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  Saturday, January 14, 2006


Knowledge Revolution Gems

1. Given the ease with which capital can move to the smartest, most efficient, most reliable work force, having more skilled and capable workers than the next country becomes essential for attracting and holding the best jobs for the longest time. - Tom Friedman, author of “The World is flat: A Brief History of the Twenty First Century”.

2. The Popular Idea that America is one step smarter and more sophisticated than its rivals is a dangerous myth …. the United States not only has a deficit on commodities and cheap manufactured goods, it also has a deficit on agricultural products and high tech products…. From a surplus of $30 billion in 1998, the high tech trade currently runs at a deficit of $40 billion. - Clyde Prestowitz, president of Economic Strategy Institute.

3. We have to understand that competition can’t be shut out. In the end, it can only be beaten…. Success will go to those companies and countries which are swift to adapt, slow to complain, open and willing to change. - Tony Blair, UK Prime Minister

4. Amid a great information explosion, the share of knowledge that the world puts to good use is falling. History tells us this will end badly. - Danny Quah, professor of economics at London School of Economics.


6:19:24 AM     comment []   trackback []

Newsweek’s Knowledge Revolution 1

 

newsweek coverNewsweek has come out with an excellent 2006 special edition entitled Knowledge Revolution. In it , you will find various article penned by such leading thinkers, statesmen and businessmen as Thomas Friedman, Tony Blair, Bill Gates, Craig Barrett, Tim Berners Lee, John Chambers, Lou Gerstner, Jeff Immelt, Lee Hsien Loong, Sam Palmisano, Eric Schmidt and others. I will put in snippets of their observations in the coming days.


6:14:33 AM     comment []   trackback []

Tech Weblogs

bird flyingHere are some of the blogs of leading tech people that I follow:

Ray Ozzie, developer of Lotus Notes and Groove, and now Chief Technology Officer of Microsoft, has a new blog , and it is just in Spaces of MSN.

Joel Spolsky, founder of Fog Creek Software, and famous author, has always some insightful things to say about the art of developing software.

Jonathan Schwartz, is the current president of Sun Microsystems, and is always on his combative self as he brings insights into the industry practices and competition.

Robert Scoble, Microsft tech evangelist, and its most famous blogger, has a new blog here.


6:09:09 AM     comment []   trackback []

Here are some take homes after I attended the Microsoft SQL Server 2005 launch. This is obviously for only those readers who are technology-inclined.

- SQL Server 2005 has 40% performance improvement over SQL Server 2000
- SQL Server 2005 has built-in data mining and business intelligence at no extra cost.
- SQL Server can scale better. Largest install for SQL Server 2000- 26,000 users. Largest install test so far for SQL Server 2005 - 93,000 Concurrent users in SAP
- SQL Server 2005 has a 50% off for licenses for competitive database upgrade for a limited time.
- SQL Server 2005 will not charge for licenses for the passive cluster in a high availability active-passive cluster.
- SQL Server 2005 charges by CPU, not by core. So if you use Dual or Multicore CPUs, you only need to pay for 1 server license.
- SQL Server Express 2005 is available for free.


6:03:09 AM     comment []   trackback []