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September 2011

iPhone5 and Facebook

One more thing? #Facebook #iphone5

Sep 27, 2011 4 notes
#apple #iphone #facebook
Great curated coverage from Disrupt Conferencetechcrunch.com

The six must watch videos. Some very interesting insights and discussions.

Sep 19, 2011 2 notes
#innovation
Sydney @ the Beach

On a fine day in early Spring. Like no other place in the world. Just beautiful.

Sep 4, 2011
I was wrong.. on TV Rentalssdi.co.nz
Sep 3, 2011

April 2011

Why Dropbox Avoids Industry Buzzwords Like "The Cloud" | Fast Companyfastcompany.com

Sometimes a great user experience is in the words we use. It’s not always about the creative look and feel of the experience #design #UI @dropbox

Apr 26, 2011
WVIL, A Glimpse At The Future Of Photography After Cameras Die [Video] | Co.Designfastcodesign.com

When the camera disappears and only the lens remains… a whole new user experience.

Apr 23, 2011
iStrategy Blog | Why User Experience Design “IS” the Holy Grail for brand advocacyistrategyconference.com

Great article on the role of user experience design in brand advocacy #design 

Apr 13, 2011
Play
Apr 12, 2011
Play
Apr 7, 2011
Cortex is dead simple and dead cool.cortexapp.com

Simply add as an extension to your browser. Configure your login details to facebook, twitter, tumblr and instapaper and by pressing and holding your mouse over any part of a web page the cortex wheel will pop-up and let you post immediately. Simple, elegant and fantastic.

Apr 7, 2011 10 notes
#cool #design #cortex
Wanted: Cosmonaut, An iPad Stylus That Actually Writes Well | Co.Designfastcodesign.com

More great design ideas… a very cool stylus that actually works.

Apr 7, 2011 1 note
#apple #design
Play
Apr 7, 2011
#Apple #cool #future
Analyst Sees MacBook Air as a $2.2 Billion-a-Year "Quasi-Tablet" | John Paczkowski | Digital Daily | AllThingsDdigitaldaily.allthingsd.com

Great UI + realistic price + relevant form factor that meets the needs of the productivity worker = overnight success.

Apr 5, 2011
It's Time to Transform Your Marketingslideshare.net

This is a great presentation about the transformative change that the marketing profession is going through..

Apr 2, 2011
Apr 1, 2011
Note to IT department - we're bringing our own stuff now

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A really interesting article in The Australian IT section earlier this week about Suncorp’s decision to allow thousands of staff to bring their own computer or tablet to work.

Suncorp will effectively role their corporate firewall back into the datacentre and enable full self provisoning and access to corporate applications via a secured virtual desktop environment. They're not the first organisation to do this, but they are the first major financial services organisation in Australia that I am aware of is going down this track. 

I think with this approach we are seeing a window into the future of how enterprise IT consumption and asset provisioning is changing and how the IT department of tomorrow will need to adapt to enable this style of end user choice.

Choice, and a potential lower cost of ownership, is really what this is all about. In today’s global fight for talent organisations are increasingly trying to differentiate their employee value proposition by providing options like this.

This approach enables the employee to personalise a small part of their workspace. It enables them to work with similar infrastructure to what they use everyday at home and lowers the barriers around training and adoption in the enterprise.

By providing this sort of personal choice the organisation is saying to their employees, and potential recruits that not only are they flexible, but they understand that the wave of consumerisation of the mobile smart phone market and its encroach into the workplace that has occurred.

The humble desktop - until recently the frontline of enterprise information security management - is next. IT departments must be ready to embrace to enable this choice. 

Apr 1, 2011 3 notes
#strategy #Mobile Strategy

March 2011

Mobility - but don't forget the reality check

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One of the best things about working in the information technology industry is… yes, the technology. I speak with the nagging sense of personal guilt which comes from being an IT professional who has succumbed to non-rational buying decisions – leading to simultaneous ownership of both a BlackBerry and an iPhone, and a laptop bag which just got a little bit heavier with the addition of an iPad.

I am not alone. Mobility is the buzzword of the day. The proliferation of appealing mobile devices, faster broadband, and cloud-based applications all conspire to add appeal and glamour to the ability to use technology any time, anywhere, free of the physical constraints of conventional networks.

Industry growth forecasts add fuel to the fire. Last year Cisco announced – with understandable enthusiasm – that based on its Visual Networking Index (VNI) Mobile forecast for 2006-2013 – global mobile data traffic will increase 66-fold by 2013 with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 131 per cent over that period.

Gartner’s most recent forecast on global IT spending saw a reduction in year-on-year growth across the entire industry from 5.3 per cent to a forecast year-on-year growth of just 3.9 per cent. The reduced forecast is linked to the current Euro debt crisis. But at the same time, Gartner is forecasting 9.1 per cent growth in hardware fuelled by growing demand for mobile devices and PC upgrades linked to Windows 7. 

Everyone wants to be mobile and many of us have been guilty of buying the latest mobile gadget without really thinking through just what the business benefits will be.

This is harmless enough on a personal level, but buying decisions at an organisational level must be underpinned by a hard-nosed understanding of the business benefits and a solid business case. The mobile device should come last in the decision sequence – post the establishment of the use case for the role and the actual applications to be mobilised, not first as is often the case. Deploying the right device to meet the use and business case requirements will often make or break the actual business case. Clear use cases, by role, need to be defined prior to embarking on enterprise mobile applications. Not every role has the same requirements for mobile application access.

I suggest a six-step plan to ensure that the horse is placed firmly in front of the cart when it comes to advising on and managing the implementation of organisation-wide mobility solutions.

  1. Understand the business requirements and the context of those requirements – go out on the road with the end-users to understand and ‘sanity check’ perceived requirements against real requirements.
  2. Identify the application which most closely fits the business requirement.
  3. Resolve the deployment, security and architecture issues.
  4. Match the business requirement to the role and then establish what type of device meets the requirements.
  5. Start with a small pilot to assess effectiveness and productivity or improvement results.
  6. Finally, plan and manage large scale deployment based on a business case understanding of the costs relative to benefits.

The hype around mobility has been fuelled by the relatively uncontrolled nature of early deployments of mobile email – along with the proliferation of appealing devices – which have created the misperception within organisations that this creates a
foundation for mobile access to enterprise applications.

The reality is that mobile deployments need to be highly structured and carefully managed. As with all technology deployments, the business requirements have to be paramount and the cost benefits of mobile deployments need to be fully understood upfront. Mobility has strong business advantages but it also has the potential to pose serious risks if security and architecture issues are not identified and managed to a robust standard.

The bottom line is that mobility decisions have to be made without any emotional attachment to cool devices. Follow good process. A reality check after the fact will likely be one you won’t want to cash.

This post originally appeared in my column on http://www.insidesap.com.au 

Mar 29, 2011 2 notes
#mobile strategy #strategy
Deloitte Australia - Social Media Report 2010deloitte.com

A great insight into a professional services firm using Social Media and how they are doing it in a Business to Business environment. Very encouraging…

Mar 27, 2011
Simple Genius: A USB Plug That Fits Even if It's Upside-Downfastcodesign.com

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More great design thinking.. a multiway USB key

Mar 27, 2011
Play
Mar 21, 2011
#cool #future
Mar 21, 2011
Usability and Application adoption

A funny thing happened a couple of weeks ago in our organisation. Two years ago we started using yammer internally to communicate. Our business is primarily mobile based consultants. At the time we were using Blackberry’s as out smartphone of choice. Long story short adoption was woeful and it never really got going.

A month ago we re-platformed the business with iPhone 4s. Simultaneously we relaunched yammer internally using the iPhone app as a key selling point. Usage has exploded and we are now yammering internally with an entire new level of intra business communication going on.

I accept that a lot has happened in the last 24 months around people’s willgness to use social media applications but it just struck me that a decent UI really helps drive adoption.

Mar 3, 2011 11 notes
#yammer #apple #blackberry #design #useability

February 2011

Play
Feb 15, 2011
The Verdict is in.. iPad only results..

Six weeks ago I announced that it was my intention to make use of my iPad only as I traveled over the Christmas and New-Year period. That involved a week working in the Oxygen Auckland office and then Whangamata and Ti Point as family destinations. The experience was interesting and despite a few frustrations along the way ultimately satisfactory. For someone who has religiously traveled with a laptop in the past in was in many ways a liberating experience.

Preparation

Prior to leaving Sydney I spent two days working from my own office in an attempt to make sure the whole thing was going to work. During this period I established two important things:

  • I would need access to a real keyboard on the trip. The Apple Bluetooth wireless keyboard fitted the bill nicely.
  • I would need to leave my laptop on and locked in my Sydney office to ensure I could get access to files and applications that weren’t travelling with me and for some much needed piece of mind. After a bit of testing I settled on the iTap Mobile RDP client to ensure I could reach back to my laptop from on the iPad wherever I was.

Based in and around the Auckland Office

I was able to use the native applications for most of the time but was forced to revert to using iTap to get back onto my own laptop when working with complicated spreadsheets, any PowerPoint files and when I needed to access quickly emails stored on our exchange server. The iPad mail client was just painfully slow at retrieving mail from folders that was not already synced over the air. Using iTap VGA out and the Bluetooth keyboard proved to be a relatively painless experience. In many ways it felt very similar to working directly on my own laptop. Printing during the period proved challenging and in the end it was easier to email the file to a colleague and have them complete any printing for me.
Summary… the fact that I was forced to regularly access iTap to get back to use my own laptop while I was based in the Auckland office indicates to me that iPad substitution in this environment was not altogether satisfactory and not a long term solution. The own real gain is in portability as you are still using a laptop or a Terminal Server client to access or work in a more natural way. Key misses in my workflow were around complex spreadsheets, deeper email functionality and PowerPoint file reads and edits. Would I do this again - NO

On Vacation

This is where the iPad really came into its own. During the holiday period the always-on nature of the SIM and WIFI connections meant I could always be in touch with the office if required. During the vacation period email traffic was lighter and the need to work with complex files reduced. I found myself checking emails and reviewing documents without needing to use iTap to access my own laptop.
Summary.. This is where the iPad exceled. Its portability and always-on nature made it a great travel companion. It had just enough functionality without requiring me to access iTap and connect back to my own laptop. Would I do this again - YES

The Applications I Used for Work Activities

During the six week period the iPad was given a thorough workout with the following applications, beyond the standard mail, contacts and calendar, well used:

  • SharePlus to get access to files and directories on the Oxygen Sharepoint environment
  • FileBrowser to get access to files and directories on the Oxygen corporate network
  • iTap Mobile RDP for remote screen viewing and remote access to my work laptop
  • GoodReader for reading just about anything that arrived in my email
  • QuickOffice HD for modifying spreadsheets and word documents
  • TaskTask HD for synced access back to my Microsoft Exchange Task list
  • WebEx and GoToMeeting for attending client meetings using screen sharing

The Hardware I Used

  • iPad Wi-Fi/3G 32 GB
  • Apple Bluetooth keyboard (the experiment would have been over within 24 hours if not for this accessory alone. The arrow keys make ALL the difference).
  • Apple iPad VGA monitor out connection (iTap has VGA out enabled meaning in our Auckland office I could plug into a big screen and effectively use the iPad as a large touchpad mouse!)
  • Apple SD/USB connector (for photo syncing – not strictly work but certainly went on during the period!)
  • On arrival in New Zealand I removed my existing Telstra 3G SIM and replaced it with a NZ Vodafone prepay SIM. This worked a treat for the entire trip.
Feb 14, 2011

October 2010

Play
Oct 8, 2010
TV Rentals - the future

Over a long weekend and a few nights at home I was keen to catchup on the MadMen TV series, or at least figure out if I liked it.

As an Apple fanboy (self confessed but probably true) I was all ready to rent an Episode and see what whether I like it. Turns out that was harder than it could be and TV rentals via iTunes are not yet available in Australia. I ended up purchasing one episode and watching it. I liked it and will be looking for more.

In thinking more about it… I am convinced TV rentals like movie rentals are the way of the future. Do you really need to own it? Libraries seem to have worked well for eons - albeit it as a community service, but maybe the future of minimal/infrequent use content really is rental. The same logic probably doesn’t apply to my daughters Bob the Builder DVD. I would be a poor man if that was rental bases. I think their will be a tipping point where it make sense to own things you are going to watch more than say ¾ times and for everything else rentals are it.

Surely as we move more and more to the cloud all we want to know is that it’s available and if we want to access it their will be a small charge. Seems a whole lot easier than owning stuff we probably only watch once or twice anyway and then having to remember what we have and where it is.

Oct 4, 2010
#Apple #Tv rentals

August 2010

Innovation - are we doing enough?

As business confidence returns, CIOs are once again being asked to turn their focus to innovation and growth – rather than survival-oriented cost saving. Innovation is the latest topic I focus on in my InsideSAP article. You can read the full text here..

Aug 1, 2010
#oxygen #innovation

June 2010

Never mind the carbon footprint, consider the bottom line

There are still those who laugh behind their hands at the whole greenie idea of sustainability. After all, in the real world when you’re focused on making budget for the next quarter, who has time to save the planet with a smaller carbon footprint?

Read the full story here.

Jun 28, 2010

May 2010

I'm excited - SAP has a new product strategy

In the last 100 days it has become clear that SAP has radically transformed itself and repositioned. For the first time in ages we are seeing a really clear product strategy based around; On Premise, On Demand and On Device all tied together with a clear orchestration program.

What’s also clear is that SAP are prepared to put significant investment behind it. This week’s proposed friendly acquisition of Sybase makes a statement and points to a real commitment to mobilising the enterprise. Streamwork and BI OnDemand in the On Demand product category also look to represent significant new opportunties to further extend the On Premise SAP paradigm into the cloud.

The next six month’s should be exciting - as this new strategy further evoles and as SAP ERP6 Enhancement Pack 5 ships for existing on premise ERP6 implementations we have a whole new world of possibilities and opportunties begining to emerge.

May 20, 2010
#SAP
Adding Value - It's all about the process..

Recently I talked about process value and the face that not all business processes were created equal. Read the whole story on the Oxygen site here..

May 15, 2010
#oxygen #sap #process value
May 14, 2010
Starting Out

Welcome to my tumblr blog … will it be all its cracked up to be? I have no idea.. but thanks for stoping by. Check back regularly to see what I have to say.

May 14, 2010
#start
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