Going mobile ?
Posted by Geir Stene in All categories, Internet, Telecom, Networks&Media, Web applications on March 23rd, 2010
There are lots of discussions of how the digital environment will look like the next coming years. Hardly anyone argue against the trend of the “mobile revolution”. But what is really going on as we all are equipped with smart phones and have we really become mobile?
Mobile services for the business market.
We already have a huge business- to- consumer market, where ring tones, games, and applications are growing in a tremendous speed. If we look at the corporate environment, what has happened? Till now, not much has happened for most of the corporate world. And nothing will happen until we make it happen, so it’s time to integrate your core IT/ information/ workflow/ business systems, and make important functionalities available for your employees’ cell phones.
OK, quite a few of us have our cell phones connected to our e mail, and calendar. Some are able to connect to the Internet. Fewer have established a presence management system, where the cell phone is included. Collaboration and Unified communications are areas where “mobile” make sense and enable a streamlined workflow and also rapid problem solving between employees.
Connect mobility to our value chains
We have to start thinking out of the traditional “IT” box, when discussing what “mobile” is all about. Our companies core systems needs to be able to reach out to the mobile devices. That’s the only way to make use of the mobility in an efficient way for the corporate world. We need to be able to interact and to be connected with the value chain and core IT solutions of our business. This way we become more available, effective and have results requested once, and delivered at once.
Seamless integrations
What this means is that your company’s core systems, like BI, ECM, search, CRM and so forth needs to get connected with the employees cell phones, and other mobile devices. Connections aren’t enough; we need seamless interaction and automated workflows. To enable this we will need an architecture where the web and e mail activities are included. All online digital solutions need to be connected to make benefit and provide added value for the company’s employee, for partners and of course for the company’s customers. In short it’s needed to develop Multi channel structures. Imagine that you can send requests directly from you cell phone and into your company’s database, get a feedback – and the required information automatically delivered on your PC / your collaboration web portal and so forth.
Public sector
Public services have started becoming more effective, and will have to get eve n more so in the coming years. Self service systems will be a keyword in order to get there. Imagine what the possibilities there is in the European public sector for refining their systems, from the core backend IT solutions, via a well functioning web interface and a set of mobile services that simplifies people’s everyday life. For the public sector, the benefits are great. It saves time and costs for the employees in their public contact, and it makes citizens far happier, by getting their services automated, quicker and more convenient. You can imagine solutions where citizens can apply online, and get recites, confirmation codes, appointment reminders on their cell phone, to name a few very obvious concepts.
Connectivity, collaboration and innovation; how will it change us?
Posted by Geir Stene in All categories, Information Management, Internet, Web applications on February 21st, 2010
Collaboration used to be”hype”. Nowadays it’s social media and the iPad/ Kindle e-readers. The speed of innovation is increasing. It’s getting harder and harder to divide these topics. In my eyes they are interconnected, and will become even more woven together. How will this change us?
We have moved from a closed in collaboration (software for use only within the organization, document sharing and workflow) towards a more open and including form of collaboration, where Twitter now seems to be in the forefront of the development. The best forms of collaborative activities are those who appear from nowhere, that aren’t planned, in short are anarchistic in their form. That doesn’t mean that they are purposeless, it means that the collaborative need develops from an individual (or small group) that has a motif for finding answers and solutions quickly. The most effective way to get there is to search for other people that might have the answer,a part of an answer or/ and a benefit from participating with you to solve a topic. Because of the relational interaction, collaboration starts to develop. The blending of collaboration and community (social media) happened in the process, because it’s the most effective way to get to the goal.
What we see is that this kind of mindsets can be used generic. It will enable far better ways of knowledge management, collaboration, innovation, product development, project management and so forth. Furthermore it will be put into effect within all kinds of businesses, from education, media business, commercials and nonprofit organizations, production of renewable energy, car production and so forth, all will very soon see the connective collaboration and community as one arena of relational co- existence, where things aren’t as pre- planned as we used to do things. New technology, new tools and the semantic web will be forces that drive this development, or is it the other way around? I don’t think it matters, but I do think that it is what’s happening around us is as we speak.
I’ve spoken of Charles Leadbeater before. I won’t stop doing so, because what he’s been speaking about (innovation and mass creativity) is one of the things we see happens around us in an increasing speed. So I’d advise you to have a look at his homepage HERE. Seen from a different perspective I would highly advise you to look at Kevin Kelly from Wired magazine, a very interesting speech he had in 2008 that can be found at Youtube HERE. Kevin Kelly explains what the web really is in a philosophical way, and where it’s heading (web 3.0). In my eyes both are speaking of something that is going on, not about some distant future, which might happen. We are afraid, afraid of the value that disappeared; now everything is “free” on the web, how to make revenue? Newspaper people are asking this several times a day. Publishers fight the development of “free” Educational institutions are, and corporations are afraid that their competitive advantage is gone if you share all knowledge. I think it’s wrong, I think it’s missing the point of what this leads to. I do like the postulate Kevin make in the speech “the value is beyond “free” Kevin Kelly argues that the web is, and will even more become something – not “out there” but something that embody us, that we are inside of. What is of value change, and I believe that holding on to what used to be “of value” no longer is a good idea. The change is, as you might guess – tremendous for all of us.
I found the blog of Umar Haque (Director of the Havas Media Lab and founder of Bubblegeneration) and the posting in Harward Business review “Twitter’s Ten Rules For Radical Innovators” and discover that it seems to be a guideline worth while reading for all of us. It just migt give us some hints of how to focus of finding value, and making a living by changing what, why and how we do business into the future. I suggest you read it for yourself, but here are the bullet points:
- Ideals beat strategies
- Open beats closed
- Connection beats transaction
- Simplicity beats complexity
- Neighborhoods beat networks
- Circuits beat channels
- Laziness beats business
- Public beats private
- Messy beats clean
- Good beats evil
This word is wonderful
Posted by Jean-Pascal Perrein in Information Management, Internet, Web applications on March 29th, 2009
This world is wonderful. Social networking tool (like yammer) gives us the ability to share whatever we think is useful for other. What a change with the old time where we all had to :
-ask to do it !
-do it in a special predefined way !
-do it in a special place !
-do it only for specifics purposes or people !
-or just not doing it because of too much difficulty.
Beeeeark !
Ok, and about moderation ? (you know this think that use to make us sales to client regiment of administrator to control is what have been said was ok. And help many projects to fail because of too much constraints’ and … costs)
Well aren’t we enough mature to moderate ourselves for 98% of what we will share? I convince “that we can”, because we care about our personal reputation as we care about our personal valorization.
I love Usage 2.0
Sécurisation des frontaux Web RIA/RDA
Posted by Yannick Le Bruchec in Security, Web applications on March 10th, 2009
La problématique de sécurisation des frontaux Web dits “RIA” ou “RDA” (Rich Internet Application ou Rich Desktop Application) entre dans le scope des préoccupations des utilisateurs. Le domaine bancaire est à ce jour l’un des plus attentif aux apports potentiels de ce type de technologie, mais s’attache encore à traiter ses failles de sécurité sur le ton de l’étude ou du Proof of concept.
La maturité opérationnelle n’est donc pas encore atteinte du moins pour envisager sereinement une généralisation significative de ces solutions. Les analyses de risque prennent en compte les différents cas d’utilisation et menaces possibles aux seins du SI bancaire :
- Portails et sites transactionnels bancaires sensibles (exemple : banque en ligne particuliers, professionnels et entreprises)
- Portails et sites vitrines internet peu sensibles
- Applicatifs transactionnels intranet (ou extranet) sensibles
- Applicatifs transactionnels intranet (ou extranet) peu sensibles (site d’information, ..)
et les confrontent aux menaces externes et internes les plus envisagées, parmi lesquelles :
- Phishing, troyens bancaires,
- Fraude internet,
- Denis de service (botnet,..)
- Altération du contenu
- Fraude interne
- Vol de données
Une qualification des risques en termes de probabilité d’occurrence, et de technicité nécessaires à l’exploitation sont les deux sujets les plus envisagés. Ils sont le généralement traités sous forme de recommandations visant au minimum les thèmes suivants :
- Interdits
- Bonnes pratiques
- Contre-mesures et solutions de contournement (outils, configuration, choix de mise en oeuvre, administration.)
- Mesures organisationnelles (formation, sensibilisation, procédure, cloisonnement des responsabilités, …)
La cartographie des attaques potentielles est déjà constituée : elle en identifie au moins deux nouvelles que sont le Cross Site Scripting (XSS) et le Cross Site Request Forgery (CSRF).
A vos Bugs….
Posted by Philippe Masquart in Business application, Telecom, Networks&Media, Web applications on March 7th, 2008
On connait tous les bugs informatiques dans nos ordinateurs et même maintenant dans nos voitures…Mais à chaque fois nous ne sommes pas à l’origine de ces bugs !!!
Non plus sérieusement, une jeune société américaine Bug Labs nous propose désormais de créer nos propres besoins, nos propres produits, nos propres usages grâce à un système ressemblant à des légos que l’on emboite l’un avec les autres. Chaque Bug est un petit module électronique qu il faudra associer logicielement ensemble pour obtenir un nouvel objet pour un nouvel usage :par exemple associer une caméra et un GPS on aura alors un GeoPhotoShooter.
A nous maintenant nos propres bugs ;o)
Plus d’infos : buglabs.net
Le million, le million…..
Posted by Philippe Masquart in Web applications on March 6th, 2008
Depuis la fin de la semaine dernière plus d’un million de nom de domaine en “.fr” sont enregistrés auprès de l’AFNIC.
L’ouverture il y a un peu plus d’un an aux particuliers de l’usage du domaine “.fr” aura permis de rendre plus dynamique ce domaine.
Mais sur ce coup là on reste loin derrière les hollandais, les allemands et les américains.
source : domainesinfo.fr
Internet Mobile
Posted by Philippe Masquart in Telecom, Networks&Media, Web applications on February 29th, 2008
Le premier smartphone sous windows mobile sorti en 2002 par Orange devait lancé l’internet mobile grâce à IE pocket. Les années passent, les téléphones évoluent, les normes de connections mobiles aussi (GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA, WIFI) mais l’internet mobile ne décolle pas. Bref cela reste une affaire de Geeks.
Puis Janvier 2007, un Buzz énorme est mis en place par Apple avec l’arrivée de l’Iphone pour mi 2007 aux US et fin d’année pour l’europe.
Résultat en 6 mois, les statisticiens de Google s’aperçoivent que 50 fois de plus requêtes proviennent de l’’iPhone que de n’importe quel autre appareil nomade. Mais un autre constat s’impose de lui même de plus en plus de site internet son consultable au format Iphone : 20munites.fr, Liberation, RATP, SNCF, les Echos, Linkedln, Facebook, l’encyclopédie Britannica…….
Et même si IE Pocket peut les consulter, on retiendra que l’Iphone a lancé l’internet Mobile en 2007, soit 5 ans après l’apparition de windows mobile ;o)
Enfin Google a annoncé ses statistiques un 14 Février, aurait on une prochaine idylle entre la Pomme et Google ? et du coup quel avenir pour Android l’OS mobile de Google.
Wait & See, 2008 sera à coup sur l’année des OS Mobile pour l’internet Mobile
Google plus fort que Microsoft (si, si !)
Posted by Claire Toussaint in Internet, Web applications on November 29th, 2007
Bonjour,
http://www.google.com/intl/en/press/annc/20071128_maps_mobile_my_location.html
Sur son blog d’entreprise, le groupe américain a annoncé mercredi une nouvelle fonction, encore en phase d’essai, qui permet d’indiquer par un point bleu sur les cartes de Google Maps l’endroit où se trouve le propriétaire de l’appareil, à 1.000 mètres près, voire moins.




