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Neil Movold

7 key habits of Super Networkers - 0 views

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    "The ability to network successfully can be one of the greatest assets in business. It allows some people to find incredible opportunities, while others just watch from the sidelines. Effective networking isn't a result of luck -- it requires hard work and persistence. What does it take to be a super networker? Here are seven of the most important habits to develop:"
Neil Movold

5 ways Semantic Technologies help us all - 0 views

  • First, semantic technology helps us “Find more relevant and useful information because it enables us to search information from disparate sources (federated search) and automatically refine our searches (faceted search).”
  • Second, semantic technology helps us “Better understand what is happening because it enables us to use the relationships between concepts to predict and interpret change.”
  • “Build more transparent systems and communications because it is based on common meanings and mutual understanding of the key concepts and relationships that govern our business ecosystems.”
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  • “Increase our effectiveness, efficiency and strategic advantage because it enables us to make changes to our information systems more quickly and easily.”
  • “Become more perceptive, intelligent and collaborative because it enables us to ask questions we couldn’t ask before.”
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    "Janice Lawrence of Semantic Arts recently shared a list of five business benefits - and truly, public benefits - of semantic technology solutions. Here are the benefits that she came up with along with links to some of our own articles underscoring each point. "
Neil Movold

Collective Intelligence: The Mating of Ideas - 0 views

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    "Collective intelligence has been around for a long time. What is different today, however, is how collective intelligence, combined with technology, has the power to create what has been described as a "global brain." Technology optimists like Thomas Malone, who heads MIT's Center for Collective Intelligence, argue that this global brain will develop into an awesome problem solving tool that will be able to tackle seemingly insurmountable problems. "
Neil Movold

#5 The Four Most Powerful Types of Creative Thinking - 0 views

  • The word insight has several different meanings, but in the context of creative thinking it means an idea that appears in the mind as if from nowhere, with no immediately preceding conscious thought or effort. It’s the proverbial ‘Aha!’ or ‘Eureka!’ moment, when an idea pops into your mind out of the blue. There are many accounts of creative breakthroughs made through insight, from Archimedes in the bath tub onwards. All of them follow the same basic pattern: Working hard to solve a problem. Getting stuck and/or taking a break. A flash of insight bringing the solution to the problem.
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    "Considering I'm a creative coach, some people are surprised to learn I'm a little sceptical about creative thinking techniques. For one thing, there's a lot more to creativity than thinking. It's possible to sit around having lots of creative thoughts, but without actually making anything of them. But if you start making something, creative ideas seem to emerge naturally out of the process. So if I had to choose, I'd say creative doing beats creative thinking. And for another thing, a lot of 'creative thinking techniques' leave me cold. Brainstorming, lateral thinking and (shudder) thinking outside the box have always felt a bit corporate and contrived to me. I've never really used them myself, and after working with hundreds of artists and creatives over the last 14 years, I've come across plenty of other creative professionals who don't use them. I don't think you can reduce creative thinking to a set of techniques. And I don't think the process is as conscious and deliberate as these approaches imply."
Neil Movold

Brain's unconscious bias sways decisions - 0 views

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    "If you've ever had to make a snap decision between two unfamiliar choices, you may want to thank your subconscious for making it possible. According to new research, the brain's memory areas link new memories to old associations, providing a roadmap for decision-making we don't even realize we have. The research, published in the Oct. 12 issue of the journal Science, focuses on the hippocampus, a region nestled deep in the brain that helps consolidate memories. Scientists have long known the hippocampus links memories and integrates them together, but the new study is the first to look at the region's role in biasing the brain toward certain choices."
Neil Movold

Why Big Data and Business Intelligence Are Like One Direction - 0 views

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    "The sensational rise of Big Data within the reporting and analytics realm resembles an uncanny likeness to the escalating popularity of bothersome big-haired British boy 'band', One Direction."
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