by TomorrowToday Global | May 17, 2010 | Archive, Diversity, Future Trends
I’ve come accross a couple of interesting articles in the last week. They’ve not all focussed exclusively on ‘privacy’, but they’ve mentioned it somewhere. What has me interested is that they’re not all saying the same thing. In...
by Graeme Codrington | May 17, 2010 | Archive, Clients Feedback and Media, Future Trends, Organisational Development
I am becoming increasingly interested in company structures that are trying to use quantum mechanics (as opposed to Newtonian science) as the basis of their design. The simplest versions of these are linked to the concepts of cloud computing and virtual organisations....
by Graeme Codrington | May 16, 2010 | Archive, Clients Feedback and Media, Future Trends
Newspapers and magazines are going through a tough time. Not because of the recession, but because they don’t seem to know what to do with the Internet and the rise of free content. Some are choosing to try and sell their content. Other are trying to find ways...
by TomorrowToday Global | May 14, 2010 | Archive, Diversity, Future Trends, Organisational Development
Ted.com is one of the best internet resources I’ve ever come across for short, powerful and interesting inputs on a broad cross-section of topics that loosely fall into the categories of Technology, Environment and Design (TED). Most inputs have a future focus,...
by TomorrowToday Global | May 12, 2010 | Archive, Future Trends, Organisational Development
We’ve just added a new PodCast to the TomorrowToday feed. Graeme Codrington explores what happens when old is no longer considered old and people change the retirement paradigm completely. There are implications across the board. If you’d like to listen to this audio...
by Graeme Codrington | May 11, 2010 | Archive, Clients Feedback and Media, Future Trends
I was recently introduced to Peter Vesterbacka, who heads up an innovative company called Wreckamovie. The concept is simple: use social media concepts to facilitate the crowdsourcing of movie making. Or (without the web 2.0 jargon): use the Internet to get thousands...