A better world, one thought at a time!
Thinkpanda stumbled upon a nice iPhone game today called Me Want Bamboo.
It's a platform jumping game: you make the panda single or double jump, and you can also get the panda to fart for extra boost, though you can store one fart at a time, replenish with eating bamboo.
OpenFeint and Facebook connected. Great music, great graphics, and simple gameplay means time well wasted. Plus it is free to download. Plus the icon looks nice on your iPhone. Anyway, back to work!
We finally got to play the Kung Fu Panda demo on XBOX, based off of the movie. It is a third-person action-adventure game and is basically a kid-friendly version of Dante's Inferno. For an hour of entertainment, this is awesomeness, and since this *is* a free demo, there is no charge for awesomeness.
The animation and camera work is very dynamic, almost movie-like. The gameplay is a bit repetitive after a while, since there seems to be only two types of enemies, small animals and their big brothers. If you love Kung Fu Panda, or love cute mindless button-bashing games, this is a great title for your collection. Unfortunately, there is a charge of awesomeness in full version.
The inability to find what you are searching for is frustrating and demoralizing. Now you can add "wasteful" to the list of descriptions. Research from IDC indicates the cost of not finding information is $3300 per person per year. For an average mid-sized company, that is an annual $1.65 million virtual bonfire, the equivalent of 194 panda chairs.
And there are no style points awarded for this kind of money burning.
How did they come up with this number? Apparently, the sum of all inefficiencies
as factors in causing employees to not find the information they need. No business should be burning this much money, especially in these times of austerity. The challenge though is to pinpoint a solution, precisely because this cash bonfire involves non-cash items.
Are collaboration technologies the answer to the problem? The latest craze is around transferring social media from consumer space to enterprise. Would Enterprise Collaboration 2.0 stop the annual bonfire?
Collaboration is about managing resources: time, tasks, employees, etc. The underlying factor is the human factor, and with it is the culture, something that forms automatically when more than one person gathers together. In short, different cultures that define different companies and their different departments require different collaboration strategies, and thus different solutions. In the collaboration space, there is no such thing as one-size-fits-all.
Now enough with the talk, show me the money: what is the ROI? When expenditures are directly correlated to cash items, such as staffing a research and development team, use of collaboration solutions indeed affects positive ROI. Opportunity cost to developing or hosting your own infrastructure also produces good ROI.
Finally, being mindful of the digital wasteland phenomenon helps with a better ROI too.