You are browsing the archive for 2012 July.

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by Bertie

The journey from PC to Mac

July 31, 2012 in User experience

With iPad it makes sense to have an iPhone then with iPad and iPhone you begin asking shouldn’t I go the entire way?

I am sure many iPad and iPhone users are asking this question. So, perhaps it will help you if I tell you how I found the journey, the pitfalls and joys.

This is how my logic went:

  1. I do a lot of PP presentations. It is so much better carrying an iPad around than slogging a laptop. Also, during the presentation I wanted to avoid having to move back to the iPad to change slides. So, Keynote remote on the i Phone is the answer. But then you need to use Apple’s Keynote presentation software instead of Power Point.
  2. Then you want to create the presentations in Keynote right from the beginning in order to keep your formatting. So this is when the question became imminent for me: Why not move over entirely to Mac?
  3. The big caveat was what always kept me away from Mac, I really think the laptops are outrageously expensive.
  4. A friend then suggested; If you have iPad you don’t need a laptop, why not buy the Mac mini? This little box comes in at below R,7000, you must supply your own screen, keyboard and mouse. This clinched the deal.
  5. Three things became apparent, you had to have Office, by far too cumbersome to save  Mac’s own files in Office compatible formats. Secondly, I needed Outlook because receiving invites from people on Outlook proved to be cumbersome if not impossible.  But I must confess that I did not want to spend hours decyphering issues. Thirdly it was quite obvious that Apple’s OS X Lion  was not nearly as intuitive and convenient as OS for the mobile devices. I had a series of important presentations to make and the Mini Mac, iPad, iPhone system delivered for me, but otherwise it clearly was a better option to have waited for OS Mountain Lion that fully integrated iCloud with the Mac and delivered a seamless update between the devices.

I also find that I use Outlook calendar only for accepting invites on the mini Mac, they show up immediately on the Calendar on mini Mac, but I have manually to click on the calendar option to make them visible on the other two devices. I am beginning to think that I don’t anymore need Outlook at all. Then I will have to switch to Apple’s mail client as well. If you do this, remember to download an windat app to convert some attachments that you receive from MS Office.

So, what are the outstanding features of the migration?

  1. After OSX Mountain Lion, you really are myopic if you don’t make the switch when you already have an iPad and an iPhone.
  2. The software is so cheap! This is the other side to Apple’s pricey hardware, the inexpensive software !  I always need a good vector graphics package. Sketch Book Pro is as powerful as Corel Draw on the PC at about 20% of the price 4% of the price. I have bought a professional 3D animation design package for designing my sculptures for less than R300.  The entire App store is open to you on the Mac at really amazingly cheap prices.  Your productivity is taken to a different dimension.  By the way the upgrade to the new OS was for less than R200. You are forced by the cheap software to recalculate when considering the cost of a Mac.

Final conclusion: I can’t see me going back to PC and Microsoft was just too late with Windows 8 to catch me. And if Windows 8 is such huge shift from the present, you could just as well now move to Apple and get it over. With OS X Mountain Lion Apple has also defended against Android, because now for the first time yo can have all your devices running off the same operating universe.

Oh, and final, final:  What I have seen on large IT transformation projects holds true here as well.  Don’t make an immediate clean break! Do a gradual transition. I kept the PC laptop next to me for some three weeks and even now I have a mobile hard disk with the PC’s content plugged into the Mac Mini. I did not go to the trouble to import my Outlook from the PC into the Mac and it is only when looking up old emails that I still use the PC.

 

 

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by Bertie

Proud to be British

July 30, 2012 in Innovation, Media

No, I am not a Brit, but proud and very happy to be part of the world that the Brits created, after looking at the fabulous Olympic opening ceremony.

In a stroke of genius, show master Boyle, put the entire revolutionary two centuries of Britain like a suspension bridge between the two towering engineering geniuses, Isambard Kingdom Brunel who created the infrastructure for the industrial revolution, and Sir Tim Berners-Lee who created the World Wide Web, the ” railroad”  of the information economy.  And in between the revolutions that created the world as we know it: Votes for women, the Beatles and the sexual revolution of the sixties.

Compare with the dazzling ceremony at Beijing four years ago. Created by one of my all time favourite artists in the entire world,  Cai Guo-Qiang. And truly wonderful! But as one commentator remarked, what are the chances the Chinese could conceive, never mind actually executing a humorous take on Mao, as Boyle did with the Queen starring as a Bond ” girl”? Would they ever, ever had the Corgis so sentimentally beguiling in a cameo performance?

And in the humorous, self-effacing comedy of Mr Bean and James Bond, the compassion of the NHS sequence and the tear wrenching choir performance which included  the deaf children singing with their hands – therein lies the West’s  mental supremacy over China.

Where would you rather be participating in the metronomic performance in Beijing or in the individualist exuberance of London? And what in the end will drive invention and adaptation better?

Let;s not forget the foundations of our success – as Niall Ferguson reminded us recently in his TV show and book: The West and the Rest.

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by Bertie

Do you have a scientific mind?

July 25, 2012 in Smart thinking

Lots and lots of talk of leadership training in business education. Lot’s and lots of Maxwell and Co. Smiles  and lots an lots of motivational talk and values. Very little about the mental toolkit you need to be a leader. That’s why the issue of the mental toolkit so in intrigues me. Please click back to: http://blogs.fin24.com/bertieduplessis/2012/07/16/by-less-than-10/  After a couple of diversions let’s continue what the 100 or so great scientists and thinkers think should be in our  toolkit.

Here’s one from Neil Gershenfield, Director of MIT’s Center for Bits and Atoms (oh, what a wonderful name, and then you thought that scientists and university people are programmed to be linguistically pompous and obtuse?!)

His suggestion goes to the bottom of sound thinking.

What do scientists do?

We need to understand that scientist do not seek the truth. Scientists make and test models.  

This is how we make sense of things in a responsible way: ” We make models that can predict outcomes and accommodate observations. Truth is a model.”

Decisions are made by evaluating what works better, not by invoking received wisdom.

Now, how many of the Maxwell leadership trainees have this in their leadership toolkit?

 

 

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by Bertie

Losers or elites: the stark choice

July 24, 2012 in Investment, Smart thinking

How did the UK become so dominant in cycling? John Kay renowned business philosopher, successful investment officer and the founder of Oxford’s SAID business school, describes the recipe last week in FT . By the way the bill was GBP50 million over some 30 years.

Here’s the recipe:

  1. Scout all over the country for young talent at schools, preferably not older than age 10.
  2. Select these individuals and bring them together at a high performance centre / academy.
  3. And voilà!

Compare with what rugby and cricket are doing:  pouring millions and millions into rural areas and previously disadvantaged communities. Negligible results. Our administrators work like estate agents, believe that if you pour in enough at the bottom there will be froth at the top. It’s the socialist mindset that torpedoes the effort. Performance is an elite endeavor.  Excellence can come from any far flung corner of the country, but it needs to be recognized and taken from there to a centre of excellence and the child must be in the company of other would be top performers.

You need to grow and foster elites. As long as you  focus on egalitarian values, you are doomed to be mediocre – after all mediocre is a synonym for average and egality!

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by Bertie

Too many cooks?

July 20, 2012 in Innovation

The same story again and again…

They invent and others run with the idea and make money.

The latest is Nokia. They had it in the late 90s, a tablet, just like iPad and they had a smart phone to go with it. Seven years before iPhone they had a concept touch screen phone with a single home button at the bottom. And yet… Only if… “Of all the words the saddest…”   All revealed by Frank Nuove then Nokia’s chief designer in an interview with WSJ yesterday.

Like Kodak, like Xerox (mouse and GUI)…

And everybody talks about how important innovation is. Methinks they spend millions on invention, not innovation. The CEOs and executives all know the text book definition of innovation: “Invention that becomes commercialized.”  Seems they all pay lip service to the definition and think no further than invention.  Invention alone won’t bring you anywhere. Why this talk, talk, talk, of innovation and when push comes to shove there is no will to commercialize your own inventions?

Maybe we should stop talking of innovation – quite clearly there are enough inventions lying around and begin focusing on bringing to market and making money from what there is.

Or does the problem go deeper? Perhaps our obsession with consultative leadership and management leads to ” too many cooks spoil the broth.” Perhaps you do need strong-willed leaders like Jobs – even tough thoroughly unpleasant at times – to override corporate fiefdoms. Perhaps, just perhaps we have sunk into politically correct corporate thinking and forgetting that the real world is not such a kind democratic, touchy feel place as gurus would want us to believe.

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