Nexttech

Nexttech
Creating Generational Legacies

Sunday, August 27, 2023

A cool story about failure!




It’s one of my favourite stories, all the better for being true.


 A young chemist had been working for some time at developing a new bonding agent, a glue. Eventually the work was complete. He tried it out. It didn’t stick. What’s the use of a glue that doesn’t stick? A failure. Time wasted. Effort spent in vain. Back to the laboratory to try again. So, ninety-nine out of a hundred people would have concluded. The young chemist was the one in a hundred who thought differently.


Instead of deciding that his work was a failure, he asked, “What if it’s a success? What if I’ve discovered a solution? The only thing left to do is to find the problem.” He refused to give up. He kept asking himself, What’s the use of a glue that doesn’t stick? Eventually he found it. It became a huge commercial success. I use it all the time. It’s used for notes you can attach and detach at will. 


That’s how the “Post-it” pad was born.

 

I think of that story every time I hear someone write off their own or other people’s efforts as a failure. That is not just negative thinking. It’s destructive – of confidence, morale, self-respect. More importantly, it’s not true, or at least, not the best way of seeing things.


Creation, by its very nature, involves taking risks – the experiment that fails, the attempt that doesn’t quite come off. Each is part of the process that leads to discovery. Each is a learning experience. Analysing why something fails is often one of the most instructive exercises we can undertake. 


Creativity without failure is like being lifted to the top of a mountain without the climb. It’s fun. But it isn’t an achievement.


 “According to the effort,” said the sages, “is the reward.”


A few other failures that were the biggest successes!

Moses Maimonides 

Nor are we, here, now, in a position to judge success. I think of Moses Maimonides, the great Jewish thinker of the Middle Ages. Late in life he wrote a book. It was, he tells us in one of his letters, written for a single disciple who had doubts about his faith. It took a long time. Maimonides was in those days a physician as well the leader of his community, and the hours were hard to find. Eventually he completed it and sent it to the young man. From his reply it’s clear that it didn’t work. Perhaps he didn’t understand it. At any rate it didn’t answer his questions. 


A failure in Maimonides’ lifetime. 


The name of the book? “The Guide for the Perplexed”, the greatest work of Jewish philosophy ever written.

Moses

I think, too, of the first Moses. What would his obituary have been like, written by a contemporary? The evidence is there throughout the books that bear his name. When he intervened on behalf of his people, they complained. He hadn’t made things better; he’d made them worse. In Egypt, their burdens were made heavier. Leaving Egypt, they came up against the Red Sea. Crossing the sea, they found a desert. First there was no water. Then there was no food. Then the people complained there was no meat. Having given the Israelites the Ten Commandments they made a Golden Calf. Sending spies to prepare their entry into the land, they came back and said, it’s impossible. Every effort he made to form a free and holy people collapsed. Nor was he privileged to set foot in the land to which he had spent forty years travelling. Can a life of failures be a success? Sometimes it can be the greatest life there is.


As we journey through Elul and look back over our year, we must remind ourselves of an important lesson: you have to make a blessing over failures too.


– Rabbi Sacks (Ellul 5779 / September 2019)


What are examples of organisations who failed because they didn’t innovate?  


Friday, August 25, 2023

Cyber Careers and Qualifications - Lifelong Learning




2023 National Skills Week 21- 27 Aug:
VET Impact #6 - BSI Learning and BSI Digital Learning currently conduct research & industry consultations to design, develop & deliver blended VET programs in emerging technologies and industries.

One such field is Cybersecurity and Cybergovernance - skilling up Australia is part of the roadmap for us to be the most secure nation by 2030. 

The Australian Qualifications Framework is recognised in 21 countries at various levels of participation, including Norway, Sweden, France, UK and Japan.

 “Being part of the Global Convention will boost international recognition of Australia’s world-class, vocational education and training graduates who are equipped with skills ready for the jobs of the 21st Century.” 
Says Simon Dewar BSI Digital Learning CEO 

"This benefits students, including international students, wanting to work and further their education in other countries." 

CyberPeace Foundation Savin Sam Vineet Kumar (he/him)
#VETforCyber
#NationalSkillsWeek
#ChangingLivesthroughLearning 
#cyberresilience 
#cyberpeace 

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Australia as a top global study destination. 🌎




The QS Best Student City Ranking 2024 is out! 
 
This year, five Australian cities are ranked among the top 30 student cities globally: Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, Adelaide and Canberra. 

High university rankings, a diverse student mix, high desirability, a vibrant jobs market, affordability and a positive student voice have all combined to continue to position Australia as a top global study destination. 🌎 

Read more: https://lnkd.in/es_bRqW8 

Monday, July 17, 2023

KPMG to invest $2B with Microsoft to develop AI for firm

KPMG announces a multi-billion-dollar investment in Microsoft’s generative AI and cloud services that will accelerate the use and development of generative AI for KPMG’s audit, tax and advisory clients and its 265,000 people globally. KPMG CEO Paul Knopp joins Caroline Hyde to discuss on "Bloomberg Technology." (Source: Bloomberg)

Ark CEO Cathie Wood speaks to KPMG CEO Paul Knopf - who shares that the firm  is to invest $2B in generative AI and Cyber and cloud solutions in partnership with Microsoft for its audit, tax and advisory clients - and expect it to return in excess of $12B for the firm!

There has been many disruptions in the accounting profession over the years- from ledgers to PCs to accounting software such as MYOB and XERO. These disruptions did not replace jobs but generated economic activity allowing business  to grow.

Paul believed that we are in an era  of the greatest technology disruption that he has seen in many decades - and believes the workforce will grow over the years - with generative AI - employing more  Cyber Professionals, Data Scientists,
Analysts and Auditors - letting AI do more mundane tasks and enabling people to be upskilled to do more interesting things !

 The firm looks forward to partnering with Microsoft to embrace this technology!

Workers will need to be lifelong learners - says Simon Dewar of BSI E’learning and is looking forward to be partnering with Kala Philip, CEO of BSI Learning Institute and Cassandra Parton, CEO of Microsoft training Partner, NEXTTECH Learning, with a view  to help upskill and reskill these humans in areas such as Generative AI, IT and Cybersecurity.

Security , governance and architecture is key for organisations to build and run their businesses. Ongoing training and a mindset of lifelong learning is key to the future of work - says NEXTTECH Director , Craig Saphin





Tuesday, July 4, 2023

The Opportunity to upskill and reskill people in India




India is busy constructing roads, tech campuses, airports and factories and growing by 6% a year  - but its education system leaves  a lot to be desired / says the Economist 


500m of its people are under 20— there is India’s brainy elite getting quals and the best education but for most Indians they are jobless and do not have the basic language literacy and numeracy skills! 


This could bring India’s economic development to a premature stop.


Why? 


What are some of the root causes of this lack of education ?


It’s the teachers - says the Economist


Teachers are poorly trained and badly supervised: 

  • a survey of rural schools found a quarter of staff were absent. 
  • Officials sometimes hand teachers unrelated duties, from administering elections to policing social-distancing rules during the pandemic.


Why is Vietnam’s kids doing so well ? It’s the teachers -  they are better prepared, more experienced and more likely to be held accountable if their pupils flunk.



The good news is that there has been a splurge on infrastructure. A decade ago only a third of government schools had handwashing facilities and only about half had electricity; now around 90% have both. 


Since 2014 India has opened nearly 400 universities. Enrolment in higher education has risen by a fifth.


BSI is proud to help solve this wicked problem by being a part of a collaboration between Australian and Indian educational institutions! 


BYJU is in Pain 

In the meantime , India’s biggest ed-tech firm has been slashed from 22b -6 b as a result of non compliance and a $1.2b debt around its neck ! 


Byju’s, who is trying to fix this problem of educating Year K-12s - and says it educates over 150m people worldwide . Deloitte has resigned  for non compliance -  resulting in many of its backers directors to resign Prosus, Peak XV Partners and ! 


Investors in BYJU include Tiger Global, Sequoia Capital, General Atlantic, Prosus and Tencent.

Monday, June 19, 2023

Australia’s leading RTO (BSI Learning ) is looking to Partner With Indian Universities



What can Australia learn from UK universities?

The Economist points out that Indian students are reviving UK universities


Last year more than 6,000 students, or about one-quarter of the total of University of East London hailed from India. 


The vice-chancellor, Amanda Broderick, says that uel has a global feel. 

It is booming. 

Total enrolment at the campuses has jumped by more than 60% since 2017.


Between 2017 and 2021 Britain saw a sixfold rise in Indians starting new courses. 


Visa data suggest that India had displaced China as the number-one sender of foreign students to Britain. 


What explains the rise? 

A change in visa rules, in 2019. (Australia take note!!!)


 Officials restored a scheme that lets foreigners stay, and work, for two years after they graduate. 


Students use those years to find employers to sponsor longer-term visas, or try to earn enough to pay down debts - 


The win win win is that these students are Helping the economy with the  labour shortage !!!


There is a boon for university finances. Foreigners pay higher fees than locals and now provide around one-fifth of university income.  In subjects such as business and management, postgraduates from overseas outnumber Britons by about ten to one. 


The Australian Opportunity!

The opportunity for students  to study in India - with BSI Learning  - in partnership with Indian Universities - with a view to get an Australian Diploma and a pathway to  Australian  Universities - is a game changer says Kala Philip - CEO of BSI Learning  .

The Economist


Thursday, June 8, 2023

Is AI a danger or a solution or both




Is #ai  inevitable - unstoppable - how do you engage it?

Are we  the frog in a frying pan ?  We are evolving into  cyborgs   - and we can’t see it ? 

Is it a danger?

Are machines slaves to you or are you a slave to the machine!

Steven Bartlett Speaks to Mo Gawdat in an amazing podcast that explains #ai - the dangers and opportunities….

Is this just part of the evolution?