Tuesday, October 31, 2006

happiness and innovation

from metacool:
I believe that a strong emphasis on personal happiness is the hallmark of an innovative culture.

Tal Ben-Shahar teaches a class at Harvard on positive psychology, and out of this class has created a nice list of principles for enabling happiness.

Sunday, October 29, 2006

good design is...

...my scion xb - because, among many other things, it took me 2 seconds to adjust the clock when dst came to an end...without consulting a manual...

little things count - good design can help prevent the devil from being in the details

Tuesday, October 10, 2006

innovation, IT and the global economy

ZDnet has an article about what US IT firms need to do to stay competitive.

From the article:
We all recognize it: the light bulb that appears overhead when a character in a book or cartoon comes up with a bright new idea. "I've got a great idea!" the character says before explaining an innovation.

But companies can't afford to sit around waiting for lightning bolts of inspiration. A one-time flash of creativity might grab headlines for a day or boost sales for a quarter, but long-lasting business success requires a process of innovation that is reliable and consistent.

In today's global economy, innovation is the single most powerful competitive weapon an IT organization can wield. At the same time, it is fraught with risk. One study found that for every product success, 3000 new product ideas and 125 small projects fail.


the article argues that
The only way IT companies can stay competitive is to implement a consistent, predictable innovation strategy.


and to do so, the typical corporate mindset about innovation needs to change:
Too often, however, innovation is regarded as an expense that may--or may not--pay off for the organization. As a result, many companies allocate minimal resources to innovation--resources that are vulnerable to cuts when the organization faces temporary difficulties. If, instead, you view innovation as an investment, you take a long-term view, build capabilities, and internalize best practices so you can maximize the return on your innovation investment while minimizing risk. For many companies, this is a dramatic, philosophical shift.


the article makes several other salient points including the value of cross-disciplinary efforts with regards to innovation and the need for innovation to be seen as part of everyone's job, as opposed to a select few - to integrate the spirit of innovation throughout the organization.

the prospect of global competition in all fields, including IT, is at the same time exciting and scary. collectively, we can not afford "business as usual". competition from china, india and elsewhere has pushed up the bar for american IT firms. this article challenges us to rise to the occasion and offers some solid advice on how we can do so...

Saturday, October 07, 2006

open source vs. proprietary software

a slashdot post speaks of a study comparing the bugginess and overall quality of open source software vs. proprietary software.

Friday, October 06, 2006

working from a third place...

USA Today has an article about those that work from a "third place", i.e. not home, nor the office...

from the article:

"With technology what it is, it's far easier to bring the work to the people than the people to the work," says Jim Ware of the Future of Work, a Bay Area enterprise that helps large companies such as Boeing anticipate workplace trends.

Ware says working out of a "third place" — neither home nor office, it's anything from Starbucks to the local library — does raise "a host of human resources issues related to keeping track of people you don't see much."

But in the end, "employers are realizing that it's about the work, not about the hours in an office."


originally found on slashdot

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

security risks in new technologies...

a wired article, Beguiling but Beware: AJAX, VoIP points out some of the security risks of these exciting new technologies.

From the article:
Some of the slickest new technologies online -- VoIP and AJAX -- are dangerously insecure, and likely to only get worse as they become more prevalent, according to security researchers presenting their findings at the ToorCon security conference here.

Monday, October 02, 2006

advice from a venture capitalist