Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Visionaries

Historic Microsoft photo of Paul Allen (left) ...
Historic Microsoft photo of Paul Allen (left) and Bill Gates (respectively) on October 19, 1981 surrounded by PCs after signing a major contract with IBM to develop software for its upcoming PC line. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Large companies can only find real Visionaries by looking for people who have been right more than once, and never right because they rode somebody else’s wave. Having found one of these rare unicorns, Visionaries are often completely at odds with the skillset needed to survive in large organizations. They are not politically savvy (or don’t care). They do not do well in meetings. They do not crave gigantic staffs to manage. They will not suck up at the expense of doing something they know is wrong, or even a little bit less right. They are prickly and uncompromising. Yet, you must not only find them, you must prop them up and make them successful despite all the antibodies the entrenched burocracies at Microsoft and Yahoo will generate to try to expel them. It’s not going to be fun, but the alternative is a continuing slide into irrelevance at the hands of the Visionaries in other companies. That’s even less fun and you’ve had a taste of what that’s all about.
Source: SmoothSpan
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MM



Why Marissa Mayer may not be a good fit for Yahoo
Steve Ballmer and Marissa Mayer Face the Same Problems at Microsoft and Yahoo
Unsolicited advice for Marissa Mayer
The Truth About Marissa Mayer: She Has Two Contrasting Reputations

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

FoxConn Style Outsourcing

Deutsch: Foxconn Logo
Deutsch: Foxconn Logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
When companies like Apple outsource production, they send it off to FoxConn that employs people who do great work for cheap. But what does FoxConn do when it decides to outsource? Looks like there is a plan.

Migrant Workers in China Face Competition from Robots
Foxconn, which employs nearly one million low-wage workers to hand-assemble electronic gadgets for Apple, Nintendo, Intel, Dell, Nokia, Microsoft, Samsung, and Sony..... the Taiwan-based manufacturing giant would add up to one million industrial robots to its assembly lines inside of three years
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Big Data For The Masses

Big Data
Big Data (Photo credit: Kevin Krejci)
Big Data is not new. Walmart has been crunching Big Data for decades now. What's futuristic about the term  though is that Big Data is about to descend to the masses.

Technology Review: Your Laptop Can Now Analyze Big Data
As technology gets more networked, and data sets get larger, graph computation is becoming more and more relevant in many domains ... "Enabling web developers to construct these analyses on their desktop computers catalyzes these industries and accelerates product development." .... "Big data is everywhere now, but some big data isn't as big as it once was, relatively speaking. Tools like GraphChi will let many companies and startups solve all their graph-computing needs on a single machine. It's cost effective, and it drives innovation, too."
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