Yes.
The world is full of interesting things … via Kottke
The world is full of interesting things … via Kottke
Very catchy title of this FT review of Don Tapscott’s newest book, huh? Snip: “Good things happen when we seize the opportunity to contribute our ideas, our passion and our creativity. The question is whether the world is ready to truly embrace the social and economic innovations that this collaboration could unleash.” He provides fresh […]
I would say that good ideas come from having many ideas … but there’s more, via BoingBoing: […] a short video promo for Steven Johnson’s upcoming Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation, a lecture on the way that transformative ideas incubate for long times, come out of left field, and thrive best […]
I guess there’s a reason why linkblogging is making heavy use of embedded videos … instant propagation of ideas and inspiration, leading me to think about the role of vidco in enterprise collaboration. OK, this got also fueled by this post by Alex Howard on the O’Reilly Radar Channel, check out the part on video […]
Video via Erwin Fielt Seizing the white space and the importance of business model innovation, earmarked one more time after downloading (while not yet reading) a range of articles from a – freely available – special issue of Long Range Planning on business model innovation. Patrick is not exactly happy about academic practices et al.: […]
View more presentations from David Gillespie. Found via PSST (about some 8 months late, funny – given my Kubrick fascination I should have seen that one earlier …)
Well, Bootstrapping can be good, but you need to know when to scale it up … there’s a difference between lingering on and pursuing natural, organic growth. Whatever happened to big thinking in business (you know the answer, it’s alive and well). Transcript here.