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Einer der bekanntesten deutschen Unternehmen, der Otto Versand, expandiert nach erfolgter Umstrukturierung weiter und schickt sich an, Deutschlands groesster Online Versand zu werden und in der Gruppe der Major – Player, wie ebay oder Amazon mitzuspielen.
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No Comments » Posted on October 22nd, 2007 by Lasse Manthei
I rarely let someone else speak for me, but I have been working on-site doing technology consulting for a Fortune 50 financial services firm in Baltimore and we’re exploring Enterprise 2.0, Attention Data, RSS Enablement, and RSS Aggregation, just to throw out a bunch of buzzwords. Well, to get an amazing primer on how too much can be good enough, if you run the right filters and track the right stuff, please read An Excess of RSS by Mike Walsh from the The Fourth Estate:
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2 Comments » Posted on August 10th, 2007 by Abraham Harrison
So I came across this video today on ZdNet in which a bunch of corporate dudes - from Google, Levi Strauss, Hasbro, and McKesson - discuss the introduction of the iPhone and whether their organizations will support the use of it by their employees. Here is the link to the video
Anyway, it made me wonder what it means if corporate America for some reason were to not switch over to the iPhone. All of these guys, except for Google, said that they are not supporting the use of the iPhone by their employees and that the Rim Blackberry was still the technology of choice. There whole tech infrastructure and support systems are built around the Blackberry technology.
Let’s just, hypothetically, assume that the majority of corporate America decides not to utilize the new iPhone. Does this have any impact on the potential failure or success of this technology? How important is it to get the corporate dudes to buy your technology? We have all seen the impact of the Window’s system being adopted and utilized by companies vs the Apple. Though Apple is having a resurgence but it is not being driven by the corporations but rather by the lowly consumer. Will the consumer be strong enough to drive the iPhone into a truly universal and successful piece of technology - like the iPod?
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1 Comment » Posted on August 8th, 2007 by Saul Wainwright
Here’s a quick primer for a piece of the Enterprise 2.0 puzzle that had eluded me: most stuff in an Enterprise isn’t aggregation-ready. Just about everything - notes, docs, spreadsheets, IMs, email, PDFs, databases, files, and archives - don’t have RSS feeds. So, you’re generally shit-out-of-luck if you want turn your Enterprise 1.0 to Enterprise 2.0 and deploy cool tool like Particls, NewsGator, or Attensa. What do you need? Well, you need RSS Enablement. Network Computing has a great description of what RSS Enablement is all about.
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2 Comments » Posted on August 4th, 2007 by Abraham Harrison
Wouldn’t it be cool if you could find a glue that could connect all of the stuff you have stored in your Fortune 500 Enterprise 1.0 to your Enterprise 2.0? Yes, glue. I have been investigating. Everyone’s talking about Kapow but have you heard of Serendipity’s WorkLight? Very interesting. Kinda cool.
“Serendipity goes for for the big prize. Its Flagship solution, WorkLight™, is already helping global 500 and other enterprise customers catch up with web 2.0. The solution is a secure server-based software product that provides workers and consumers with “Web 2.0-style” access to corporate data stored in enterprise information systems and applications. Timely information is delivered using technologies such as RSS, Ajax, desktop and web-based gadgets and widgets, personalized homepages, social bookmarks, application mashups and instant messaging.” Via De Gardener
1 Comment » Posted on August 4th, 2007 by Abraham Harrison