The document discusses IBM University Programs worldwide (IBM UPward), which aims to accelerate regional development through collaboration with universities. It provides an overview of IBM's work with universities to build a smarter planet by developing instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent systems. IBM UPward works with universities and other partners to solve grand challenges in areas like transportation, water, energy, and more through programs and competitions. The goal is to develop new technologies and a skilled workforce to improve quality of life around the world.
The document discusses how education, workforce, and universities can help drive regional prosperity. It provides background on Nevada's economy and largest employers. It then discusses how IBM is working on technologies like nanotechnology, biotechnology, infomatics, and cognitive computing to create new jobs and drive innovation. The document emphasizes the importance of universities' roles in knowledge transfer, research, startup creation, and solving challenges to strengthen regional economies. It also notes many current and future jobs did not exist just a few years ago and will continue rapid changes due to technological acceleration.
The document discusses how the global economy has shifted towards services, the growth of IBM's service business, and how CEOs can lead their organizations by cultivating connections within their organizations, with customers and partners, and through better use of data and insights. It also discusses IBM's University Programs initiative which aims to accelerate regional economic development through connections with universities.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs which aim to:
1) Accelerate regional development through research awards, skills development, recruiting, improving university performance, community service, and supporting regional innovation ecosystems.
2) Provide an educational continuum for individuals and institutions through technology immersion, personalized learning paths, knowledge skills development, and lifelong learning communities.
3) Redesign the missions of higher education around knowledge conservation, construction, status competitiveness, and regional competitiveness.
The document discusses IBM University Programs worldwide which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It focuses on IBM's work in areas like smarter cities, cognitive computing, and using service science and systems thinking approaches to improve quality of life. The presentation also provides examples of how measuring and improving various service systems can enhance areas like transportation, healthcare, education, and other areas that impact human well-being.
This document discusses IBM's University Programs worldwide initiative called IBM UPward, which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It provides an overview of IBM UPward's mission and goals, which include knowledge transfer, creation, application, and integration. The programs also focus on research, readiness, recruiting, revenue, responsibility, and helping develop regional innovation ecosystems. As an example, it mentions that Harvard University generated nearly $4.8 billion for the local Boston economy in 2008 through its economic impacts.
University and industry interactions for a smarter planet 20110830 v4ISSIP
The document discusses opportunities for collaboration between universities and IBM to build a smarter planet. It outlines IBM's university programs that focus on research, skills development, recruiting, and helping regions through entrepreneurial ecosystems. The goal is improving quality of life by better understanding infrastructure, institutions, individuals, and shared information across generations.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs and their role in developing regional entrepreneurial ecosystems (U-BEEs). Key points:
- IBM University Programs focus on the 6 R's: Research, Readiness, Recruiting, Revenue, Responsibility, and Regions to accelerate regional development through U-BEEs.
- U-BEEs are university-based entrepreneurial ecosystems that create and sustain local jobs through innovation in all sectors and help distribute the future more evenly across regions.
- On-campus IBMers help develop students' skills for building smarter planet solutions, support new ventures, and refresh their own skills, contributing to regional growth.
The document discusses how education, workforce, and universities can help drive regional prosperity. It provides background on Nevada's economy and largest employers. It then discusses how IBM is working on technologies like nanotechnology, biotechnology, infomatics, and cognitive computing to create new jobs and drive innovation. The document emphasizes the importance of universities' roles in knowledge transfer, research, startup creation, and solving challenges to strengthen regional economies. It also notes many current and future jobs did not exist just a few years ago and will continue rapid changes due to technological acceleration.
The document discusses how the global economy has shifted towards services, the growth of IBM's service business, and how CEOs can lead their organizations by cultivating connections within their organizations, with customers and partners, and through better use of data and insights. It also discusses IBM's University Programs initiative which aims to accelerate regional economic development through connections with universities.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs which aim to:
1) Accelerate regional development through research awards, skills development, recruiting, improving university performance, community service, and supporting regional innovation ecosystems.
2) Provide an educational continuum for individuals and institutions through technology immersion, personalized learning paths, knowledge skills development, and lifelong learning communities.
3) Redesign the missions of higher education around knowledge conservation, construction, status competitiveness, and regional competitiveness.
The document discusses IBM University Programs worldwide which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It focuses on IBM's work in areas like smarter cities, cognitive computing, and using service science and systems thinking approaches to improve quality of life. The presentation also provides examples of how measuring and improving various service systems can enhance areas like transportation, healthcare, education, and other areas that impact human well-being.
This document discusses IBM's University Programs worldwide initiative called IBM UPward, which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It provides an overview of IBM UPward's mission and goals, which include knowledge transfer, creation, application, and integration. The programs also focus on research, readiness, recruiting, revenue, responsibility, and helping develop regional innovation ecosystems. As an example, it mentions that Harvard University generated nearly $4.8 billion for the local Boston economy in 2008 through its economic impacts.
University and industry interactions for a smarter planet 20110830 v4ISSIP
The document discusses opportunities for collaboration between universities and IBM to build a smarter planet. It outlines IBM's university programs that focus on research, skills development, recruiting, and helping regions through entrepreneurial ecosystems. The goal is improving quality of life by better understanding infrastructure, institutions, individuals, and shared information across generations.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs and their role in developing regional entrepreneurial ecosystems (U-BEEs). Key points:
- IBM University Programs focus on the 6 R's: Research, Readiness, Recruiting, Revenue, Responsibility, and Regions to accelerate regional development through U-BEEs.
- U-BEEs are university-based entrepreneurial ecosystems that create and sustain local jobs through innovation in all sectors and help distribute the future more evenly across regions.
- On-campus IBMers help develop students' skills for building smarter planet solutions, support new ventures, and refresh their own skills, contributing to regional growth.
1. The document discusses service science and its focus on service systems and value co-creation. 2. It outlines foundational premises of service science including the configuration of resources and calculation of value from multiple stakeholder perspectives. 3. Future directions discussed include challenges of local optimization not equaling global optimization and real-world problems not equating to single discipline problems.
The document discusses service science and its importance for building a smarter planet. It outlines how the world's economies and jobs have shifted towards services. Service science aims to study complex service systems and improve customer-provider interactions. The document discusses key concepts in service science like service systems, value co-creation, and a systems-disciplines matrix. It emphasizes the need for a skilled multi-disciplinary workforce and highlights opportunities in areas that improve quality of life.
The document summarizes Jim Spohrer's presentation on "City Ecosystems of the 21st Century" given at the Stanford Global Innovation Ecosystem Summit. The presentation discusses how cities are becoming the defining artifacts of civilization and will house over 75% of the world's population by 2050. It outlines various elements that comprise city ecosystems, including infrastructure/environment, individuals/skills, institutions/jobs, and information/quality of life. The presentation also proposes that universities will play a key role in connecting information flows between city ecosystems and accelerating regional innovation through multi-disciplinary research centers.
Mpict cloud computing and ict workforce 20110106 v8ISSIP
The document discusses emerging trends in information and communication technologies (ICT) and their implications. It notes that ICT is becoming pervasive and networked, with tremendous impact on society, the ICT workforce, and technical education. It argues that demand will increase for local ICT talent with broader skill sets that combine both depth and breadth of knowledge across disciplines and systems.
The document discusses how big data is transforming how we work and live. It explains that big data requires both business and IT approaches to extract value from data. The document promotes embracing big data now for future business success and outlines EMC's big data solutions for storage, analytics, and building new applications.
The document provides information about Canada, including its capital (Ottawa), population in 2010 (34 million), official languages (English and French), and currency (Canadian dollar). It then lists major cities and places of interest in Canada, such as museums, parks, and cathedrals in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver. Finally, it mentions some typical symbols of Canada like its coat of arms and beaver, as well as some famous Canadian people like Miley Cyrus, Bruno Mars, and Nelly Furtado.
The document discusses pricing strategies and methods. It defines what a pricing strategy is and identifies key determinants for pricing decisions like organizational objectives, costs, competition, and customer perceptions. It also explores different pricing methods like cost-oriented pricing, demand-oriented pricing, and competition-oriented pricing that set prices based on costs, demand levels, and competitor prices respectively. The document emphasizes that price is a key element of the marketing mix and must be considered along with other factors.
El documento discute la representación de la guerra en las series de televisión, señalando el resurgimiento de la ficción histórica y bélica en los últimos años con ejemplos como la Segunda Guerra Mundial, la Guerra de Irak y la Guerra contra el Terror. El autor es María del Mar Grandío, quien proporciona detalles de contacto para más información.
This document discusses IBM's "Smarter Planet" initiative and vision of interconnected systems producing real-time actionable information. It examines how storage solutions can enable a smarter planet by harnessing data from various sources. Examples are provided of how healthcare and retail have begun implementing pervasive data systems using sensors and analytics to improve patient outcomes, optimize operations, and gain competitive advantages. The role of real-time information and analytics is growing for both organizations and individuals to understand what is happening now and make predictions.
Os alunos da 5a série da Escola Básica Virgínia Moura elaboraram um trabalho sobre diferentes animais, incluindo cachorro, gato, cavalo, galinha, ovelha, vaca, coelho, hamster, elefante, hipopótamo, coruja, pato, burro e boi.
O documento resume alguns pontos importantes sobre a Austrália, incluindo monumentos como a Catedral de Sydney e a Casa de Ópera, símbolos como o brasão de armas e o canguru, e alguns artistas famosos como Cate Blanchett e Russel Crowe. Foi um trabalho realizado por dois alunos da 6a classe sobre aspectos culturais e históricos da Austrália.
Os Estados Unidos têm como capital Washington D.C. e algumas das suas maiores cidades são Los Angeles, Chicago e Houston. Locais importantes incluem a Estátua da Liberdade em Nova Iorque e Hollywood.
IBM University Programs worldwide (IBM UPward) aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships between IBM and universities globally. The program discusses how building smarter planets through smarter service systems can help address grand challenges involving healthcare, education, finances, and government. It also outlines how two generations of professionals will be needed to manage ongoing changes through 2030 and beyond.
This document discusses IBM's University Programs (IBM UPward) and building smarter cities and regions through university partnerships. It provides an overview of IBM's work with universities to advance areas like transportation, healthcare, education and more. The presentation discusses how instrumented, interconnected and intelligent systems can improve quality of life by focusing on transportation, energy, IT and other service systems that support human activities and development. It emphasizes the important role of universities and their surrounding regions/cities in innovation and economic development through entrepreneurial ecosystems.
This document discusses strategies for funding Professional Science Master's (PSM) programs. It provides an overview of a workshop on PSM funding that included presentations from program directors and university representatives. They discussed challenges with attracting students, gaining industry recognition, and measuring program success. The document also discusses how large companies like IBM can partner with universities through research funding, skills training, recruiting, services, social responsibility programs, and supporting regional innovation ecosystems.
IBM University Programs aims to help build a smarter planet through research, skills development, recruiting, solutions, volunteering, and regional development. The programs focus on six areas: Research, Readiness, Recruiting, Revenue, Responsibility, and Regions. The goal is to produce T-shaped professionals with both depth in their field and breadth across disciplines to solve problems at the intersection of technology and business.
Ibm 101 smarter planet and universities 20121011 v1ISSIP
This document discusses IBM's University Programs which aim to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities worldwide. It provides an overview of IBM's work in building smarter planet solutions involving instrumented, interconnected and intelligent systems. Examples are given in areas like smarter cities, healthcare, transportation, buildings and more. The presentation outlines benefits universities provide to regional economies and innovation ecosystems. It also envisions future advances in various fields by 2030 that could be influenced by university collaborations. In conclusion, the speaker emphasizes the important role of universities in creating the future and building a smarter planet.
James C. Spohrer future of universities 20123helix
The document discusses IBM University Programs and building a smarter planet. It describes IBM's work with universities on research, skills development, entrepreneurship and regional development. It provides examples of IBM's collaborations with universities on projects involving smart cities, healthcare, transportation, energy and more. The presentation envisions the future in various fields in 2030 and beyond with greater technology integration.
This document discusses University-Based Entrepreneurial Ecosystems (U-BEEs) and their role in accelerating regional development. It notes that universities are usually top job creators in regions when they have associated incubators, science parks, data centers, hospitals, schools and other facilities. These U-BEEs connect information flows between ecosystems in cities. The document also provides an outline of its discussion on trends of universities becoming more locally connected research centers and the evolution of cities becoming smarter.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs (IBM UP) and initiatives to build innovation capacity. It describes how IBM UP addresses skills shortages by finding lead academics and accelerating skills programs, with hundreds of new programs created. It also discusses how IBM UP helps to reframe university relationships and create regional economic development by supporting university startups and helping graduates develop skills for in-demand jobs. Lessons learned include the need to let initiatives grow and restart them quickly to maintain focus on skills and sharing.
Japan may 11 future of cities and universities 20120511 v3ISSIP
The document discusses IBM's University Programs worldwide (IBM Upward), which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It highlights how universities can help cities and regions by transferring knowledge, creating knowledge, and applying knowledge. Universities play an important role in national competitiveness and economic development. IBM Upward seeks to strengthen university-based entrepreneurial ecosystems and three streams of knowledge (transfer, create, apply) to help cities and regions prosper.
1. The document discusses service science and its focus on service systems and value co-creation. 2. It outlines foundational premises of service science including the configuration of resources and calculation of value from multiple stakeholder perspectives. 3. Future directions discussed include challenges of local optimization not equaling global optimization and real-world problems not equating to single discipline problems.
The document discusses service science and its importance for building a smarter planet. It outlines how the world's economies and jobs have shifted towards services. Service science aims to study complex service systems and improve customer-provider interactions. The document discusses key concepts in service science like service systems, value co-creation, and a systems-disciplines matrix. It emphasizes the need for a skilled multi-disciplinary workforce and highlights opportunities in areas that improve quality of life.
The document summarizes Jim Spohrer's presentation on "City Ecosystems of the 21st Century" given at the Stanford Global Innovation Ecosystem Summit. The presentation discusses how cities are becoming the defining artifacts of civilization and will house over 75% of the world's population by 2050. It outlines various elements that comprise city ecosystems, including infrastructure/environment, individuals/skills, institutions/jobs, and information/quality of life. The presentation also proposes that universities will play a key role in connecting information flows between city ecosystems and accelerating regional innovation through multi-disciplinary research centers.
Mpict cloud computing and ict workforce 20110106 v8ISSIP
The document discusses emerging trends in information and communication technologies (ICT) and their implications. It notes that ICT is becoming pervasive and networked, with tremendous impact on society, the ICT workforce, and technical education. It argues that demand will increase for local ICT talent with broader skill sets that combine both depth and breadth of knowledge across disciplines and systems.
The document discusses how big data is transforming how we work and live. It explains that big data requires both business and IT approaches to extract value from data. The document promotes embracing big data now for future business success and outlines EMC's big data solutions for storage, analytics, and building new applications.
The document provides information about Canada, including its capital (Ottawa), population in 2010 (34 million), official languages (English and French), and currency (Canadian dollar). It then lists major cities and places of interest in Canada, such as museums, parks, and cathedrals in Montreal, Toronto, and Vancouver. Finally, it mentions some typical symbols of Canada like its coat of arms and beaver, as well as some famous Canadian people like Miley Cyrus, Bruno Mars, and Nelly Furtado.
The document discusses pricing strategies and methods. It defines what a pricing strategy is and identifies key determinants for pricing decisions like organizational objectives, costs, competition, and customer perceptions. It also explores different pricing methods like cost-oriented pricing, demand-oriented pricing, and competition-oriented pricing that set prices based on costs, demand levels, and competitor prices respectively. The document emphasizes that price is a key element of the marketing mix and must be considered along with other factors.
El documento discute la representación de la guerra en las series de televisión, señalando el resurgimiento de la ficción histórica y bélica en los últimos años con ejemplos como la Segunda Guerra Mundial, la Guerra de Irak y la Guerra contra el Terror. El autor es María del Mar Grandío, quien proporciona detalles de contacto para más información.
This document discusses IBM's "Smarter Planet" initiative and vision of interconnected systems producing real-time actionable information. It examines how storage solutions can enable a smarter planet by harnessing data from various sources. Examples are provided of how healthcare and retail have begun implementing pervasive data systems using sensors and analytics to improve patient outcomes, optimize operations, and gain competitive advantages. The role of real-time information and analytics is growing for both organizations and individuals to understand what is happening now and make predictions.
Os alunos da 5a série da Escola Básica Virgínia Moura elaboraram um trabalho sobre diferentes animais, incluindo cachorro, gato, cavalo, galinha, ovelha, vaca, coelho, hamster, elefante, hipopótamo, coruja, pato, burro e boi.
O documento resume alguns pontos importantes sobre a Austrália, incluindo monumentos como a Catedral de Sydney e a Casa de Ópera, símbolos como o brasão de armas e o canguru, e alguns artistas famosos como Cate Blanchett e Russel Crowe. Foi um trabalho realizado por dois alunos da 6a classe sobre aspectos culturais e históricos da Austrália.
Os Estados Unidos têm como capital Washington D.C. e algumas das suas maiores cidades são Los Angeles, Chicago e Houston. Locais importantes incluem a Estátua da Liberdade em Nova Iorque e Hollywood.
IBM University Programs worldwide (IBM UPward) aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships between IBM and universities globally. The program discusses how building smarter planets through smarter service systems can help address grand challenges involving healthcare, education, finances, and government. It also outlines how two generations of professionals will be needed to manage ongoing changes through 2030 and beyond.
This document discusses IBM's University Programs (IBM UPward) and building smarter cities and regions through university partnerships. It provides an overview of IBM's work with universities to advance areas like transportation, healthcare, education and more. The presentation discusses how instrumented, interconnected and intelligent systems can improve quality of life by focusing on transportation, energy, IT and other service systems that support human activities and development. It emphasizes the important role of universities and their surrounding regions/cities in innovation and economic development through entrepreneurial ecosystems.
This document discusses strategies for funding Professional Science Master's (PSM) programs. It provides an overview of a workshop on PSM funding that included presentations from program directors and university representatives. They discussed challenges with attracting students, gaining industry recognition, and measuring program success. The document also discusses how large companies like IBM can partner with universities through research funding, skills training, recruiting, services, social responsibility programs, and supporting regional innovation ecosystems.
IBM University Programs aims to help build a smarter planet through research, skills development, recruiting, solutions, volunteering, and regional development. The programs focus on six areas: Research, Readiness, Recruiting, Revenue, Responsibility, and Regions. The goal is to produce T-shaped professionals with both depth in their field and breadth across disciplines to solve problems at the intersection of technology and business.
Ibm 101 smarter planet and universities 20121011 v1ISSIP
This document discusses IBM's University Programs which aim to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities worldwide. It provides an overview of IBM's work in building smarter planet solutions involving instrumented, interconnected and intelligent systems. Examples are given in areas like smarter cities, healthcare, transportation, buildings and more. The presentation outlines benefits universities provide to regional economies and innovation ecosystems. It also envisions future advances in various fields by 2030 that could be influenced by university collaborations. In conclusion, the speaker emphasizes the important role of universities in creating the future and building a smarter planet.
James C. Spohrer future of universities 20123helix
The document discusses IBM University Programs and building a smarter planet. It describes IBM's work with universities on research, skills development, entrepreneurship and regional development. It provides examples of IBM's collaborations with universities on projects involving smart cities, healthcare, transportation, energy and more. The presentation envisions the future in various fields in 2030 and beyond with greater technology integration.
This document discusses University-Based Entrepreneurial Ecosystems (U-BEEs) and their role in accelerating regional development. It notes that universities are usually top job creators in regions when they have associated incubators, science parks, data centers, hospitals, schools and other facilities. These U-BEEs connect information flows between ecosystems in cities. The document also provides an outline of its discussion on trends of universities becoming more locally connected research centers and the evolution of cities becoming smarter.
The document discusses IBM's University Programs (IBM UP) and initiatives to build innovation capacity. It describes how IBM UP addresses skills shortages by finding lead academics and accelerating skills programs, with hundreds of new programs created. It also discusses how IBM UP helps to reframe university relationships and create regional economic development by supporting university startups and helping graduates develop skills for in-demand jobs. Lessons learned include the need to let initiatives grow and restart them quickly to maintain focus on skills and sharing.
Japan may 11 future of cities and universities 20120511 v3ISSIP
The document discusses IBM's University Programs worldwide (IBM Upward), which aims to accelerate regional development through partnerships with universities. It highlights how universities can help cities and regions by transferring knowledge, creating knowledge, and applying knowledge. Universities play an important role in national competitiveness and economic development. IBM Upward seeks to strengthen university-based entrepreneurial ecosystems and three streams of knowledge (transfer, create, apply) to help cities and regions prosper.
2030 inspire students to build it better 20141230 v1ISSIP
2030 Predictions for Smarter Service Systems basedPlatform Technologies such as Smarter Cities Intelligent Operations Centers and Cognitive Assistants for All Occupations - all industry sectors transportation, water, manufacturing, energy, ICT, buildings, retail, finance, health, education, government
Dr. James Spohrer gave a presentation on partnering for skills at the Zermatt Summit. He discussed the need for T-shaped people who have both depth in one area and breadth across disciplines. Spohrer also talked about cybersecurity solutions and the changing knowledge requirements in companies and universities. He emphasized that IBM partners with universities globally to align on innovation and highlighted some of IBM's growth initiatives and financial performance.
Jim Spohrer discusses service science, service platforms, and trends related to IBM's university programs. He defines ISSIP as the International Society of Service Innovation Professionals and a service platform as accessing places and entities at scale to rapidly share new knowledge globally. Service science is described as an emerging discipline focused on value co-creation through service systems. Future trends discussed include self-driving cars, the circular economy, cognitive computing, and universities collaborating with IBM Research on developing Watson.
The document provides an overview of IBM Research - Almaden and IBM's university programs. It discusses IBM's history and growth, from punch cards to brain chips. It highlights IBM's work in cognitive computing through projects like Watson and the TrueNorth chip. The presentation emphasizes the importance of universities in driving innovation and the future, and how IBM partners with universities through programs like IBM Research - Almaden. It also discusses IBM's vision of augmenting human expertise through cognitive technologies and building smarter service systems.
The document summarizes IBM's University Programs which uses six "R's" - Research, Readiness, Recruiting, Revenue, Responsibility, and Regions - to help build a smarter planet. It provides examples of partnerships between IBM and universities around the world focusing on areas like skills development, research collaborations, startup support, and regional economic development. The programs aim to accelerate skills growth, innovation, and job opportunities through global academic engagements.
The document discusses the future of innovation through the convergence of technologies like nanotechnology, biotechnology, information technology, cognitive science, and social aspects. It proposes that innovation will occur through city-university nodes that leverage smarter cities and universities through infrastructure, individuals, institutions, and information. Quality of life will depend on factors like quality of service, quality of jobs, quality of opportunities, and developing human capabilities.
IBM's University Programs (IBM UPward) aims to accelerate regional development through collaborations between IBM and universities worldwide. The program focuses on research, skills development, recruiting, economic growth and social responsibility. IBM UPward works with over 400 universities globally in areas like cognitive computing, cloud computing, analytics and smarter cities.
The document discusses a workshop on NBIC(S) 2.0, which stands for Nano-Bio-Info-Cogno-(Social)-2.0. It explains that NBIC(S) 2.0 returns to the concept of converging technologies introduced in 2002, but adds the dimension of social to account for new developments in social media and business collaboration. The document provides examples of how technologies like 3D printing, Google Glasses, and drones have progressed since the original NBIC concept. It then discusses potential future developments in areas like energy, manufacturing, agriculture, education, life sciences, and intelligence technologies. Key aspects that will be important going forward are identified as whole service systems, measures of innovativeness
This document summarizes a talk given by Jim Spohrer from IBM on moving from cognitive to wise computing using a service science perspective. Some key points from the talk include:
- Cognitive systems are getting smarter, but the goal is to make them wiser by considering their roles, capabilities, constraints, rights and responsibilities within complex service systems.
- Systems could progress from tools to assistants to collaborators and potentially moral entities if designed properly.
- Cognitive assistants could augment many occupations and roles through smart service systems.
- A service science perspective looks at the ecology of relationships between different service system entities.
The document discusses moving from cognitive computing to wise or wisdom computing through a service science perspective. It considers how tools, assistants and collaborators could progress to become cognitive or moral entities. Cognitive assistants could benefit all occupations and enable smart service systems where everyone can access support like an executive secretary or personal coach. Moving forward, research directions include developing "The CSIG Algorithm" and cognitive assistants for policymakers, as well as defining what wise/wisdom computing entails through literature reviews and roadmaps. The talk was presented by Jim Spohrer from IBM.
This document provides an update on progress and directions in service science. It discusses the growth of the service sector globally and at IBM. Priorities for service science research are outlined from reports by Cambridge and Arizona State Universities. The concept of SSME+D (Service Science, Management, Engineering + Design) is evolving to help create a smarter planet by focusing on innovations that improve quality of life. Key aspects of service systems, service science, and visualizing their relationship to academic disciplines are described. The goal is to develop T-shaped professionals skilled in both disciplines and systems thinking to enable effective teamwork. Opportunities in service science are seen as widespread.
Similar to Smarter planet asee glf 20120924 v3 (20)
Spohrer on AI for SIRs Post 125 20240618 v6.pptxISSIP
Sons in Retirement (SIRs)
Post 125 San Jose
Host - Gene Plevyak
URL: https://sirinc2.org/branch125/
We are SIR Westgate Branch 125
We meet on the third Tuesday of the month
at the Three Flames Restaurant
1547 Meridian Ave., San Jose
Fellowship Hour: 11:00 AM
Host Santokh Badesha: https://www.linkedin.com/in/santokh-badesha-24b72916/
Recommended Readings (If Possible, Skim Before the Talk)
Patent: Management of Usage Costs of a Resource (IBM)
Jim Spohrer patent: Graphical Interface for Interacting Constrained Actors (Apple)
Jim Spohrer's Google Scholar Profile, includes open publications as well as patents
Apple's ATG Authoring Tools - Balancing Open and Proprietary Work
Forbes - Cognitive World
AI Magazine - Role of Open Source in AI
AI and Education 20240327 v16 for Northeastern.pptxISSIP
Prof. Mark L. Miller (https://www.linkedin.com/in/mlmiller751/), Northeastern University, class on AI and Education
Speaker: Jim Spohrer (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/)
===
Speaker: Dr. Jim Spohrer, retired Apple and IBM executive, currently Board of Directors for ISSIP.org (International Society of Service Innovation Professionals).
Title: AI and Education: A Historical Perspective and Possible Future Directions
Abstract: This talk will briefly survey my 50 years working in the area of AI & Education. At MIT (1974- 1978), MIT's summer EXPLO schools for AI and entrepreneurship classes. At Verbex (1978-1982), speech recognition, language models, early generative AI. At Yale (1982-1989), MARCEL, a generate- test-and-debug architecture and student model of programming bugs. At Apple (1989-1998), from content (SK8) to community (EOE) to context (WorldBoard). At IBM (1999 - 2021), service science and open source AI. At ISSIP (2021-present), generative AI and digital twins.
Bio:Jim’s Bio (142 words):
Jim Spohrer is a student of service science and open-source, trusted AI. He is a retired industry executive (Apple, IBM), who is a member of the Board of Directors of the non-profit International Society of Service Innovation Professionals (ISSIP). At IBM, he served as Director for Open Source AI/Data, Global University Programs, IBM Almaden Service Research, and CTO IBM Venture Capital Relations Group. At Apple, he achieved Distinguished Engineer Scientist Technologist (DEST) for authoring and learning platforms. After MIT (BS/Physics), he developed speech recognition systems at Verbex (Exxon), then Yale (PhD/Computer Science AI). With over ninety publications and nine patents, awards include AMA ServSIG Christopher Lovelock Career Contributions to the Service Discipline, Evert Gummesson Service Research, Vargo-Lusch Service-Dominant Logic, Daniel Berg Service Systems, and PICMET Fellow for advancing service science. In 2021, Jim was appointed a UIDP Senior Fellow (University-Industry Demonstration Partnership).
Readings:Apple's ATG Authoring Tools:
URL: https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/279044.279173 Blog: WorldBoard
URL: https://service-science.info/archives/2060 Blog: Reflecting on Generative AI and Digital Twins
URL: https://service-science.info/archives/6521 Book: Service in the AI Era
Attached: Pages 46-54.Video: Speech Recognition (History)
URL: https://youtu.be/G9z4VAsw_kw
Thanks, -Jim
--Jim Spohrer, PhDBoard of Directors, ISSIP (International Society of Service Innovation Professionals) Board of Directors, ServCollab ("Serving Humanity Through Collaboration")Senior Fellow, UIDP ("Strengthening University-Industry Partnerships")Retired Industry Executive (Apple, IBM)
March 20, 2024
Host Ganesan Narayanasamy (https://www.linkedin.com/in/ganesannarayanasamy/)
Uploaded here:
===
Event 20230320
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/ganesannarayanasamy_productnation-semiconductorproductnation-activity-7174119132114620418-jvpx
Themed Shaping a Sustainable $1 Trillion Era, semicondynamics.org 2024 will gather industry experts on March 20th at Milpitas, California , for insights into the latest trends and innovations Accelerating AI with Semiconductor RTL Front end services and workforce development. The event will feature keynotes from the Semiconductor ecosystem, academia and Industries.
March 20, 2024
Host Ganesan Narayanasamy (https://www.linkedin.com/in/ganesannarayanasamy/)
Uploaded here:
===
Event 20230320
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/ganesannarayanasamy_productnation-semiconductorproductnation-activity-7174119132114620418-jvpx
Themed Shaping a Sustainable $1 Trillion Era, semicondynamics.org 2024 will gather industry experts on March 20th at Milpitas, California , for insights into the latest trends and innovations Accelerating AI with Semiconductor RTL Front end services and workforce development. The event will feature keynotes from the Semiconductor ecosystem, academia and Industries.
Jim Spohrer is an advisor to industry, academia, governments, startups and non-profits on topics of AI upskilling, innovation strategy, and win-win service in the AI era. He is a retired IBM executive and was previously the director of IBM's open-source AI developer ecosystem effort. In this talk, Spohrer discusses topics such as how to keep up with accelerating change, verifying results from generative AI, and understanding how generative AI works through concepts like monkeys at typewriters in high dimensional spaces. He emphasizes balancing hype with realism and doing work alongside gaining knowledge.
This document contains notes from a presentation by Jim Spohrer on leadership, career experiences, and technology topics. The presentation covers collaborating with others, teamwork practices, storytelling, communication skills, leadership habits and mindsets. It includes links to Spohrer's online profiles and resources. Tables provide estimates of increasing GDP per employee over time and a timeline of Spohrer's career highlights and accomplishments in the fields of service science and artificial intelligence.
It my pleasure to be with you all today – thanks to my host for the opportunity to speak with you all today.
Host: Leonard Walletzky <qwalletz@fi.muni.cz> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/leonardwalletzky/) +420 549 49 7690
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=aUvbsmwAAAAJ&hl=cs
Katrina Motkova (https://www.linkedin.com/in/kateřina-moťková-mba-a964a3175/en/?originalSubdomain=cz)
Speaker: Jim Spohrer <spohrer@gmail.com> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/) +1-408-829-3112
I am Jim Spohrer, a retired Apple and IBM Executive, and currently a UIDP Senior Fellow, on the Board of Directors of ISSIP and ServCollab.
I am retired, meaning my primary activities are family-oriented – families are the oldest and most important type of service systems
I volunteer to help non-profits, mentor students, professionals, and retiree (some in retirement communities where the average age is 85) on AI & service science
My hobbies are hiking, reading, programming, and building my AI digital twin and humanoid robots for maintaining farms and farming equipment.
My hobbies are also trying to understand as much as I can about the system called the universe and mult-verse, and robots to rapidly rebuild civilization including themselves from scratch.
2001 - Nonzero: The Logic of Human Desitiny (Wright) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonzero:_The_Logic_of_Human_Destiny
2015 - Geek Heresy: Rescuing Social Change from the Cult of Technology - https://www.amazon.com/Geek-Heresy-Rescuing-Social-Technology/dp/161039528X
2021 - Humankind: A Hopeful History (Bregman) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humankind:_A_Hopeful_History
Humankind - https://www.amazon.com/Humankind-Hopeful-History-Rutger-Bregman/dp/0316418536
Humankind Book Review - https://service-science.info/archives/5654
2022 - Service in the AI Era: Science, Logic, and Architecture Perspectives (2022) by Spohrer, Maglio, Vargo, Warg - https://www.amazon.com/Service-AI-Era-Architecture-Perspectives/dp/1637423039
2023 - Design for a Better World: Meaningful, Sustainable, Humanity-Centered (2023) by Don Norman - https://www.amazon.com/Design-Better-World-Meaningful-Sustainable/dp/0262047950/
It my pleasure to be with you all today – thanks to my host for the opportunity to speak with you all today.
Host: Leonard Walletzky <qwalletz@fi.muni.cz> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/leonardwalletzky/) +420 549 49 7690
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=aUvbsmwAAAAJ&hl=cs
Katrina Motkova (https://www.linkedin.com/in/kateřina-moťková-mba-a964a3175/en/?originalSubdomain=cz)
Speaker: Jim Spohrer <spohrer@gmail.com> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/) +1-408-829-3112
I am Jim Spohrer, a retired Apple and IBM Executive, and currently a UIDP Senior Fellow, on the Board of Directors of ISSIP and ServCollab.
I am retired, meaning my primary activities are family-oriented – families are the oldest and most important type of service systems
I volunteer to help non-profits, mentor students, professionals, and retiree (some in retirement communities where the average age is 85) on AI & service science
My hobbies are hiking, reading, programming, and building my AI digital twin and humanoid robots for maintaining farms and farming equipment.
My hobbies are also trying to understand as much as I can about the system called the universe and mult-verse, and robots to rapidly rebuild civilization including themselves from scratch.
2001 - Nonzero: The Logic of Human Desitiny (Wright) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonzero:_The_Logic_of_Human_Destiny
2015 - Geek Heresy: Rescuing Social Change from the Cult of Technology - https://www.amazon.com/Geek-Heresy-Rescuing-Social-Technology/dp/161039528X
2021 - Humankind: A Hopeful History (Bregman) - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humankind:_A_Hopeful_History
Humankind - https://www.amazon.com/Humankind-Hopeful-History-Rutger-Bregman/dp/0316418536
Humankind Book Review - https://service-science.info/archives/5654
2022 - Service in the AI Era: Science, Logic, and Architecture Perspectives (2022) by Spohrer, Maglio, Vargo, Warg - https://www.amazon.com/Service-AI-Era-Architecture-Perspectives/dp/1637423039
2023 - Design for a Better World: Meaningful, Sustainable, Humanity-Centered (2023) by Don Norman - https://www.amazon.com/Design-Better-World-Meaningful-Sustainable/dp/0262047950/
Brno-IESS 20240206 v10 service science ai.pptxISSIP
It my pleasure to be with you all today – thanks to my host for the opportunity to speak with you all today.
Host: Leonard Walletzky <qwalletz@fi.muni.cz> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/leonardwalletzky/) +420 549 49 7690
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=aUvbsmwAAAAJ&hl=cs
Katrina Motkova (https://www.linkedin.com/in/kateřina-moťková-mba-a964a3175/en/?originalSubdomain=cz)
Speaker: Jim Spohrer <spohrer@gmail.com> (https://www.linkedin.com/in/spohrer/) +1-408-829-3112
NordicHouse 20240116 AI Quantum IFTF dfiscussionv7.pptxISSIP
Jim Spohrer presented on AI and quantum computing. He discussed the history of AI from the 1955 Dartmouth workshop to modern advances like AlphaGo, GPT-3, and DALL-E 2. Spohrer noted that computation costs have decreased exponentially over time, driving increases in knowledge worker productivity. He highlighted several experts and resources he follows to stay informed on AI capabilities and implications. Spohrer sees opportunities to improve learning and performance through advances in learning sciences, technology, lifelong learning, and early education. The talk addressed how generative AI works and challenges around verification.
20240104 HICSS Panel on AI and Legal Ethical 20240103 v7.pptxISSIP
20240103 HICSS Panel
Ethical and legal implications raised by Generative AI and Augmented Reality in the workplace.
Souren Paul - https://www.linkedin.com/in/souren-paul-a3bbaa5/
Event: https://kmeducationhub.de/hawaii-international-conference-on-system-sciences-hicss/
Congratulations to the organizers of the “Symposium for Celebrating 40 Years of Bayesian Learning in Speech and Language Processing” and to Prof. Chin-Hui Lee of Georgia Tech the Honorary Chair of the Symposium.
Thanks to Huck Yang (Amazon) for the invitation to record this short message.
Huck Yang
URL: https://www.linkedin.com/in/huckyang/
Event: https://bayesian40.github.io
Recording:
Slides:
URL: https://professionalschool.eitdigital.eu/generative-ai-essentials
Course on Generative Al
Description:
Generative AI is a world-changing power tool that is getting better by the day. So now is the time to get truly inspired, climb up the learning curve, and unleash more of your creative potential.
Learning Topics:
* Inspiration: What is Generative AI in the context of AI's history, present, and future
* Climbing Up: Ways to accelerate your learning trajectory
* Unleashing Creativity: Ways to stay future-ready in the AI era
What You'll Take Away:
By the end of this session, you'll understand the importance of upskilling with today's generative AI tools to get more work done, both faster and at higher quality, as well as some pitfalls to avoid, all within the broader context of the past, present, and future of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Intelligence Augmentation (IA).
Learning Topics
Inspiration: What is Generative AI in the context of AI's history, present, and future.
Climbing Up: Ways to accelerate your learning trajectory.
Unleashing Creativity: Ways to stay future-ready in the AI era.
Deep dive into ChatGPT's features.
Techniques for basic and advanced prompting and real-world applications.
- Service science has progressed significantly in the past two decades since its inception in the early 2000s.
- However, there is still a long way to go to fully realize the potential of service science and its role in areas like upskilling with AI.
- Looking ahead, some of the biggest challenges will be upskilling entire nations with AI for digital transformation, while also decarbonizing nations through sustainable energy infrastructure - both accomplished through service-based business models.
THE SACRIFICE HOW PRO-PALESTINE PROTESTS STUDENTS ARE SACRIFICING TO CHANGE T...indexPub
The recent surge in pro-Palestine student activism has prompted significant responses from universities, ranging from negotiations and divestment commitments to increased transparency about investments in companies supporting the war on Gaza. This activism has led to the cessation of student encampments but also highlighted the substantial sacrifices made by students, including academic disruptions and personal risks. The primary drivers of these protests are poor university administration, lack of transparency, and inadequate communication between officials and students. This study examines the profound emotional, psychological, and professional impacts on students engaged in pro-Palestine protests, focusing on Generation Z's (Gen-Z) activism dynamics. This paper explores the significant sacrifices made by these students and even the professors supporting the pro-Palestine movement, with a focus on recent global movements. Through an in-depth analysis of printed and electronic media, the study examines the impacts of these sacrifices on the academic and personal lives of those involved. The paper highlights examples from various universities, demonstrating student activism's long-term and short-term effects, including disciplinary actions, social backlash, and career implications. The researchers also explore the broader implications of student sacrifices. The findings reveal that these sacrifices are driven by a profound commitment to justice and human rights, and are influenced by the increasing availability of information, peer interactions, and personal convictions. The study also discusses the broader implications of this activism, comparing it to historical precedents and assessing its potential to influence policy and public opinion. The emotional and psychological toll on student activists is significant, but their sense of purpose and community support mitigates some of these challenges. However, the researchers call for acknowledging the broader Impact of these sacrifices on the future global movement of FreePalestine.
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
12. A city is essentially a
system of service
systems—
transportation,
healthcare, public
safety and education.
To enable a Smarter
City, IBM is working to
improve the quality &
efficiency of service
systems and how they
operate and function.
12 IBM GMU External Relations 2012