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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Phil Ridout

Phil Ridout

SharePoint 2010 Migration | Metalogix - 0 views

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    Mentioned by British Council ----- Whether you are upgrading from SharePoint 2003 or 2007 to SharePoint 2010, moving between SharePoint servers, or re-organizing your SharePoint content, Migration Manager for SharePoint, formerly SharePoint Site Migration Manager, is an easy-to-use and convenient way of moving your SharePoint data. With its familiar copy-and-paste-style user interface, you can quickly migrate all SharePoint sites, libraries, lists, web parts and permissions between servers.
Phil Ridout

Technology Services - 0 views

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    Mentioned by AWE ---- ICS Solutions technology Advantage Programs aim to reduce the time, cost and risk of planning, designing, building and implementing Microsoft technology solutions.  Through a flexible suite of 10 technology choices, the Advantage Program can either:    Take the client through a structured process from understanding the technology through to a full implementation  Allow the client to selectively choose a technology service at any point in their technology or solution process   The Advantage Programs have been built using our experience with over 400 clients and best practice methadology, they provide a flexible, yet structured approach to your technology solutions. 
Phil Ridout

MetaVis - 0 views

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    Mentioned by British Council Easily migrate to Microsoft Office 365 and SharePoint online with MetaVis Migrator for Office 365. No server install required. Just install MetaVis on your workstation and start migrating to Office 365 now.
Phil Ridout

Urban economic clout moves east - McKinsey Quarterly - Economic Studies - Productivity ... - 1 views

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    More than 20 of the world's top 50 cities ranked by GDP will be located in Asia by the year 2025, up from 8 in 2007. During that same time period, our research suggests, more than half of Europe's top 50 cities will drop off the list, as will 3 in North America. In this new landscape of urban economic power, Shanghai and Beijing will outrank Los Angeles and London, while Mumbai and Doha will surpass Munich and Denver. The implications-for companies' growth priorities, countries' economic relationships, and the world's sustainability strategy-are profound.
Phil Ridout

The new growth frontier: Midsize cities in emerging markets - McKinsey Quarterly - Mark... - 0 views

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    Senior executives searching for growth face a stark new reality: roughly 400 midsize cities in emerging markets-cities they mostly will have never heard of-are posed to generate nearly 40 percent of global growth over the next 15 years. That's more growth than the combined total of all developed economies plus the emerging markets' megacities (those with populations of more than ten million, such as Mumbai, São Paulo, and Shanghai), which together have been the historic focus of most multinationals. Learning about consumer attitudes in the emerging markets' "middleweight" cities (three-quarters of which have less than two million people), figuring out market entry strategies for them, and deciding how to allocate resources within and across them will all be crucial priorities in the years ahead.
Phil Ridout

Global cities of the future: An interactive map - McKinsey Quarterly - Strategy - Growth - 0 views

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    Over the next 15 years, 600 cities will account for more than 60 percent of global GDP growth. Which of them will contribute the largest number of children or elderly to the world's population? Which will see the fastest expansion of new entrants to the consuming middle classes? How will regional patterns of growth differ?
Phil Ridout

Google Demo Slam - or what did Google evere do for us ? - 4 views

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    Demos of Google technology at work in some interesting ways !
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    etsig
Phil Ridout

John Goodwin's Homepage - 0 views

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    I set up this website in order to experiment with the emerging Semantic Web and Linked Data Web. I'm not really interested (at this stage) in creating a pretty website so please forgive the amateurish look of these pages. Maybe I'll change this with time, but for now I'm more interesting in what's going on under the bonnet and for now it's all about the RDF. These pages are best viewed in Firefox. To get the most from these pages there are a number of addons you can install to transform your web browswer into a semantic web browser: Semantic Radar - a simple plugin that detects semantic web technologies on a webpage Operator - lets you do cool stuff with microformats and RDFa Tabulator - a neat way to browse RDF and linked data on the semantic web OpenLink Data Explorer - another data browser for the semantic web Welcome, and enjoy... Feedback Diigo Web Highlighter (v1.6.2.4)  Highlight     Bookmark   Sticky Note Share Save Bookmark Url Title PrivateRead laterCache Description Tags Loading recommended tags... Add to a List Share to a Group Share my existing annotations
Phil Ridout

The Semantic Web: Scientific American - 0 views

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    A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new possibilities
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