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Collaborating on work across distances has always been difficult. We fly groups together to work temporarily as a single team on a critical project issue. We have regularly scheduled conference calls; we have videoconferencing rooms. We rely deeply on e-mail to stay in step. We try to build single Web-based repositories of project knowledge that are accessible throughout an organization. It has all been a struggle. Distance is misunderstanding. Distance is wrong interfaces. Distance is friction. But now we are witnessing the positive effects of distance beginning to shrink. The next generation of collaboration tools is here, or at least the early arrivals are here. Broadband access is the underlying technology for all these tools. The videoconference room is dead, and collaboration is moving out of meetings and into its most useful place: the daily lives of project members.
Over the past 30 years, more and more things have become digitized as very fast computers and very fast communication continuously change the world in which we live. However, digital riches are creating a new generation of digital problems, including digital asset management, which is the focus of this Executive Report.
October 31, 2004 | Authored By: Ken Orr, Andy Maher
Those of us in the technology business tend to overestimate the short-term impact of new technologies and underestimate the long-term impact.
November 30, 2002 | Authored By: Ken Orr