How can businesses keep up with tech change today?
With the digital world changing today faster than ever before, here's a look at what some top organizations are doing today to adapt more sustainably to the rapidly shifting technology landscape.
With the digital world changing today faster than ever before, here's a look at what some top organizations are doing today to adapt more sustainably to the rapidly shifting technology landscape.
At SAP Sapphire Now, Burberry CEO Angela Ahrendts, Ace Hardware CEO Ray Griffith and Coinstar CFO Scott Di Valerio discuss how they tackled problems with a platform.
At the Microsoft Research Faculty Summit in Redmond, Wash., Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates challenged developers to create solutions that will "change the way things are done."
My own view is that expanding the market for innovation is itself an innovation, and that getting innovation into more hands spurs yet-more innovation.
Inventor Dean Kamen tells engineers at WinHEC in New Orleans what it takes to be innovative, explaining why risk and failure are necessary parts of the process.
At PC Forum in Scottsdale, Ariz., scientist John Seely Brown and business strategist John Hagel talk to technology visionary Esther Dyson about "productive friction" and how it can harnessed to create value in IT.
Commentary--Policy analyst Patrick Ross says a well-meaning proposal wending through Congress will achieve the opposite of the author's intent.
When Wall Street loves a technology deal, it's usually a bad deal. Wall Street loves this deal. Loves it like your 10 year old daughter loves Hannah Montana.
Bruce Nussbaum at Newsweek calls on Obama and McCain (Hillary is excused) to address a key issue facing American competitiveness – the need for an "innovation policy." Here's his list:Support the codification of design methodology and design strategy as being worked on at leading IT schools.
The time is ripe for social networking applications to be developed for the healthcare industry and its patients, says medical practitioner.