When employees cross the line online

Posted by & filed under Business Intelligence, Digital Policy, Human Resources, Privacy, Social Media, Uncategorized.

Description: Most everybody posts online these days. But in an age of conspicuous opinionation, how does an employer know when an employee has crossed the line? Source: Globe & Mail.com Date: Jan 31, 2011 The boundaries between work life and home life are dissolving, just as the difference between public and private communication is becoming… Read more »

Ottawa enters dispute over higher Internet fees

Posted by & filed under digital divide, Digital Policy, industry analysis, M-commerce, telecomunications, WI-Fi.

Description: The Harper government is stepping into a contentious debate over just how much Canadians should pay for Internet service, as Industry Minister Tony Clement says he will review a federal regulator’s decision that will raise prices for consumers and businesses Source: Globe & Mail.com Date: Feb 1, 2011 As people access increasing numbers of… Read more »

The world’s fastest Internet access—who’s got it?

Posted by & filed under digital divide, Digital Policy, national culture, telecomunications.

Description: New research ranks the countries with the fastest Internet connections, and all 50 U.S. states too. Source: Fortune.com Date: Jan 24 , 2011 The speed at which people around the world connect to the Internet is climbing at a 14% annual clip and now averages nearly 2 megabits per second, according Akamai’s “State of the… Read more »

Microsoft Steps Up Competition With Dynamics CRM 2011

Posted by & filed under business models, M-commerce, revenue model, Software.

Description: Hoping to take a bite out of Salesforce.com’s fast growth, Microsoft announced aggressive promotional pricing of $34 per user, per month. That’s well below the cost of Salesforce.com Source: Informationweek.com Date: Jan 18 , 2011 We give you full sales, service and marketing functionality in our standard service where Salesforce.com does not offer marketing functionality or… Read more »

So far for magazines, tablets are a bitter pill

Posted by & filed under Apple, business models, Copyright, Digital Policy, iPad, M-commerce.

Description: Since Apple introduced the iPad last year, publishers have poured millions of dollars into apps in the hopes that the device could revolutionize the industry by changing the way magazines are read and sold to consumers. Source: Globe and Mail.com Date: Jan 17 , 2011 “If you look at the Apple store,” said David Carey,… Read more »

In the Works: A Google Mobile Payment Service?

Posted by & filed under Digital Policy, Ecommerce, Google, M-commerce, revenue model, WI-Fi, wireless networks.

Description: Google (GOOG) is considering building a payment and advertising service that would let users buy milk and bread by tapping or waving their mobile phones against a register at checkout Source: Businessweek.com Date: Jan 4 , 2011 The service may make its debut this year, say the two, who requested anonymity because the plans… Read more »

Defying Conventional Wisdom to Sell Glasses Online

Posted by & filed under business models, Ecommerce, M-commerce, revenue model.

Description: Shopping skeptics said people would never buy certain things —shoes, diamond rings, cars — online because they needed to see the products in person. They were wrong. E-commerce companies have found success in all of those fields. Source: NYT.com Date: Jan 16 , 2011 But some purchases still happen mostly offline, including one of the… Read more »

Supplementing Textbooks with Digital Content

Posted by & filed under Copyright, industry analysis, online education, revenue model.

Description: Plans to supplement textbooks with digital content. Source: CNN.com Date: Jan 4 , 2011 A Toronto District School Board Trustee discusses supplementing textbooks with digital content. Questions for discussion: Do you think supplementing textbooks with digital content is a good pedagogical decision? Who should bear the cost or recieve the cost savings as a… Read more »

When the Assembly Line Moves Online

Posted by & filed under Cloud Computing, M-commerce, outsourcing, Supply Chain Management, System development.

Description: DO one assigned task on your computer. It shouldn’t take you more than two seconds. Repeat 14,399 times. Congratulations! Your eight-hour work day is complete. Source: NYT.com Date: Oct. 30, 2010 No such workplace yet exists, but with the fiendishly clever creation of standardized two-second tasks, delivered to any computer connected to the Internet,… Read more »