The future of the music business: creating a new ecosystem (Futurist & Keynot...Gerd Leonhard
Futurist, Author and Keynote Speaker Gerd Leonhard summarizes the key trends for the future of the music industry - 15 years of presentations on this topic all-in-one :) See all of Gerd's stuff on this topic, and his free books, here: http://gerd.fm/futuremusic
This presentation explores the intersection of social media and the Internet of things. By applying futurist techniques for developing foresight strategies, the presentation provides a basic introduction to tools like STEEP analysis and scenario planning.
Famous Last Words about Technology in the WorkplaceCotap, Inc.
Technology at work has come a long way. Many new ways of communicating first emerged as tools to enhance our personal lives. But it wasn’t all roses. Many reporters, analysts, scientists and CEOs never expected them to amount to much. Ready for a trip down memory lane?
A presentation to regional CIOs in Hong Kong on the value of social media in business with a focus on the benefits of its deployment inside the company - "Change comes from within"
The future of the music business: creating a new ecosystem (Futurist & Keynot...Gerd Leonhard
Futurist, Author and Keynote Speaker Gerd Leonhard summarizes the key trends for the future of the music industry - 15 years of presentations on this topic all-in-one :) See all of Gerd's stuff on this topic, and his free books, here: http://gerd.fm/futuremusic
This presentation explores the intersection of social media and the Internet of things. By applying futurist techniques for developing foresight strategies, the presentation provides a basic introduction to tools like STEEP analysis and scenario planning.
Famous Last Words about Technology in the WorkplaceCotap, Inc.
Technology at work has come a long way. Many new ways of communicating first emerged as tools to enhance our personal lives. But it wasn’t all roses. Many reporters, analysts, scientists and CEOs never expected them to amount to much. Ready for a trip down memory lane?
A presentation to regional CIOs in Hong Kong on the value of social media in business with a focus on the benefits of its deployment inside the company - "Change comes from within"
The Future of the Internet: the key trends (Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard)Gerd Leonhard
This is an edited version of a presentation I gave at ITUWorld 2013 in Bangkok, Nov 21, 2013, see more details at http://www.futuristgerd.com/2013/11/21/here-is-the-pdf-with-my-slides-from-the-ituworld-event-in-bkk-today/ Topics: US domination of the Internet and cloud computing, big data futures, privacy failure and the global digital rights bill, the importance of trust, key issues for cloud computing, and much more. Check www.gerdtube.com for a video version (should be available soon)
If you enjoy my slideshares please take a look at my new book “Technology vs Humanity” http://www.techvshuman.com or buy it via Amazon http://gerd.fm/globalTVHamazon
More at http://www.futuristgerd.com or www.gerdleonhard.de
Download all of my videos and PDFs at http://www.gerdcloud.net
About my new book: are you ready for the greatest changes in recent human history? Futurism meets humanism in Gerd Leonhard’s ground-breaking new work of critical observation, discussing the multiple Megashifts that will radically alter not just our society and economy but our values and our biology. Wherever you stand on the scale between technomania and nostalgia for a lost world, this is a book to challenge, provoke, warn and inspire.
What is the future like? Can we predict the future? Doing so is not easy. Even if you have some ideas on how things are developing, convincing others is not easy.
However, there are some clear signs that can tell us what are the next big industries. We are now in the digital age and real time software is causing dramatic transformation of industries.
In this lecture we look at nine important trends that you need to know about.
Promise + Peril in the Hypernetworked NowGreg Verdino
Slides from my keynote presentation to the Long Island chapter of the Contingency Planning Exchange on April 11, 2014. Given the audience, this presentation is a bit different from my usual keynotes. While I covered some of the same themes -- exponential change, Internet of Things, big data, social media, collaboration and connectivity, digital disruption, transformation, etc -- I focused heavily on the implication of these things on security, privacy, ethics and so on.
Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organizational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organisational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. The hierarchical structure of these established companies assumes high coordination cost due to human activity. But when the coordination cost drops
The organisational structure that companies in the 20th century established was based on the fact that employees needed to do all the work. The coordination cost was high due to the effort and cost of employees, housing etc. Now we have software that can do this for use and the coordination cost drops to close-to-zero. Another thing is that things become free. Consider Flickr. Anybody can sign up and use the service for free. Only a fraction of the users get pro account and pay. How can Flickr make money on that? It turns out that services like this can.
Many businesses make money by giving things away. How can that possibly work? The music business has suffered severely with digital distribution of content. Should musicians put all there songs on YouTube? What is the future business model for music?
The Future of the Internet: the key trends (Futurist Speaker Gerd Leonhard)Gerd Leonhard
This is an edited version of a presentation I gave at ITUWorld 2013 in Bangkok, Nov 21, 2013, see more details at http://www.futuristgerd.com/2013/11/21/here-is-the-pdf-with-my-slides-from-the-ituworld-event-in-bkk-today/ Topics: US domination of the Internet and cloud computing, big data futures, privacy failure and the global digital rights bill, the importance of trust, key issues for cloud computing, and much more. Check www.gerdtube.com for a video version (should be available soon)
If you enjoy my slideshares please take a look at my new book “Technology vs Humanity” http://www.techvshuman.com or buy it via Amazon http://gerd.fm/globalTVHamazon
More at http://www.futuristgerd.com or www.gerdleonhard.de
Download all of my videos and PDFs at http://www.gerdcloud.net
About my new book: are you ready for the greatest changes in recent human history? Futurism meets humanism in Gerd Leonhard’s ground-breaking new work of critical observation, discussing the multiple Megashifts that will radically alter not just our society and economy but our values and our biology. Wherever you stand on the scale between technomania and nostalgia for a lost world, this is a book to challenge, provoke, warn and inspire.
What is the future like? Can we predict the future? Doing so is not easy. Even if you have some ideas on how things are developing, convincing others is not easy.
However, there are some clear signs that can tell us what are the next big industries. We are now in the digital age and real time software is causing dramatic transformation of industries.
In this lecture we look at nine important trends that you need to know about.
Promise + Peril in the Hypernetworked NowGreg Verdino
Slides from my keynote presentation to the Long Island chapter of the Contingency Planning Exchange on April 11, 2014. Given the audience, this presentation is a bit different from my usual keynotes. While I covered some of the same themes -- exponential change, Internet of Things, big data, social media, collaboration and connectivity, digital disruption, transformation, etc -- I focused heavily on the implication of these things on security, privacy, ethics and so on.
Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organizational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. Software is changing the way traditional business operate. People now have smartphones in their pockets - a supercomputer that is 25,000 times more powerful and the minicomputers of the 1960s. This is changing people´s behaviour and how people shop and use services. The organisational structure created in the 20th century cannot survive when new digital solution are being offered. The hierarchical structure of these established companies assumes high coordination cost due to human activity. But when the coordination cost drops
The organisational structure that companies in the 20th century established was based on the fact that employees needed to do all the work. The coordination cost was high due to the effort and cost of employees, housing etc. Now we have software that can do this for use and the coordination cost drops to close-to-zero. Another thing is that things become free. Consider Flickr. Anybody can sign up and use the service for free. Only a fraction of the users get pro account and pay. How can Flickr make money on that? It turns out that services like this can.
Many businesses make money by giving things away. How can that possibly work? The music business has suffered severely with digital distribution of content. Should musicians put all there songs on YouTube? What is the future business model for music?
The Next Moore's Law: Netness - describes the growing and changing power of connectivity - and why connectivity is replacing Moore's Law as the most important source of opportunity. It suggests that "everything wants to be connected" because the more things are connected (can communicate) the better things work. It describes connectivity as evolving to become fields rather than networks. Original date of presentation: June, 2009.
This video is presented by USEP's BSCS student Alvin Mark U. Cabeliño under Mr. ND Arquillano as a partial fulfilment for Elective 4 -E-Commerce It talks about E-Commerce Fundamentals.
Nuvem sem limites: IaaS, PaaS ou SaaS? Transforme seu negócio!, por Sergio GamaiMasters
Sergio Gama, Líder Técnico de Cloud e Gerente da IBM Innovation, falou sobre 'Nuvem sem limites: IaaS, PaaS ou SaaS? Transforme seu negócio!' no iMasters Developer Week - Vitória.
O iMasters Developer Week - Vitória aconteceu nos dias 3, 4 e 5 de Março no Teatro Rede Gazeta em Vitória-ES - http://developerweek.imasters.com.br/vitoria/
ALPMA - Craig Rispin's Keynote & Workshop 18 Oct 2013
Australian Legal Practice Managers Association keynote presentation by Craig Rispin, CSP Business Futurist & Innovation Expert.
Les sciences et le langage sont les principaux facteurs qui alimentent les mécanismes de la transformation précipitée de nos vies privées et sociales. C’est la poésie et la philosophie qui en donneront un sens.
La nouveauté est bien en soi. Il y a une certaine fascination aujourd’hui pour les progrès technologiques. Jusqu’à très récemment, le rythme de ces évolutions s’est soudainement accéléré, projetant de la science-fiction dans notre quotidien. Or on se focalise plutôt sur le mouvement d’un changement que sur son objectif final. Être mobile, s’adapter toujours, innover encore, changer plus vite, sont devenues les principes de notre conscience occidentale, notre nouvelle religion. Il importe alors de s’interroger sur l’intérêt de la transformation de nos organisations afin d’y donner un sens.
Dans ce premier document, j’essaie de comprendre à travers le prisme des entreprises, les origines de cette transformation dont le numérique et la mondialisation ont fortement contribués. Puis, je propose une approche pour sa prise en main. Être un acteur de sa propre évolution dans ce tourbillon d’innovations est un premier pas pour habiter ce monde et mettre l’humanité au cœur de nos activités.
Our Guide to Digital disruption Update 2019John Ashcroft
A collection of our articles on Digital Disruption and Change Management updated for 2019.
Don't thumb your nose at Digital Disruption
So what do we mean by digital disruption
The six forces shaping digital disruption
Digital Disruption Industries of the future
Which jobs will be at risk in the years ahead
Digital Disruption and the UK Banking System
Ten Technology Trends that Will Shape the Next-Generation InternetCisco Services
The 10 technology trends discussed in this paper (http://www.cisco.com/web/about/ac79/docs/sp/Next-Generation-of-the-Internet.pdf) will significantly alter the next generation of the Internet. Characterized as the New Digital Explosion, the future Internet will be considerably faster, smarter, more connected and pervasive, and more mobile. This new world will ignite life- and society-changing applications and services that may be unimaginable today. In the not-so-distant future, our children will be viewed as the “Internet dinosaurs.”
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1. Yohan Wismantoro [email_address] Management Department Dian Nuswantoro University Semarang The hope, the hype, the power, the pain E-Business Overview
21. “ Don’t look back, somethin’ might be gaining on you!” -Satchel Paige, baseball great. The End Jack M. Wilson [email_address] http:www.JackMWilson.com