The end of the company mobile?

  So in the space of a few days BlackBerry sells itself and then the analyst group Gartner seems to offer seemingly unprecedented direct advice to its clients - "get the f*** out of there!". (I paraphrase - a more balanced description of what Gartner said is here. I wonder if the demise of BlackBerry … Continue reading The end of the company mobile?

Sodding autocorrect

  Every so often I hear someone blathering on about The Singularity. If you're not aware of it, it's basically heaven for atheist geeks, where the computers become so powerful they take over the world because they can design new computers more powerful than us mere mortals and then we ourselves become immortal as our … Continue reading Sodding autocorrect

Smart phones push up house prices

So here's a thought, following a fascinating conversation with Diana Janicki from EMC at lunch today. Today's housing market in London is being governed to some extent by the first major social network - the train and underground service. Live closer to a station (mostly built before the end of the first decade in the … Continue reading Smart phones push up house prices

Implosion

  At the recent Silicon Beach event I was lucky to be able to meet and chat with agency legend Andy Law. I didn't know he was an agency legend until talking to him (man - for most of the time Andy's been in the agency world, I was nestled in the world of tech). … Continue reading Implosion

Underlying motivations

  Another day, another smart device vendor emerges (as a few more disappear). Today Tesco announce that they are throwing themselves into the tablet market with their low-priced Hudl device. The seven-inch Android device goes on sale at the end of the month, and one can only hope that alongside the four colours available at … Continue reading Underlying motivations

The end of WIMP

At the weekend I spent some time observing my eldest child Oscar try to navigate his way around the CBeebies website on a computer with mouse and keyboard. It was a painful experience. The touchpad on the laptop (a Samsung Chromebook) was beyond his comprehension and dexterity. The full-sized mouse cumbersome and his little fingers … Continue reading The end of WIMP

Transparent tablets? Really?!

Some things from fiction come true: Arthur C Clarke and satellites, for example. Or the surveiled society depicted in Orwell's 1984. Others don't: where are the hover boards? There is a vogue for transparent devices in depictions of the future at the moment. As illustrated by the picture on the front of a Guardian advertising … Continue reading Transparent tablets? Really?!

Confluence

I've just started reading the draft of Matt Baxter-Reynold's forthcoming book Death of the PC after I had a fascinating conversation with Matt earlier this week. It's got me thinking about how the "post-PC" devices that Matt talks about, whilst the next in line along the evolution of computing devices (in which mainframe begat mini begat … Continue reading Confluence

The problem with projects

Another day, another enormous public-sector IT project disaster getting news coverage. This time, the abandoned NHS systems project that has cost us all £10Bn so far. "All" of course being unless you are a shareholder in one of the companies involved, in which case you're probably at worst neutral on the deal. "Richard Bacon, a … Continue reading The problem with projects

Social tribes

I'm trying to pull together some consistent terminology to describe different types of social networking behaviour that manifests in the way people use the services in a work and not-work context. I'm looking for some feedback on the structure illustrated above, which maps the amount of activity someone has in the social network space against … Continue reading Social tribes