"A mere two hours before the scheduled start of the Firestone Firehawk 600 at Texas Motor Speedway, ... [organizers] "postponed" the race. During practice, drivers reached speeds over 235 mph and experienced 5½ Gs for 18 of the 22 seconds it took to complete a lap. It was reported that 21 of 25 drivers said they had experienced dizziness, disorientation, or other problems after the practice session. Driver Michael Andretti ...
April 2002
March 2002
In this issue:- March 2002 Cutter IT Journal -- The Technology Myth in Knowledge Management
- The Technology Myth in Knowledge Management: Opening Statement
- The New Face of Knowledge Management: Integrating KM Processes and Technology
- A Framework for Knowledge Management
- Global Knowledge: How Shell Developed Global Communities of Practice
- Humanistic Knowledge Technology
- The End of the Beginning: The Future of Knowledge Management
March 2002
In an earlier life, I participated on a team that was redesigning IT customer support for a large company. As people were prone to do then when they needed to "clean-sheet reengineer" something, we hired a facilitator and retired to a conference room for a week of debating and bickering about trouble tickets, problem diagnosis, information routing, etc. At the end of the week, the facilitator and her minions disappeared to document our deliberations. They returned early in the following week bearing flow charts.February 2002
In this issue:- February 2002 Cutter IT Journal -- Is Risk Management Going the Way of Disco?
- Is Risk Management Going the Way of Disco?: Opening Statement
- Defining Risk: A Debate
- Making It Up as We Go: The Perils of Ad Hoc Risk Management
- Achieving Effective Risk Management by Overcoming Some Common Pitfalls
- Safety, Risk, and Danger: A New Dynamic Perspective
- Risk Management: Here to Stay
- Risk Management for Software and Systems Projects: Utterly Doomed
- A Personal Postscript: Is There a Future for Risk Management?
February 2002
Over the past several months, Cutter Consortium Senior Consultant Paul Harmon has been studying the Extensible Markup Language (XML) as it facilitates business process improvement -- a growing trend. This month's Cutter Benchmark Review presents Harmon's research and analysis to help you determine how best to take advantage of the developing technologies that are enabling the integration of business processes.
Copyright © 2024 Arthur D. Little | All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Service