« YouTube and the Rise of the Killer App | Main | Me on CNBC »
Latest Stories
- Excel Wankers and Recession Averages
- Sorry, New York is Closed. Check Back Later.
- Catching Falling 2009 Earnings Estimate Knife
- Survivorship Bias in Global Markets
- Talking Positions on a Lazy-ish Retirement Portfolio
October 25, 2006
Presentation: Sheer Hype by Desperate Men
The following (via Slideshare) are the slides from a presentation of mine today on so-called Enterprise 2.0 technologies.
Sphere It
|
Digg it
|
Bookmark it
|
Stumble it
|
Facebook it
Excellent! Do you have audio or video of your preso?
-c
Amazing Paul,
Quote Dilbert Blog
If you find an idea, every one like it, probably its not that novel. If its not then you surely have some thing good coming up.
I remember people calling web 2.0 buzz not long ago. What we see now.
Enterprise 2.0 I am in !!!
As per Charlie - is there voice to go with this? Some of the slides don't make sense without it.
Paul,
Is the McKinsey slide and the information behind it publicly available anywhere?
Paul, Neat slides. Would love the audio too but that may take time. How about your "notes" section for each slide?
Hi Paul,
I'm another fan - and also requesting notes, audio and where to find the McKinsey source. Great! Thanks.
'Preciate the presentation last night, Paul. Typically excellent. Was cool to meet up and chat for a few minutes as well.
RE: audio, I love slideshare.net, and I love Articulate Presenter (http://www.articulate.com/presenter.html).
Presenter makes it drop-dead simple to turn a powerpoint into a narrated presentation.
Looking forward to when slideshare adopts Presenter's audio-narration interface (or sucks in Presenter presos wholesale.)
Enterprise 2.0: Bosch! Pflimshaw!
The title is great however, a staggering work of breathtaking genius-level title.
Javed's email sheds a whole new light on "early adopter"...
--soheil
Great deck!
I'd pay to hear it with audio.
Paul, sorry but you are describing what I call Enterprise 1.6. I am a big fan of Office 2.0, social networking etc but any definition of Enterprise 2.0 needs to also recognize and improve traditional transaction, compliance etc systems, systems integration models needed to implement them, get away from their business models etc - Enterprise 1.0 CIOs spend 95% of their budgets of that stuff - it ain't going away - we need to improve it. To pretend the new stuff by itself will is well - sheer hype -)
BTW - noticed you had SaaS applications (the McKinsey chart) into your definition of Enterprise 2.0 - a number of purist folks do not include any transactional systems in their definition
YES, I'd pay for the audio as well!! And pay again to see your presentation at Web 2.0 in San Francisco this week...









Simply... awesome. I'm hoping to post this on my site.
Viva la revolution.