• Connect

New Rules for the New Economy

New Rules for the New Economy. This thought is right on the money:

“We need to shift away from the notion of technology managing information and toward the idea of technology as a medium of relationships,” writes Michael Schrage in Shared Minds, a book about the new technologies of collaboration. Despite the billions of bits that information hardware can process in a second, the only matter of consequence silicon produces are relationships.

Of course reputation and trust have been essential in all economies of the past, so what’s new? Only two things:

  • With the decreased importance of productivity, relationships and their allies become the main economic event.
  • Telecommunications and globalism are intensifying, increasing, and transforming the ordinary state of relationships into an excited state of hyperrelations–over long distances, all the time, all places, all ways. It’s not Kansas anymore; it’s Oz.

  • Connect

Jet Pack Flys High

A really exciting investment made by the N0.8 Ventures team flys to new heights. Now poised for IPO and mainstream production. Very exciting to see Kiwi innovations like this making it to market.

File photo / APN

  • Learned

The Tea Pot

One of my indulgences is collecting tea pots – especially from Artisan potters and Chinese tea shops. I saw Brian’s stuff on Cool Hunting and ordered one. It just arrived and I am really astounded with the work. Amazing proportions and raw surface. Brian was a delight to work with and get to know through the process.

Here’s a shot.

 

tpot

Tea Pot: Brian Grossnickle

  • Connect

Why We Ride

This one reminded me why we ride – and that it was time to get off the trainer and onto the road…

Rapha Continental – The Movie from RAPHA on Vimeo.

  • Learned

Internet Impact

Interesting study from McKinsey. Lots of highlights. Would be great to see this data for New Zealand and Australia.

  • Most of the economic value the Internet creates falls outside of the technology sector: companies in more traditional industries capture 75 percent of the benefits. The Internet is also a catalyst for generating jobs. Among 4,800 small and midsize enterprises surveyed, it created 2.6 of them for each lost to technology-related efficiencies.

There are clear implications:

  • Enterprises need to sharpen their focus on Internet-related opportunities – especially new products, distribution and customer satisfaction
  • Enterprise strategy needs to embrace the positive or negative threat of the Internet to reinvent business models and competitiveness. We talk about Efficient IT at Dell and the Internet is a clear enabler.
  • Government leaders need to step-up promoting net access – since “Internet usage, quality of infrastructures, and Internet expenditure are correlated with higher growth in GDP per capita”
  • Education inside society and business will matter more than ever – Internet IT skills are needed in every job