Sunday, December 31, 2017
DVD predictions for 2018
Wednesday, December 27, 2017
The Robots are Coming
Jobs are not important workers are! The Swedish model works.
The Robots Are Coming, and Sweden Is Fine
The New York Times shares with us the success of Sweden !
In a world full of anxiety about the potential job-destroying rise of automation, Sweden is well placed to embrace technology while limiting human costs.
Some gems:-
A Cushion for Innovation
Sweden presents the possibility that, in an age of automation, innovation may be best advanced by maintaining ample cushions against failure.
“A good safety net is good for entrepreneurship,” says Carl Melin, policy director at Futurion, a research institution in Stockholm. “If a project doesn’t succeed, you don’t have to go broke! “
Handling automation , innovation and change needs a major mindset shift from all parts of an economy and country!
It boils down to trust !
Trust that the company will look after the employee
Trust that the state will look after the Enterpreneur
Trust that it’s about the worker and the human and not about the job!
Hope you all have an amazing 2018!
Best
Ivan
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Tuesday, December 5, 2017
BSI Grants Landscape Briefing
What if we are only at the beginning of the tech revolution?
- Information intelligence not information management
- Platforms to enable new value chains and integrated ecosystems not IT systems management
- Business transformation and accelerated growth not cost management
Friday, November 24, 2017
AI is the bomb
Thursday, November 23, 2017
Elon Musk's New Battery Just Won Him a $50 Million Bet
By Emily Price 28 Nov 2017
Mike says he is so happy to have lost the bet!!!
Back in March, the Tesla founder made a bet on Twitter with Mike Cannon-Brookes, the co-founder of Atlassian, an Australian enterprise software company, that he would be able to install the world’s largest lithium-ion battery in Australia within 100 days, or he would supply it for free. That “free” would have been anything but to Musk, who said failing to meet the deadline would have cost him “$50 million or more,” Business Insider reports.
The 129-megawatt-hour battery was being built by Musk for South Australia, which generates a substantial percentage of its energy from wind power. Musk vowed to install the battery within 100 days of signing as agreement with the state government, which he did in September.
The goal with the battery pack is to make South Australia more self-sufficient and able to provide backup power and affordable energy to South Australians during the summer months.
The battery is part of a $550 million plan by South Australia to help guarantee its power supply after a string of blackouts over the last 18 months. The state has not indicated how much it is paying Musk for the battery. A 250MW gas-fired generator is also expected to come online in the area next summer to help ease energy concerns.
Musk also recently supplied battery power to help aid Puerto Rico’s electrical grid following the devastating hurricane earlier this year.
© Time Inc 2017. All rights reserved