Innovation [2009-07-27]
2009/07/27 in Innovation by peg | View Comments
Another week and another collection of interesting ideas from around the internet.
As always, thoughts and/or comments are greatly appreciated.
This issue:
- Four Lessons from Y-Combinator’s Fresh Approach to Innovation [Scott Anthony: Innovation Insights]
Y-Combinator takes as similar approach to supporting innovation as Powering Ideas, the innovation strategy recently published by the Australian Government: make innovation cheap. - AMPlify09 [BankerVision]
A nice analysis of possibly the most interesting ideation event in recent history. - Why innovation is crucial to our survival [Socialutions]
Albert Einstein observed a world caught up in the madness of a World War and said: “The level of thinking that has created our problems will never prove sufficient to solve them.” He understood the value of innovation. And today we hear a lot about innovation, for some it’s a fad, for others a “buzz” word. To Einstein it was essential. - The Shift Index [Deloitte Centre for the Edge]
A world of near-constant disruption is emerging – one in which new ideas, technologies, and extreme events constantly and unexpectedly bear down on businesses. How are successful executives finding their way in this new world?
Tags: AMPlify, Bankervision, Centre for the Edge, Innovation, Shift Index, Socialutions, Y-Combinator
Popular
- 100% The role of snowmobiles in innovation
- 80% Consulting doesn't work any more. We need to reinvent it.
- 66% Inside vs. Outside
- 55% Is Generation X/Y/Z irrelevant?
- 52% Accelerate along the road to happiness
- 47% The IT department we have today is not the IT department we'll need tomorrow
- 39% What we're doing today is not what we did yesterday
- 37% Tesco's looking outside the building to predict customer needs
- 34% The value of information
- 30% Innovation should not be the race for the new-new thing
Recent
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Michelangelo’s approach to workflow discovery
2010/07/29 in Business Process Management
Take any existing workflow — any people driven business process — and I expect that most of the tasks within it could best be described as cruft. cruft: /kruhft/ [very common; back-formation from crufty] n. An unpleasant substance. The dust that gathers under your bed is cruft; the TMRC Dictionary correctly noted that attacking it [...]
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The sun-shaped individual
2010/07/27 in Innovation, Posterous
(Yep, this is a cross post from Stuff I find interesting, but the missive grew to the point that I thought it worthwhile putting it on this blog as well.) I stumbled across a rather interesting, and rather old (in internet terms), blog post today: T-Shaped + Sun-Shaped People by David Armano. I suppose you [...]
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What is innovation?
2010/07/26 in Innovation
What is innovation? I don’t know, but then I’m not even sure that it’s an interesting question. The yearning so many companies have to be innovative often seems to prevent them from actually doing anything innovative. They get so caught up in trying to come up with the next innovation — the next big product [...]
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Who gets the credit: the innovator or the implementer?
2010/07/24 in Innovation
Who should get the credit? The person to came up with the idea? Or the person to did something with it? I’m with the implementers. Thomas Edison might be remembered for the lightbulb, but Samuel Insull‘s hard work enabled everyone to have one in their homes. We also forget that it wasn’t even Edison who [...]
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Taxonomies 1, Semantic Web (and Linked Data) 0
2010/07/08 in Business-Technology
I’m not a big fan of Semantic Web[1]. For something that has been around for just over ten years — and which has been aggressively promoted by the likes of Tim Berners-Lee[2] — very little real has come of it. Taxonomies, on the other hand, are going gangbusters, with solutions like GovDirect[3] showing that there [...]
pevansgreenwood
- Amazing 70 giga pixel stitch of Budapest city, in DeepZoom: http://70gigapixel.cloudapp.net/ (via @follesoe) about 2 hours ago from Tweetie for Mac
- @YogaChicky Ta! I'll have to drop by Myer and check them out :) about 7 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to YogaChicky
- @lindegaard my favorite bit of evidence is the fact that people often talk of the gigs they have lined up, rather than their job. about 11 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- @lindegaard social media is letting us move back to the village and the field, and consequently dissolving the work-life divide about 11 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- @lindegaard this created the idea of "work-life balance" and seperated our network from our work about 11 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- @lindegaard thumbnail: the industrial revolution moved us from the land and the village into the scheduled production line about 11 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- @lindegaard oh... how many beers do you want that discussion to run for? :) about 11 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- RE: @work_matters Hi Bob, Unfortunately useful doctrine often transforms into unproductive dogma. It's a common probl… http://disq.us/j1248 about 11 hours ago from DISQUS
- @lindegaard we've moved from an era of "go to market" models to "in the market" models about 22 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard
- @lindegaard realise that there is no difference between "network" and "business" about 22 hours ago from Tweetie for Macin reply to lindegaard




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