a freelance journalist based in Chicago and a Miller-McCune contributing editor. As a staff writer at the San Jose Mercury News, SF Weekly and Red Herring, he covered everything from spray-can artists…

Across America, nonprofit Web sites are trying to keep public interest journalism alive at the local level. But to provide what print newspapers increasingly do not, these digitized nonprofits must overcome the challenge facing every startup: Eventually, they have to break even.


<ed.note>BTW, if you're a follower of this meme you may be interested in the Open Journalism networking group I've just set up on Linkedin.com promoting distributed and open news.</ed.note>

The Future of Companies Report at Global Futures and Foresight

<ed.note>David Smith sent a pointer to a new GFF study:</ed.note>

We are living in a period of great economic and political volatility. There are new global players entering every field of commercial endeavour and the political power brokers across the globe are changing rapidly.

India, China, Russia, Brazil, Mexico and a great many other countries are growing dramatically, creating new consumer societies and absorbing financial capital and human capital in their activities.

In the process new business models are emerging often being facilitated by the latest technologies.

Many of the issues facing our companies are common across the world. Even, the ability of the world to survive our economic activity is at stake.

Are we innovative enough to survive let alone thrive in this rapidly changing and risky environment.

Can we make the changes necessary to build our future?

This report will highlight some of the compelling drivers of change and offer questions for you to address in your own organisation to help you thrive.

Please download a copy. We hope it will help your business create a more secure future.

Our goal is to help organizations 'better prepare for the future'. So do feel free to call for our support.

Intalio|On Demand Launched, First Ever Open Source BPM Suite as Service

<ed.note>Ismael Chang Ghalimi, CEO, passed this PR piece to me:</ed.note>

Lowers Barriers to Adoption for BPM Projects

PALO ALTO, Calif. — April 1, 2008 — Intalio, Inc., the leading Open Source BPMS company, today announced Intalio|On Demand, the first open source Business Process Management System delivered as a service. Intalio|On Demand is available by signing up at www.intalio.com/on-demand. The subscription for the service starts at $1,500 for each dedicated server, and includes bandwidth, licenses, maintenance, and support. Users can receive a free 5-day evaluation.

The convenience of being able to instantly deploy a BPM project lowers the bar for adoption. Business users and IT analysts can get a project up and running much quicker and without the administrative concerns associated with managing the required servers. Intalio|On Demand essentially replicates the Intalio|BPMS On Premise version and includes the connectors for Salesforce.com as well as enterprise applications such as Oracle E-Business Suite and SAP.

"Intalio|On Demand BPM is a fully functional, scalable, secure, and flexible enterprise ready BPM solution which will revolutionize BPM adaptability across not only large but also small and medium business spectrum," stated Srikanth Kollu, global practice head–BPM/SOA at JASS & Associates Inc. “After building some prototypes with Intalio|On Demand I was convinced that this approach was the best. We have decided to go with Intalio.” JASS & Associates develops and implements end-to-end IT solutions for clients, ranging from Fortune 500 companies to start-ups, from diverse industry segments.

Running dedicated servers on top of Amazon Web Services (AWS) ensures that Intalio|On Demand retains the highest level of security, reliability and availability possible. "The Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud is a perfect fit for porting on-premise software to a ‘software as a service’ model", says Senior Amazon Web Services Evangelist, Jeff Barr. "Amazon EC2 allows companies like Intalio to develop new distribution channels with minimal expenditure."

Using rPath as the software appliance on top of AWS increases application scalability to ensure that there is always capacity for whatever user demand is generated. Intalio|BPMS, in both On Demand and On Premise versions, supports over 100,000 different process models deployed on a single server, with over 100 million process instances running concurrently. A single server can also accommodate thousands of concurrent users. This means that Intalio|BPMS has more than two orders of magnitude greater capacity than any other BPM solution available today.

According to Forrester analyst Ray Wang in the August 2007 report titled Competition Intensifies For The SMB ERP Customer, “SaaS deployment options finally put business users in the driver's seat in software decision-making. With rapid deployment of a solution, enterprises can realize benefits in days, not weeks. Additionally, software pricing by cost/user/month enables business users to consider licenses as an operation expense instead of a capital expense. No longer do business users have to seek board approval for capital expenses or assess IT capacity. However, Forrester recommends that business units and IT teams coordinate on issues such as integration requirements, process flows, and long-term support.”*

For more information on Intalio, please visit www.intalio.com or subscribe to the RSS feed at http://www.intalio.com/blog.

Recent News

Intalio Announces Support for BPMN 1.1
http://www.intalio.com/news/intalio-announces-support-for-bpmn-11/

Informatica Signs OEM Agreement with Intalio;
http://www.intalio.com/news/informatica-signs-oem-agreement-with-intalio/

Intalio and Alfresco Integrate BPM Suite with Enterprise Content Management; http://www.intalio.com/news/intalio-and-alfresco-integrate-bpm-suite-with-enterprise-content-management/

Intalio Launches Worldwide Partner Program; http://www.intalio.com/news/intalio-launches-worldwide-partner-program/

About Intalio, Inc.

Intalio is the leading vendor of Open Source BPM and SOA software. The Intalio Business Process Platform™ empowers organizations of all sizes to develop process-driven applications faster, better, and cheaper. Founded in July 1999, Intalio is a privately-held, venture-backed company located in Palo Alto, California. For more information on Intalio, please call 650-596-1800 or visit www.intalio.com.

The Intalio Business Process Platform is a trademark of Intalio, Inc. All other names, brands or products may be trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective owners.

Quocirca Reports on the Distributed Business Index

Businesses rely on widely distributed networks of workers, be they at HQ, in branch offices, mobile in the field or working at some other external location. Whilst the office continues to be seen as the primary place of work, more and more staff are spending at least part of their working week somewhere else. Certain employees have always needed to be on the move; today they are better connected but the availability of connectivity means that other jobs that were previously confined to offices can now also be done from afar, which also means they can be more easily outsourced to third parties. This report looks at the degree to which the 21st century workforce is distributed and the issues organisations have with enabling this.

Key Findings

  • Branch offices: the majority of European businesses still operate with a traditional structure of a headquarters with a number of smaller branches
    The average number of locations for a business with over 1,000 employees is 33. In some sectors, like banking, this is decreasing; for others, like retail, it is increasing. In the future, carbon taxes may drive businesses to open smaller locations, relying on technology for collaboration between workers and reducing the distance that both employees and customers have to travel.
  • Mobility: workers that have traditionally been on the move are better connected, and the communications technology used to enable this has freed others, such as those working in call centres, to work remotely too
    70% of businesses say at least 25% of their staff are working remotely for at least part of the week.
  • Outsourcing: if an employee can do their job from afar then so can someone else; businesses are allowing greater access to third party workers than ever before
    Contractors, partners, suppliers and customers are all being given direct access to internal applications to automate transactions and allow day-to-day and non-core tasks to be outsourced.
  • Distributed business index (DBI): taking these factors together-the enablement of branch, mobile and external workers-an index for the degree of distribution can be defined (see Appendix B)
    Financial services organisations are the most distributed, partly due to their high degree of external interaction, public sector ones the least. Retailers lie between the two; the big chains still rely on a large number of branches, despite the growth in internet shopping.
  • User experience: all businesses worry about the experience of HQ workers, but highly distributed businesses put more effort into ensuring a good experience for remote workers
    Just worrying about the user experience is not enough. It must be measured, because the impact for organisations with a very high DBI, if access is unavailable for some reason, is palpable.
  • Technology: a high proportion of information technology (IT) workers does not, in itself, create a distributed business; the technology first needs to be embedded in business processes
    Even businesses with low DBI have a high proportion of workers that use IT. But those with a high DBI see IT as fundamental to their business processes rather than being a "nice to have".
  • Drivers for distribution: the three main drivers for enabling distributed working are business efficiency, customer satisfaction and employee satisfaction
    As a whole, businesses are successful in providing the capabilities to support these drivers. For those with a low DBI, expectations are also low. However, those with the highest DBI, and are pushing distributed working to the limits, are not always able to meet their expectations.

CONCLUSION: There are many good reasons for enabling distributed working, but it will only succeed in the long term if there is a good enough underlying communications infrastructure. Businesses are unlikely to become less distributed in the future and those that embrace this reality will be the ones that thrive and endure. However, to succeed as a highly distributed business, and reap the benefits, requires that many business processes, such as supply chain management and customer support, are adapted to ensure they continue to operate optimally. Applications and a sufficient infrastructure should also be in place to support this.

Is That A Chip In Your Arm or Are You Just Happy To See Me? [or "How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Telecommuting"]

<ed.note>One of the most influential guys in HIT, CareGroup CIO John Halamka, gives his take on the policies and technologies necessary for supporting flexible work arrangements (ROWE) at CIO.com. RE: the chip reference, see this.</ed.note>

Education Conflicted on Collaboration

On the one hand, yet on the other.

Schools Empower Potential GRID Workers So That Management Can Turn Around And Disempower Them

here and here.

<ed.note>Meanwhile, the National Science Foundation released a study indicating "Telework" benefits employers, employees and the environment; and the U.S. Treasury, together with SIFMA and the Financial and Banking Information Infrastructure Committee recently incorporated telework in their 3-week pandemic drill.</ed.note>

Hylton Jolliffe posts on "FASTforward 08 interviews with speakers, attendees, and bloggers"

here.

Keynotes

John Hagel: The Impact of the User Revolution on Your Organization
David Weinberger: The Information Mess – And Why You Should Love It

Day One

John Hagel - consultant, author
Joe McKendrick - analyst, blogger
Bob Coxe - chief information officer for Criterion Systems
Robert Paterson - Robert Paterson, consultant, blogger
Clare Hart - EVP, Dow Jones & Company
David Sutija - SVP of enterprise products, FAST
David Weinberger - speaker, consultant, author
Tom Davenport - consultant, author
Jorn Ellefsen - CEO of Comperio
Charles Fiesel - Roundarch
Don Tapscott - strategist, author of “Wikinomics”
Sue Feldman - research vice president, content technologies group, IDC

Day Two

Gerry Campbell: president, search and content technologies, Reuters
Zia Zaman: executive vice president, global marketing, FAST
Safa Rashtchy: speaker at FASTForward’08
Jan Paul Raven: Knowledge Concepts
Jared Spataro: group product manager, Microsoft
Benjamin Rudolph: Search Discovery
Jim McGee: consultant, author, blogger
Mark Pfeiffer: SAILLABS
Bill Ives: consultant, blogger
Jon Husband: author, blogger, consultant
Paula Thornton: experience design strategist
Bjørn Olstad: CTO of FAST
Sandy Kemsley: consultant and blogger
Tim Stay: Perfect Search
Liv Brahin: UBS
Michael Cleary: Reuters

Day Three

JP Rangaswami: CIO of British Telecom
John Markus Lervik: CEO, FAST
Nate Treloar: SVP, Interaction Technology, FAST
Jevon MacDonald: blogger perspective
Kiyosh Kurihara: President of Japanese analyst firm TechVisor JP, Ltd.
Brooks Gibbins: vice president and general manager, financial services at FAST
Kyoko Suzuki: Computer World Japan

Sun's James Ware on Why Your Stockholders Are Idiots If They Don't Force Your C-Suite To Implement "Net-Work" Enterprise-wide Yesterday

<ed.note>Or words to that effect...here.</ed.note>

EURAM Conference 2008 Track "Creating Value Through Digital Commons" Call For Paper

Ljubljana & Blend – May 15th -17th 2008

How collective management of IPRs, open innovation models, and digital communities shape the industrial dynamics in the XXI century.

TRACK DESCRIPTION
The track, hosted within the EURAM Conference 2008 (http://www.euram2008.org), focuses on how digital commons (DC) create value through open ways of managing knowledge and innovation. We encourage the submission of papers addressing how open accessibility, mainly through digital networks, is affecting economic activities.

In recent years, information has become a primary wealth-creating asset, while technological developments have transformed the production process from physically-based to knowledge-based. As a consequence, the management of technology and knowledge are key factors to compete on the markets.

Following this path, new ways of managing IPRs that foster instead of limit the access to information (Benkler, 2006), have emerged as reliable business opportunities for firms in different sectors (software, biotechnologies, pharmaceutical, media, industrial design). Moreover, the creativity and competitiveness of companies are benefiting from open production and innovation methods (Chesbrough, 2003; von Hippel, 2005), relying on an emergent division of labour, collective ownership of intellectual properties, and information sharing in on-line communities. Leading examples of these new trends are the success of Free/Open Source (FOSS) solutions; the increasing usage of Creative Commons Licenses; the phenomenal success of the on-line encyclopaedia Wikipedia and, more generally, the flourishing of user generated contents.

This track aims at contributing to the research agenda on the economic exploitation of digital commons, dealing with intriguing research questions as:

  • How is possible to profit from public knowledge?
  • How does the open model perform compared to the proprietary one?
  • Do digital commons favour the creation of new ventures?
  • How to manage incentives and the division of labour in open environments?
  • Which are the strategies to compete in such new markets?
  • SUBMISSIONS
    Extended abstracts will be considered, but a preference will be given to full papers. We invite well-crafted papers contributing original ideas on different sectors as software, biotechnology, media, pharmaceutical, and industrial design. All submissions will receive a double blind review process.

    A non-exhaustive list of themes is as follows:

  • BUSINESS MODELS: taxonomies and case studies on how firms extract value from digital commons; sustainability of open business models; relationships between firms and virtual communities; division of labour and competitive strategies in open environments;
  • OPEN INSTITUTIONAL REGIMES: new ways of managing IPRs; comparison between open and traditional IPRs regimes; free riding vs. trust in on-line communities; policies to increase knowledge production by sharing and re-using
  • FREE/OPEN SOURCE ENTREPRENEURSHIP: FOSS-based firms as a special case of New Technology-Based Firms; fund-rising of FOSS based enterprises; FOSS strategies of large and small software companies; hybridization between commercial and Free/Open Software; FOSS strategies in developing countries
  • OPEN INNOVATION: internal vs. external sources of knowledge, new ways of organising R&D; types of knowledge and models of governance; open management and integration of intangible assets; assessment of users' integration inside firms boundaries; on-line community building and management.
  • COMMONS-BASED CREATIVITY: how public availability of contents through digital networks fosters creativity; analysis of collective invention/creation processes (Wikipedia, Linux, SETI@home); reuse and mixing of existing contents as lever of creativity; economic exploitation of public licensed contents.
  • We are making arrangements for a Special Issue of an International Journal and are planning to invite two keynote speakers among the most important scholars in the field.

    TRACK CHAIRS:
    Cristina Rossi,  Politecnico di Milano, cristina1.rossi@polimi.it
    Lorenzo Benussi,  University of Turin, lorenzo.benussi@unito.it
    Jean Michel Dalle, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, jean-michel.dalle@upmc.fr

    DEADLINES:
    Authors should submit their potential contribution to this EURAM track by 27 January 2008 24:00 (CET) through the conference Web site (see http://www.euram2008.org/CallForPapers.asp)

    Decisions of paper acceptance will be made by FEBRUARY 22TH 2008

    Cristina Rossi, Ph.D.
    Politecnico di Milano
    Dipartimento di Ingegneria Gestionale
    P.za L. da Vinci, 32
    20133 MILANO
    <cristina1.rossi@polimi.it>
    Tel. +39 02 2399 3972
    Fax  +39 02 2399 2710

    Proceedings: Ontolog Panel Discussion - Semantic Interoperability in Health Informatics: Lessons Learned

    Peter Yim writes:

    We had, on Thursday 10-January-2008, another one of our best attended panel sessions.

    Mr. Marc Wine (co-chair), Mr. Rex Brooks (co-chair), Dr. Michael Cummens and Professor Saul Rosenberg were on the panel to join the community in a discussion around the topic "Semantic Interoperability in Health Informatics, Lessons Learned." Sharing their insights and experience, the panelists called upon the government, industry and the ontology community to collaborate toward better healthcare through better health informatics through improved semantic interoperability.

    Thank you very much, Marc and Rex, for organizing the session, and to Mike and Saul as well for sharing your insights with the rest of the community. The wonderful turnout today (and more importantly, who it was that came) really, as Rex put it, "underscored the extent to which the topic resonates and reflected the fact that [the session was] addressing a very key concern that the industry is facing and is looking for guidance and solution. Appreciations, as always, go to those who joined us at the event in real time; and for their contributions to the rich discussion we had during the last segment of the session.

    Proceedings of the session are captured on our wiki page, at: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2008_01_10

    In particular, full audio recording of the session (as well as the podcast of it) is now on our archives and is available - see: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?ConferenceCall_2008_01_10#nid16RV

    Thank you again, Mr. Wine, Mr. Brooks, Dr. Cummens and Professor Rosenberg!

    Best regards. =ppy

    P.S.  Watch our [ontolog-invitation] list for further announcements of Ontolog events that may be of interest, or browse the listing under the "News & Announcements" section at our Ontolog WikiHomePage (at: http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?WikiHomePage#nidW ) for our upcoming events.

    The archives of noteworthy past Ontolog events can be found at:
    http://ontolog.cim3.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?WikiHomePage#nidZ

    Tx. =ppy

    Open GRID Group Launched on LinkedIn.com

    This is a group to promote the intersection of open source, open standards and grid and high performance computing. The invite link is here.

    Comment on Jay Deragon's "Businesses Fear the Social Web"

    <ed.note>Jay writes here. I writes here:

    Jay, what businesses truly fear ( and by businesses I mean the non-outsourceable management strata ) is that social web collaboration will accomplish that which the dying unions have been unable -- put a magnifying glass on the practice of structurally redefining employees as contractors ( permalancers to use the "in" term du jour ) in order to avoid paying benefits. The not very publicized case of Viacom ( http://gawker.com/news/viacom/ ) is case in point. What businesses have failed to realize is that if they remove that one benefit for which most people strive ( health insurance for family members ) there is truly very little loss in walking out on a substandard business culture -- see: Bob Sutton and the "No AH Rule" ( http://bobsutton.typepad.com/my_weblog/ ) and the ROWE concept ( http://www.culturerx.com ). What we need are bosses who aren't afraid of employpreneurs and some venture money to back them.</ed.note>

    World's next outsourcing hub: Kenya?

    The Kenyan government is pumping millions of dollars into improving the nation's outdated telecom industry.


    <ed.note>I reiterate my harrangue for the Kenya Call Center Industry -- driving in to a call center to access the wiki and VOIP is missing the point. Rural telehealth and disease management will never reach its full potential if you can't develop a management structure which can trust remote workers -- or develop enough tech monitoring tools savvy to fake it. Just because the US keeps talking "green" but refuses to adopt ROWE doesn't mean the rest of the world has to repeat the mistake.</ed.note>

    New technologies and innovation in higher education and regional development

    According to the Academy of Finland and Tekes, the Finnish Funding Agency for Technology and Innovation, there are two prominent driving forces in today’s global operating environment. The first is the trend towards increasing mobility; the second is the growing interdependence of different parts of the world, their increasing interaction and cooperation in the economy, production, social development, communications and human exchange. In today’s global and technological world, learning has become increasingly important to all people and all communities. It is widely understood that the most important skills of the future will be communication skills. Today, everyone is able to access vast amounts of data without a mediator. Critical thinking skills are needed as a productive and positive activity. Critical thinkers see the future as open and malleable, not as closed and fixed. As noted in the UNESCO Report on Knowledge Societies (2005), there is a general agreement on the appropriateness of the expression “knowledge societies”; the same cannot be said of the content. However we define the 21st century societies there are some trends that seem to have consequences in all spheres of life. Globalization and digitalization have fundamental consequences in educational and learning life, working life and in governance. The vision is a society which develops and utilizes the opportunities inherent in the information society to improve the quality of life, knowledge, international competitiveness and interaction in an exemplary, versatile and sustainable way. These ideas have been used to develop the Global University System (GUS) within the UNESCO Chair in global e-learning at the University of Tampere. Because of the importance of media and digital literacy and competencies, in 2007 the Government of Finland published a Proposal for an action programme for developing media skills and knowledge as part of the promotion of civil and knowledge society. The reason for setting up this committee was the topicality and importance of media education as part of citizenship skills and the problems encountered in its realization. Keywords higher education, Finland, universities and innovation, new technology in higher education, regional innovation

    Tapio Varis, tapio.varis@uta.fi
    Professor and Chair of Vocational Education, with particular reference to global learning environments, University of Tampere, Finland. UNESCO Chair in Global e-Learning, Professor and Chair of Vocational Education, with particular reference to global learning environments at the University of Tampere, Finland, Research Centre for Vocational Education, and UNESCO Chair in global e-Learning with applications to multiple domains. Principal research associate of UNESCO-UNEVOC. Acting President of Global University System (GUS). Former Rector of the University for Peace in Costa Rica. Expert on media and digital literacy to the European Union. Communication and Media Scholar at the University of Helsinki and the University of Art and Design in Helsinki. and the University of Lapland, Finland. Published approximately 200 scientific contributions.

    Faster, Cheaper Broadband Internet Coming to Michigan Health Care Providers

    <ed.note>Story here. Project site here. But will auto manufacturers and Michigan management culture still require health care workers to "drive in" to access the Infogrid as the general practice? ( vs ROWE a la  culturerx.com )</ed.note>

    Intel's Craig Barrett on Bridging Africa's digital divide

    <ed.note>The fact that many are discovering that to get "teaching" to a student in a "far off place" doesn't require getting the "teacher" there -- has been "missed" by public schools in the U.S.

    Educational policy needs to be focused on reallocating good teachers rather than attempting to pay for one good teacher per each hectare ( read: virtual classroom instruction ). As Barrett points out as in "Africa it is not a choice between clean water and broadband. You can do more than one thing at a time". The same is true of the US. One Laptop Per Child, for instance, does no good if the kids aren't allowed to begin learning until a teacher is standing in the same room with them. Curriki, DSpace, etc. are of no value if they have to be moderated by some official gatekeeper.

    The REAL question is how will the self-taught receive certification for their acquired knowledge ( and will potential employers' HR personnel recognize it ) when the global higher ed system measures achievement, in part, by butt time in an "official" school desk. And newspapers thought they were dealing with disintermediation...</ed.note>

    Omeka

    Omeka is a web platform for publishing collections and exhibitions online. Designed for cultural institutions, enthusiasts, and educators, Omeka is easy to install and modify and facilitates community-building around collections and exhibits. It is designed with non-IT specialists in mind, allowing users to focus on content rather than programming.

    Omeka will come loaded with the following features:

    • Dublin Core metadata structure and standards-based design that is fully accessible and interoperable
    • Professional-looking exhibit sites that showcase collections without hiring outside designers
    • Theme-switching for changing the look and feel of an exhibit in a few clicks
    • Plug-ins for geolocation, bi-lingual sites, and a host of other possibilities
    • Web 2.0 Technologies, including:
      • Tagging: Allow users to add keywords to items in a collection or exhibit
      • Blogging: Keep in touch with users through timely postings about collections and events
      • Syndicating: Update your users about your content with RSS feeds

    Project Goals

    Beginning in Fall 2007, CHNM will host and organize and open source community to plan, design, test, evaluate, and disseminate Omeka over four phases through September 2010, while working closely with our major partner, the Minnesota Historical Society (MHS).

    We envision Omeka benefiting cultural institutions, enthusiasts, and educators in three ways:

    1. Enable users to publish web content with a system that is low-cost and easy-to-use.

    Since many cultural institutions publish limited web content because they lack trained staff and sufficient budgets to manage a professional online presence, CHNM will release Omeka as a free and open-source system that will be fully documented and easy to use for staff with little technical experience. Omeka offers users professional-looking design themes that showcase collections and eliminate the need to hire outside designers. CHNM also plans to offer a hosted version by 2009 for those who cannot run Omeka on their own servers.

    2. Provide users with a standards-based, interoperable system that allows them to share and use digital content in multiple contexts.

    When cultural heritage and teaching sites offer online resources, those digital pieces do not conform to basic metadata standards and do not meet accessibility guidelines, making resource sharing and reaching all potential visitors impossible. Omeka will be fully standards-based, both with regard to object metadata (Dublin Core) and to design interface (W3C), and to be extensible and interoperable with other Omeka installations and selected collections systems. This will allow users to re-use materials in multiple online contexts without redundant data entry and to share collections more easily with other users. By 2009, omeka.org will host a live directory that aggregates content from all Omeka installations to encourage resource sharing.

    3. Facilitate users, in particular cultural institutions, engaging their publics and building communities around objects and primary sources.

    Omeka will include basic Web 2.0 features such as an RSS feed, blog, and a tag cloud. Other planned plugins include a mapping function, and ways to collect and display stories and photos from web visitors who are demanding a different type of online interaction shaped by Web 2.0. Omeka offers organizations and individuals the opportunity to share in the creation of content. We encourage users to develop other Web 2.0 applications that fit into Omeka’s plugin architecture, and omeka.org will host a directory of all plugins created by the community. Interactive and participatory systems,like Omeka, build regular interaction with a base of online visitors and encourage democratic participation in the shaping of our culture.

    Development for Omeka is funded by grants from the Institute of Museums and Library Services and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Omeka will be released under General Public License, Version 2.

    http://omeka.org/blog/

    GLORIAD

    GLORIAD is built on a fiber-optic ring of networks around the northern hemisphere of the earth, providing scientists, educators and students with advanced networking tools that improve communications and data exchange, enabling active, daily collaboration on common problems.  With GLORIAD, the scientific community can move unprecedented volumes of valuable data effortlessly, stream video and communicate through quality audio- and video-conferencing.

    GLORIAD exists today due to the shared commitment of the US, Russia, China, Korea, Canada, the Netherlands and the 5 Nordic countries  to promote increased engagement and cooperation between their countries, beginning with their scientists, educators and young people.  The benefits of this advanced network are shared with S&E communities throughout Europe, Asia and the Americas.

    GLORIAD provides more than a network; it provides a stable, persistent, non-threatening means of facilitating dialog and increased cooperation between nations that have often been at odds through the past century.  This new era of cooperation will provide benefits not only to the S&E communities but to every citizen in the partner countries through:

       
    • Improved weather forecasting and atmospheric modeling through live sharing of monitoring data;
    • New discoveries into the basic nature and structure of the universe through advanced network connections between high energy physicists and astronomers - and the expensive facilities GLORIAD makes it possible to share;
    • Support of the global community building the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), creating a technology which will someday provide a practically limitless supply of energy;
    • Advancing joint geological sciences related to seismic monitoring and earthquake prediction;
    • Enabling new joint telemedical applications and practices;
    • Strengthening current programs in nuclear weapons disposal, nuclear materials protection, accounting and control and active discussions on combating terrorist threats.
    • Increasing classroom to-to-classroom cooperation to accessible scientists and students in other countries through the 24/7 EduCultural Channel, the “Virtual Science Museum of China,” the Russia-developed “Simple Words ” global essay contest, and a special partnership with International Junior Achievement.

    These are a small sample of the literally hundreds of active collaborations served by both the general and advanced network services provided by GLORIAD.  To learn more about the applications using GLORIAD, browse the following pages.   This site describes the currently operating GLORIAD network and plans to expand this to a much higher capacity and more capable infrastructure in the years ahead. 

    We have released the official GLORIAD-2007 map. It is in high, medium, and small resolutions for your convenience.

    The GLORIAD-2007 map you can download from the web server. 

    Jay Deragon on LeapFrogging Ahead of Competition with Web 2.0

    here.

    This Day in "Open" and "Collabortition"

    Cisco open sources, HCL publically evaluates management, Oracle wikis, Wrox rocks.
     

    World Community Grid Call for Research Proposals

    Submit a Proposal 
    World Community Grid invites public and not-for-profit organizations to apply to use its powerful grid technology at no cost for projects that benefit humanity. Grid technology enables researchers to access tremendous amounts of power, exceeding that of several supercomputers, to run complex computations and to accelerate the pace of their research. Research results must be made available to the global research community and will be made available on World Community Grid's web site.

    Research We Support
    World Community Grid supports research that is:
    Focused on solving problems to benefit humanity;
    Conducted by public or nonprofit organizations;
    Contributed to the public domain; and
    Accelerated by grid computing technology.
    Research projects that benefit from grid technology are those that perform computations that require millions of computer processing units (CPUs) and that can be divided into smaller independent computations.

    Examples of potential fields of study include:
    New and existing infectious disease research - development of treatments for HIV/AIDS, Malaria, Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), etc.
    Genomics and disease - functions of proteins that are coded by human genes and how they might relate to cures for common diseases
    Environmental research - meteorology and severe weather warning, pollution, remediation, climate modeling, and others
    Natural disasters and hunger - earthquake warning, information on improving crop yields and livestock production, and evaluation of the supply of critical natural resources such as water
    World Community Grid's Advisory Board, composed of prominent philanthropists, scientists and officials from leading public and private organizations, reviews proposals to identify those with the best potential to benefit from World Community Grid's technology and make important progress on humanitarian goals.

    How to Submit a Proposal
    For more information, including the proposal process, technical requirements, and selection criteria, please review our Request For Proposals (pdf).

    To submit a project for consideration, please download and complete the RFP Proposal Application (doc) and return to rfp@worldcommunitygrid.org. RFP Proposal Application (doc).

    Blogs a Radical Tool for Disability Community

    <ed.note>A decade or so after the interweb becomes popular with the public it is discovered by "Big Advocacy". Let's see how long before they "discover" other centralizing data tools like community enabling content management, wikis and standardized financial metadata, taxonomies, etc. ( vs. "recommendations and principles" ) for NGO/NPO data interoperability purposes... A boy can dream. Of course, that's not to say that the corporate world "gets" this "meaningful data over a distributed, digital enterprise" approach, either. You oughtta ask yourself: "If it is true that 96% of firms fail within ten years, what are the 4 percent doing differently?"</ed.note>

    "Expanding Africa’s Broadband Capacity", Connect Africa Summit in Kigali, 29-30 October 2007

    Where: Kigali, Rwanda

    Why: The main goal of the Summit is to help bring connectivity to Africa and promote "Connect Africa", a new partnership that seeks to expand the information and communication technology infrastructure of the continent, especially Internet broadband.

    Who: Some 500 participants are expected to attend the Connect Africa Summit. Participants include the patrons of the initiative, Rwanda’s President Paul Kagame and Ghana’s President John Kufuor, who is also the African Union Chairman. High-level participants include International Telecommunication Union Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré; President of the African Development Bank Donald Kaberuka; and Intel Corporation Chairman Craig Barrett, who is also the Chair of the UN Global Alliance for ICT and Development. Robert Zoellick, President of the World Bank Group, will make a contribution by video link. The Presidents of several African nations are expected to participate.

    The event will bring together political leaders, including Ministers and Heads of State, CEOs and senior executives of global and African IT companies, leaders from civil society and heads of international and regional development banks. Industry leaders including Cisco, GSM Association, Ericsson, Huawei, British Telecom, Qualcomm, NTT DoCoMo, Neustar, Safaricom, Nokia-Siemens and Microsoft will attend and announce new initiatives to help bring connectivity to Africa.

    The Summit sessions are designed for television to encourage interactive participation and key sessions will be moderated by Stephen Cole, a renowned TV anchor with Al Jazeera International. The event’s press conferences will be webcast live, and time slots for telephone interviews with prominent participants will be allocated for those journalists who cannot attend.

    The event is organized by the International Telecommunication Union, the African Union, the World Bank Group and the Global Alliance for ICT and Development, in partnership with the African Development Bank, the African Telecommunication Union, the UN Economic Commission for Africa, and the Global Digital Solidarity Fund.

    For further information, click here or contact:

    Sanjay Acharya
    Chief, Media Relations and Public Information
    ITU
    Tel: +41 22 730 5046
    Mobile: +41 79 249 4861
    Fax: +41 22 730 5939
    E-mail

    Contact: in New York Enrica Murmura, Tel: +1 212 963-5913, E-mail murmura@un.org; in Washington, DC Henny Rahardja, Tel. +1 202 473 4857, E-mail HRahardja@worldbank.org; in Tunis, Emmanuel K. Ngwainmbi, Tel: +216 71 10 26 27, E-mail e.ngwainmbi@afdb.org.

    About ITU

    World Community Grid begins the move to BOINC

    World Community Grid is pleased to announce that it has made the decision to migrate entirely to BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing), a software platform for volunteer computing and desktop grid computing.

    This software platform has been in use by World Community Grid since November 2005. It was added originally to provide support for users of the Linux and Macintosh operating systems, but due to its popularity, World Community Grid also has supported BOINC on Windows since December 2005. Today, approximately 50% of all runtime is returned by computers running the BOINC agent, and 80% of new computer registrations are using the BOINC software.

    The BOINC agent provides a number of advantages over the UD agent. Some of these include support for multiple processors, memory throttle and bandwidth throttle. An in-depth review of the BOINC agent can be read here.

    As a result of this decision, World Community Grid will not be releasing any new projects on the UD software platform. There are currently two projects available to users of the UD agent: FightAIDS@Home and Human Proteome Folding – Phase 2. These two projects will continue to run on the UD agent until it is shut down sometime during the second quarter of 2008. There are currently four projects available for users of the BOINC agent: FightAIDS@Home, Human Proteome Folding – Phase 2, Discovering Dengue Drugs – Together, and AfricanClimate@Home.

    Users of the UD agent will need to migrate to the BOINC client before it sunsets by visiting the website and downloading and installing the BOINC agent. The BOINC installer will detect if a computer is running the UD agent and if it is found, help the user uninstall it. Details on downloading and installing the BOINC agent for Windows can be found here.

    More details about the migration are available in the member news forum.

    Kiwiki News

    Netmocracy in action.

    UK plc’s next talent pool threatened as Realtime Generation vows to seek better work life balance abroad

    • Survey suggests UK 13-17 year olds position UK plc ahead of US in race to become successful knowledge economy
    • Yet UK lags behind in investment in Realtime Generation

    Slough, England, 7 August, 2007 –The UK's next generation workforce has the skills to become the world's leading knowledge economy but could apply their talents elsewhere if their desire for a better work life balance are not supported by UK employers, according to independent research released today and commissioned by international solutions provider, Logicalis.

    The survey looks at the attitudes of 13-17 year olds on topics ranging from their expectations of how they will work in the future, to their expected experiences of higher education. It reveals that 81 per cent of this generation have already thought about their work life balance, with 75 per cent stating an intention to work abroad at some point in their careers. Eleven per cent of those questioned were already sure that they would seek alternative employment if their employer asked them to put work before their family.

    The survey suggests that the sophisticated expectations of this ‘Realtime Generation' of children born after 1990, about where and how they will learn and work, are fuelled by the increased global perspective offered by the Internet, and a growing use of Internet powered communications services, and social networking and publishing sites. These resources encourage them to share ideas and seek opinions from, and with, a wide variety of sources, and to demonstrate the traits that describe a classic knowledge worker.

    For example, 91 per cent of children questioned claimed to use Instant Messaging at least once a week. Over 50 per cent used Instant Messaging daily, and over half (55 per cent) expected to continue this practice in the workplace to communicate with colleagues. 87% of survey respondents stated they were members of an online community, with over a third (35 per cent) claiming to have written their own blog, and nearly half (47 per cent) having read somebody else's.

    Based on the results of a comparative study, the UK Realtime Generation's use of personal technology even exceeds that of their US counterparts, [1] putting the UK in a strong position globally. However, in contrast to the Realtime Generation's willingness to embrace technology to improve their work life balance, the latest available OECD figures ranked the UK , 13 th out of 30 countries, for investment in ‘knowledge', [2] which it defines as R&D, university, and software tools.

    Tom Kelly, managing director, Logicalis UK , comments, “Gordon Brown recently re-emphasised the importance of realising the talents of all our people, in his vision of Britain as the great global success story of the century. But the UK 's ability to maintain its position as a leading knowledge economy over the next 20 years, will depend on how we act now. In an increasingly global market, the future of our economy will be defined by whether a 13 year old in Bolton can compete for that knowledge economy job, against a 13 year old in Bangladesh or Beijing ”.

    “We know from our research that the UK 's Realtime Generation has the tools and the talent to do this. But will this highly capable generation have the support and investment from business, education, and government, to encourage them to keep this talent on these shores, and ensure it is used to further the economic success of UK plc?”

    Emphasising their expectance to continue to use collaboration tools in work and university, over a third (38per cent) thought that making university lectures available online, to view anytime, would either be a reality or a very good idea, while nearly half (48 per cent) predicted that webcams were either already used in business, or would be by the time they got there. In a stark reminder to university leaders about the role of technology in education, 67% of these future student consumers stated that technology experience would play a significant part in their selection of university location.

    In light of the independent research, Logicalis suggests some key steps where government, education, and business can focus their efforts to ensure they attract and retain the best of the Realtime Generation talent pool:

    • UK Government must work with key stakeholders in education, business, and Internet Service Providers, to ensure that all of the UK 's 13-17 year olds have access to new communication technologies and services, and that social policy reflects the requirements for digital inclusion for all.
    • UK Government must view this Realtime Generation's willingness to co-operate and collaborate with friends, family and the rich forms of new content and media, as a major asset to UK plc, and must look at the earliest possible time to encourage collaboration in the classroom and community, through the creation of national strategic social technology strategy.
    • UK universities must manage the changing nature of the education experience, with education content and the education process, and ensure that the technology experience of their students is high on their education proposition agenda, or risk alienating a large proportion of their future income stream from students, at home and abroad.
    • UK business leaders must become technology aware, and the ownership of technology experience and strategy in the workplace must lie squarely in the boardroom. CEOs who shy away from understanding the information technology strategy of their business will risk losing access to a workforce of natural collaborators that will in turn challenge future competitive edge and profitability.
    • UK business leaders must be prepared to invest in information technology innovation, and better manage the emergence of ‘consumer' orientated technologies into the workplace.
    • UK business must embrace new methods of collaborative and flexible working to ensure a supply of new top human talent for their workforce.

    For more details of the survey, visit http://www.logicalis.com

    BusinessWeek, IBM and the Future of Working Cyberly

    here.

    Open Innovator’s Toolkit

    What advantages lead major corporations to look for their innovations outside the organization? How can you benefit from the revolutionary strategies of open innovation? Find out when you join your colleagues in technology acquisition and licensing at yet2.com’s ninth Executive Briefing, held this year in Boston at the Hyatt Harborside Hotel, November 4-6. Our topic is Accelerating Innovation: The Open Innovator’s Toolkit. As always, our speakers are thought-leaders, decision-makers, and practitioners who are doing it well. They’ll deliver specific suggestions to make your technology acquisition or licensing efforts even more successful. Recent conferences have averaged 140–150 leaders representing 100+ global corporations from Asia, Europe, and North America.

    Rex Brooks on Collaborative Expedition Workshop #62

    <ed.note>Rex is ACTIVE in many healthcare IT related initiatives, one of which is the OASIS International Health Continuum Technical Committee. He posted the following summary in a recent listserv comment:</ed.note>

    Hi Folks,

    I've been attending and presenting at these collaboration workshops for five years now. The first presentation I gave was at #36. It seems unreal that this was #62.

    Here's the url for the workshop yesterday. All of the presentations are downloadable.

    Ian Ïoster's presentation on Service Oriented Science is really important for connecting the dots of how all this health-related activity can be pulled together and work together, enabling the kind of multiplier effect we are all hoping will lift Healthcare IT from the depths of paper-anchored catacombs.

    Christopher Mackie's presentation on Cyberinfrastructure supports Ian's presentation on Service Oriented Science is particularly cogent in the context of not letting go of the tiger's tail. It's a very pragmatic approach to how to ensure that cyberinfrastructure, especially in academia remains strong after initial funding dwindles. It includes references to actual software development projects.

    The Trans-Enterprise Service Grid presentation was given by David Ellis from Sandia Labs, with whom I work on a regular basis in the OASIS Emergency Management TC, and it highlights both the Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) as a message payload, and the Emergency Data Exchange Language Distribution Element (EDXL-DE) for message routing. Since messaging is what makes web services work, whether using SOAP or REST, the concept of the Service Grid is what makes the Service Oriented (Architecture) Science and Health Grid mentioned in the other presentations work.

    Michelle Warner's presentation on the Health Grid from the perspective of the National Governors Association is another dose of pragmatism. It is a wise inclusion, since the level of state cooperation basically dictates the actual viability of all national health initiatives.

    Saul Rosenberg, whose presentation highlighted the concept of the Health Grid, is HQd across the SF Bay from me, and I think I will be working with him in an associated-follow-up project to support his registry-based PTSD/Head/Brain injury early diagnosis service. I met him through Marc Wine in the GSA Office of Intergovernmental Solutions.

    This wiki page is a rich set of resources, especially down in the Resources Section toward the bottom of the page.

    Cheers,

    Rex Brooks
    <rexb at starbourne.com>
     
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670

    Advances in Information, Communications and Knowledge Management Support Systems for R&D, Philadelphia, 15-16 October 2007

    2 day Community of Practice Workshop on “Advances in Information, Communications and Knowledge Management Support Systems for R&D” to take place 15-16 October 2007 at Bryn Mawr College, Philadelphia, USA.

    The workshop will have a strong emphasis on peer-to-peer discussions with each workshop session involving a facilitated Knowledge Café discussion. On Monday evening we will have a Knowledge Dinner with good food and conversation menus at the Alumni House, whereas on Tuesday evening we will have a poster session, drinks reception and buffet dinner in Thomas Great Hall. We will discuss and share experiences with current information and communications technology (ICT) supporting R&D, to discuss current requirements and short term needs with electronic laboratory notebook (ELN) systems, collaboration support and knowledge tools supporting R&D, and to create a shared vision and roadmap for next generation knowledge management (KM) support systems. A wiki will be opened 3 months prior to the workshop to commence group documentation of supporting materials and to help to populate the workshop program with introductory materials, suggestions, ideas and experiences.

    Managing Virtual Distance - Driving Business Transformation through Distributed Work, November 14-16, 2007

    The Disneyland Hotel • Anaheim, CA

    THE One, THE Only Conference Focused on Strategies, Teams, Tools & Beyond in the Virtual Workplace
    ANNOUNCING INAUGURAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGING VIRTUAL DISTANCE

    • IDENTIFY, MANAGE & MEASURE virtual distance
    • Break through language barriers & manage MULTI-CULTURAL ENVIRONMENTS
    • Harness virtual KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
    • Believe the unbelievable & witness the power of VIRTUAL WORLDS technology
    • Transform business norms & cause cultural shifts in the way people work through SOCIAL NETWORKING
    • Implement new millennium strategies that change the way we think about INNOVATION in a corporate context
    • Manage, Train & Measure Productivity of the REMOTE EMPLOYEE
    • Identify SECURITY CHALLENGES introduced by the transition into Web 2.0 and Web 3.0

    To Register:
    E-mail register@iirusa.com
    Call 888.670.8200
    Fax 941.365.2507 
    Visit http://www.iirusa.com/virtual

    The New World of Work
    Daniel W. Rasmus
    Director of Information Work Vision – MICROSOFT

    Virtual Distance Under High-Stress
    Honorable Jerry MacArthur Hultin
    President – POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY & FORMER UNDER SECRETARY OF THE U.S. NAVY

    Global Projects vs. Traditional Projects
    Karan Sorensen
    Chief Information Officer – JOHNSON & JOHNSON PHARMACEUTICAL R&D

    Legal Issues & IP Protection
    Michael S. Mensik
    Partner – BAKER & MCKENZIE

    Virtual Worlds Technology
    Philip Rosedale
    Founder & CEO – LINDEN LABS

    Secrets of High-Performance Distributed Teams
    Cynthia C. Froggatt
    Author of “Work Naked: Eight Essential Principles for Peak Performance in the Virtual Workplace”

    Leadership in the Digital Age
    Charles H. House
    Executive Director – STANFORD UNIVERSITY, MEDIA X LAB

    A Perspective From Corporate Resources
    Ann Bamesberger
    Vice President of Open Work Services – SUN MICROSYSTEMS

    More here.

    This Day in Connected Health

    <ed.note>FasterCures SmartBrief pointed me here while Wireless Healthcare Weekly News pointed me here. This is, of course, serendipitous and synergistic given this, you know, if anyone in