All posts by Richard

Partial Attention in a Technology Driven World

Quick
… check your Blackberry … three more emails may have arrived. Oops,
there goes my cell phone. Ah gee wiz, another I.M Message. Have you
read any of this blog yet? Are you in a meeting while you’re browsing
the web? Did someone just ask me a question? I had better pretend I did
not understand, and ask for clarification …

I learned of this podcast via the Distant Librarian.

Wikipedia Adds Article Update RSS Feeds

This
is a great addition to Wikipedia. Article update RSS Feeds was a HUGE
missing feature. Quoting directly from the blog Micro Persuasion
 
"Wikipedia has
added RSS feeds to the 1.25 million entries in the encyclopedia. This
means you can now more easily track the revision history for important
articles, such as those about people, brands or corporations. Simply
click on the history link at the top of any entry page and you will see
the RSS link on the left hand side. Here’s the feed for the ever-popular podcasting page."

The Globalization of Research

This is a posting transferred from my eContent Blog on MSN. It was orginally posted on July 18 2006 …
I
just arrived in Bangalore a few hours ago. To better understand how the world of software is changing, including both the cultural and business implications, a trip to India is necessary.
 
Here is an interesting webcast from MIT World on the "Art of the Relationship"
and talks to their experiences in establishing a research center in
China.  Back on July 6th my blog entry included a webcast on
Microsoft’s new research center in India.
 
I’ll give you my own impressions, once I have
something tangible.  Right now I’m dealing with jet lag and trying to
recover from a 30 hour trip … which had its own impressions including
catching up to night, twice (once over the Atlantic, and then again
over the Middle East), and the strange feeling to be flying over Iran,
specifically seeing the lights of Tehran.

Steak, Chips and a Pint of Cider! (or what I learned in India)

This is a posting transferred from my eContent Blog on MSN. It was orginally posted on July 18, 2006.

I am in England, after one week in India … my first trip ever to that country.  After being up since yesterday evening (England time), I still took time out tonight to visit a favorite pub for a perfect meal. You have to understand that this non-vegetarian just spent a week eating meals he could not pronounce, with lots of spices, and no meat!

However, food is not the subject of this posting … rather it is what we Americans don't learn upon visiting India. This trip to Bangalore, given my focus upon knowledge management and software, was long overdo. Here are a few of my impressions:
  • Americans often go over to India with the viewpoint, how can India help my operation and its bottom line. How many of us ask ourselves, what can we learn from our hosts? In my case, a knowledge management expert, I learned plenty from individuals who focused upon creating centers of excellence.
    .
  • Most Americans stay in fancy … western focused hotels. After confering with my hosts I stayed at a three star hotel used for their Asian guests. I was the only Caucasian in the hotel, and the neighborhood surrounding the hotel was typically Indian. During each evening's walk taken from my hotel I would encounter:
    • nice shops and hotels
    • one room shanties
    • cows, monekys and mongrel dogs in the streets
    • hearing prayers sung to Mecca at sunset
    • all kinds of humanity … from the poor, to very rich
    • scooters, ox pulled carts and cars

The list goes on, but the important fact is I experienced India. My final night in Bangalore was spent at a "Western" hotel near the airport. Given the hotel's location, walking to local sights was not an option; instead my entertainment / dinner options were a English pub, a discotheque, and a fancy restaurant. I'm glad I spent my other nights at the other hotel.

I could go on, but you should understand the theme of this post. If you get the opportunity to visit a country dramatically different than your own … insure you really do visit that country.

Finally … in Bangalore … stay at the Pai Viceroy!