We Are the Architects - Keynote EuroIA 2013

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@lwelchman We are the Architects

description

Information architects need to take a larger role in establishing the architecture of the information age.

Transcript of We Are the Architects - Keynote EuroIA 2013

  • 1. @lwelchman We are the Architects

2. When the present determines the future, but the approximate present does not approximately determine the future. Edward Lorenz (1917 2008) the butterfly effect 3. little things can make a big difference 4. we are making a big difference. 5. you are the prime architects in the information age fearless creator 6. are the worlds best chance to ensure that the way we leverage the Internet and Web makes us better You 7. fun we have the responsibility to do our best work 8. mature we have the responsibility to do our best work 9. look industrial & information 10. industrial supply chain management 11. technology 12. speed 13. re-organizing people and communications 14. re-organizing people and communications 15. information supply chain management information 16. technology industrial + 17. speed 18. re-organizing people and communications 19. re-organizing people and communications 20. to get better opportunities 21. work a move back to piece work specialization and craft less waste 22. relationships family organizational longevity multi-dimensional 23. equity Illuminating disparities telling stories empathy compassion 24. peace cultural individual political can we broker peace with good information flow? 25. the planet needs you to rethink your role in this evolution please 26. deep front of the screen back of the screen in the platform in the thing 27. inclusive culture economic gender 28. in front promoting information solutions to hard problems 29. we do this . . . 30. Western Union internal memo, 1876 "This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is inherently of no value to us. fear change 31. regulate the Department of Commerce became worried that too many stations -- especially amateur and experimental -- were making broadcasts intended for the general public, and, effective December 1, 1921, adopted regulations which restricted public broadcasting to stations which met the standards of a newly created broadcast service classification. US Early Radio History Thomas H. White 32. Film - 1915 The New York Times, from an interview with D. W. Griffith The time will come, and in less than 10 years, when the children in the public schools will be taught practically everything by moving picturesImagine a public library of the near future, for instance. There will be long rows of boxes of pillars, properly classified and indexed, of course. At each box a push button and before each box a seat. dream 33. but none of this ensures quality 34. you are the architects 35. thankYOU