Updated: 01/07/2003; 7:23:08 AM.
Transforming Technology
Information of Technology that has transforming or disruptive potential
        

Thursday, June 19, 2003

No institution will be able to continue along the "business as usual" model. Few institutions are more vulnerable than education to the effects of the emerging disruptive technology of social software.

When offered a participative pedagogy, freedom in terms of time to attend and much lower costs the early adapters will jump at the better deal. This will happen at first in Universities and Community colleges but will drift down to high school. It will be the small universities that will take up the challenge. The large will have so much vested interest in the old that it will be too late. The small regional player that the big guys all laughed at will have broken out and like Southwest will redefine the field.

RSS in Education.

RSS - The Next Killer App for Education

"Imagine having the news that interests you automatically delivered to your desktop, or being alerted to updates on your favorite Web sites without visiting them first. Picture yourself as a news provider to specific people who share your interests or just appreciate your commentary. Most commonly used to support the publication of weblogs and Internet news sites, RSS is an important development that promises to have a substantial impact on the world of education" [Tools, via elearnspace blog]

Some good examples for educators looking for ways to incorporate RSS into their web sites.

[The Shifted Librarian] [Blogging Alone]
8:20:58 AM    comment []

Model for Collaborative Spaces at the Workplace.

This is a brilliant attempt by Stuart Henshall at creating a really neat model for how collaborative spaces can really work to harness and augment collective intelligence. There's loads of good stuff being written on this topic - on collective intelligence, collaborative spaces, corporate blogging and on better knowledge management systems.  Yet this is the first piece i've seen that makes me feel it is a model that is really 'workable', in a corporate set-up, and not just among bloggers and KM specialists.

And the first to focus not just on the tools or on their benefits - but on both. 

A must-read for anyone interested in this area.

Collaborative Spaces - Transforming Innovation Capital.

How might the growing interest in linking digital identity, blogging wiki's, RSS feeds etc evolve?  How might the emergent functionalities in these tools benefit our evolution and daily experiences. How will they combine and spiral to augment our collective intelligence? How will they reframe the KM knowledge innovation paradigm? For most companies it's happening more rapidly than they think. 

There's a saying "the future is here  - it is just unevenly distributed" (William Gibson). This couldn't be more true when we start to apply it to emerging lightweight knowledge innovation tools and combine it with what we know about mobility, decentralization, hyperconnectivity, online identity etc. 

Yet using the metaphor "standing in the future" we almost inevitably find ourselves reframing the space we compete in today. 

I facilitated the chart below about three weeks ago before going somewhat silent (at least on my blog) when exploring early ideas for transforming a "systems integration business" into an innovation engine.  As the tools paradigm developed we kept spiraling back to the benefits. Each iteration breaking a new frontier, each new technology providing new functionality.   

A picture named CI stuart.jpg

It's a WIP (work-in-progress) and making the point that all these technologies are already available they are not just effectively connected yet.  For the most part it will be bloggers reading this.  Some have the curiosity to ask:  Is corporate blogging just noise or part of a greater shift.  What about wiki's and the broader aspects of augmented social networks? Etc. 

[Unbound Spiral]

Two more related posts today from Stuart - one that has a great list of links with stories and examples on how Blogging is emerging in Business, and the second a more philosophical passionate take on how Augmented Social Networks can impact innovation and community at large.  

Way to go Stuart.  I look forward to reading more of his thoughts.

[Conversations with Dina]
8:06:28 AM    comment []

© Copyright 2003 Robert Paterson.
 
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