At the Enterprise 2.0 conference Andrew McAfee made a few points about the approach to enterprise technology and how it might be changed a bit.
McAffee, of the Center for Digital Business, MIT Sloan School of Management, is considered the father of Enterprise 2.0. His views reflect how Enterprise 2.0 is evolving but still with a fair degree of resistance for its adoption.
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Here they are...
Declaring War On The EnterpriseThis definitely does not work. Do you think that you will get an project with such an approach?
Allow Walled Gardens to FlourishData silos prevent the ability to find and share information. Full story...
This morning, the crew of the International Space Station opened the hatch of the SpaceX Dragon capsule and went inside.
Today's theme is movers and shakers. How about some straight-up tech news for once? There's a lot of interesting maneuvering going on right now, and since RWW doesn't tend to report on rumors, this seems like a good opportunity to round up some of the stories we're watching with interest.
Even as all sorts of questions swirl around last week’s initial public offering and this week’s release of a camera app that looks a lot like the camera app it paid $1 billion for last month, Facebook has taken its usual quiet stance, issuing as few public statements and offering as few public answers as possible to the questions that business journalists and tech bloggers have been asking.
After a flawless launch on May 22, the SpaceX Dragon capsule has become the first commercial spacecraft to berth at the International Space Station.
Since this 2006 article on RWW about the Top Web Apps in India, a lot has happened in the Indian web industry.
Faking a computer science degree cost Scott Thompson his CEO job.
A study released last month breaks down patterns on how narcissists use social networks and finds differences in patterns on Facebook when compared with those on Twitter.
Many startups seem to be powered solely by excitement over the new business (occasionally mixed with some Red Bull and Starbucks).
Sometime over the next 12 hours, the SpaceX capsule Dragon will rendezvous with the International Space Station for the first time.