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E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+







E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+

E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+ 02/05/2005 09:43 PM

The Register Feb 4 2005 3:23PM GMT




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E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+

Grok Headline matches for E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+

E-gov to cost Europe €4bn+


E-gov to cost Europe €4bn+ 02/05/2005 10:13 PM
The cost of 'modern online public services' in 2008

Software pirates cost $9.7bn in Europe -
BSA


Software pirates cost $9.7bn in Europe -
BSA
07/07/2004 09:17 AM
Lesson plan

Domain Specialist - The Low Cost Domain
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Domain Specialist - The Low Cost Domain
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The Low Cost domain specialists have now revealed there latest website at www.domainspecialist.net . Bringing you fast slickly designed and easy to navigate domain buying and website hosting. The new site offers the user more choices when ordering there domain names, copyrighting or website hosting. DomainSpecialist.net is part of the IAAM Group of Companies situated at www.ItsAllAboutMarketing.com . domain Specialist is rivaling all UK Domain providers by offering a much higher class service, cheaper prices on the same products and above all else a total internet solution. [PRWEB Jul 13, 2004]

Calculate The Estimated Fuel Cost Of
Your Trip - Fuel Cost Calculator


Calculate The Estimated Fuel Cost Of
Your Trip - Fuel Cost Calculator
03/28/2005 08:11 AM
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Using current gasoline prices from AAA's daily, online Fuel Gauge Report, as well as the latest highway fuel economy ratings from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the AAA Fuel Cost Calculator estimates the amount and cost of gasoline needed to complete a vacation trip. Although the total number of miles driven and prices paid for gasoline during your trip may vary from the estimates provided, the AAA Fuel Cost Calculator is intended to help you determine the cost of fuel needed to complete a vacation drive.

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Please let me its cost?


Please let me its cost? 07/13/2004 11:55 PM
TechTree Jul 14 2004 4:44AM GMT

Cost of the war


Cost of the war 03/19/2003 10:24 PM
Well, Shrub's going to announce shortly that we're going to blow the fuck out of Iraq. Yeah, hussein could leave,...

How Shortcuts Can Cost You


How Shortcuts Can Cost You 07/14/2004 09:48 AM
If your stock analysis stops with the simplistic, you're guaranteed problems in the long run.

NRI scientist's PC won't cost more than
$250


NRI scientist's PC won't cost more than
$250
08/17/2004 07:05 PM
Express India Aug 17 2004 11:17PM GMT

XML-Deviant: The Cost of XML


XML-Deviant: The Cost of XML 12/19/2004 03:48 PM
The apparent overhead of using XML is once more in the spotlight, as is the financial overhead of using eBay's web services. Edd Dumbill reports.

Gametrac might cost just $100


Gametrac might cost just $100 12/02/2003 01:22 AM
The Register reports that the Gametrac, that portable video game console that will play MP3s and MPEG-4 video files, send and receive text messages, and will have a built-in digital camera, Bluetooth for wireless multi-player gaming, and GPS, might retail for as little as 60 pounds (about $100) in the UK after carrier subsidy. Compare this with the N-Gage, which goes for $300. Read...

Why iPods cost so much


Why iPods cost so much 12/09/2003 10:50 AM
Actually informative discussion over at Slashdot about why it's so hard to get a good deal on iPod. The short answer: Apple exercises an unusual...

The cost of authentication


The cost of authentication 06/18/2004 04:52 AM
Last issue we talked about two-factor authentication and I described such a scheme used by a Swedish bank (see link below). The bank requires a user to enter a unique identifier - a national ID number, similar to a U.S. Social Security number, a four digit PIN, and a one-time code that's revealed by scratching off the covering on one cell of a 50-cell card (similar to a scratch-off lottery ticket). I then posed the question: "Is that secure enough?" which can only, I believe, can be answered: "It depends."

The cost of reality TV?


The cost of reality TV? 04/09/2004 04:04 PM

It's Available in Sleek, but It's Going
to Cost You


It's Available in Sleek, but It's Going
to Cost You
09/15/2004 06:57 PM
New York Times Sep 15 2004 11:38PM GMT

Cost-U-Less Earns More


Cost-U-Less Earns More 07/29/2004 11:35 AM
Here's a company that's taking warehouse retail to the Pacific Islands.

How much does your petrol cost?


How much does your petrol cost? 06/03/2004 05:06 AM
Where is the cheapest and most expensive fuel in the country? Help us by sending in how much you pay for fuel where you live?

what abt the cost of this product and
where it is available?


what abt the cost of this product and
where it is available?
09/20/2004 01:04 AM
TechTree Sep 20 2004 5:44AM GMT

Low-cost low-carb


Low-cost low-carb 06/08/2004 04:26 AM
Here are some great tips for eating a low-carb diet that's also low-cost.
6. Look for substitutions that make sense. Don't want to pay top dollar for bacon? Lean boiled ham is much less expensive and fills the same purpose in many menus. And canola oil has the same healthy fat benefits as olive oil for less than half the price.
Link (via Carbwire)

More on The Cost of Not Knowing and
Where KM is Going


More on The Cost of Not Knowing and
Where KM is Going
03/14/2005 06:22 PM

CostNotKnowing2The Idea: A current state overview of KM, with particular emphasis on Personal Knowledge Management (PKM) and The Cost of Not Knowing.

I had the great pleasure of speaking, alongside Howard Deane, CKO of KPMG Canada, with the students and faculty of Ivey School of Business yesterday, on the subject of Knowledge Management. They asked us some excellent questions, and since I'm a fan of the FAQ format, I thought I'd summarize some of their (excellent) questions, and some of my answers, not all of which we had the time to address during our meetings with them. Special thanks to Mazi Raz, Prof. Darren Meister and alumnus Alina Polonskaya for the invitation, facilitation and hospitality during our day in London.

Q: How do you help management become aware of knowledge gaps in their organization?

I'm not sure you can expect management to know what the gaps are, in this era when, as Drucker says, for the first time most employees know more about their jobs (and hence more about their 'knowledge gaps') than their boss. That's why it's so important to do what Dave Snowden calls 'Cultural Anthropology' -- talk to the people on the front lines, not just to the business unit leaders and managers. And even when you do, you have to be creative in identifying the gaps and needs -- if you just ask 'what additional knowledge do you need', you'll get less constructive ideas than if you offer possibilities, ask about real business problems and obstacles, and iteratively agree on how 'knowledge' could help address them.

Q: How do you address resistance to change when it occurs at the implementation stage of a KM project? 

Resistance to change is natural -- things happen the way they do for a reason, and you can't create a sense of urgency for change where there isn't one. You need to find the existing areas of urgent need for change -- areas of high risk and unsatisfactory productivity for example, and show how KM addresses them. If you're getting push-back at the implementation stage it may be time to stop and reassess whether what you're proposing will actually effectively address these urgent needs. You also have to make it easy to change.

Q: What are the main factors that make organizations realize they have a need for KM? 

It's usually precipitated by a crisis -- the collapse of Enron, the e coli deaths in Walkerton, Ontario, SARS and Avian Flu and even 9/11 had a huge impact on the perceived quality of existing knowledge and the need for more and better knowledge in affected organizations. Every organization whether they have a formal KM system or not is assessing the cost of knowledge against the cost of not knowing, as the chart above indicates, and judgementally picking the level of investment in knowledge and in KM that balances these costs (K1 in the diagram). When a crisis occurs, the perceived cost of not knowing soars, and this equilibrium point shifts sharply to the right (K2) as a result, and there is an appetite for investing more (K2-K1) in knowledge and KM. What was always perceived as important suddenly becomes urgent as well.

Q: What are the most important elements of, land-mines to watch out for in, any KM project?

A KM project is like any other change project, and the key is to ensure you follow John  Kotter's Leading Change approach. If you don't have, or lose, a sense of urgency, if you don't have, or lose, executive sponsorship, if you don't have a clear, well-articulated and communicated vision of where you're going and why, if you don't have a well-researched plan to realize that vision, your project is in trouble.

Q: What do you use as incentives to encourage contribution to and use of KM systems? How do you overcome resistance to sharing knowledge?

Dave Snowden's famous first rule of KM is "Knowledge can only be volunteered, it cannot be conscripted". Incentive, rewards, contests, bribes and coercive approaches may be effective for a short period, but they will not be durable, and the quality of what they will produce is doubtful. Employees need to believe that their peers will get value from what they contribute, you can't make them believe that if they don't. You also need to make it easy to contribute.

Q: How do you pitch and implement KM differently in smaller companies?

In smaller companies budgets are smaller and most of the knowledge-sharing is external rather than within the organization. So you need to use simple, inexpensive, commercial tools that work between organizations -- IM, Skype, and collaboration tools for example -- and whatever you implement needs to work seamlessly with the organizations of alliance partners, customers and advisers. That means striking the delicate balance when developing applications between ability to work around firewalls and protecting the confidentiality and integrity of the organization's own knowledge.

Q: Once you have executive sponsorship, what's the biggest challenge in developing an effective KM system?

In my opinion there are three great challenges: (1) Getting sufficient budget and dedicated resources to do the job right, (2) narrowing the project list to focus on a few things you can do really well instead of juggling a mass of projects, and (3) balancing the KM pet projects of managers (who have the budgets and resources and power to support or block you, but who often have mistaken views on what their employees' real needs are, and just as often an unwelcome passion for playing a heavy personal role in the fine points of design and look-and-feel of the system) against the favoured projects of the people on the front lines. Politics, in other words.

Q: What role should blogs play in KM systems?

My view on this is that off-the-shelf blog tools are not yet ready for prime time in business organizations: They are too complicated for busy employees to learn and use effectively, and their hard-wired reverse-date organization and indexing doesn't match users' needs to be able to browse blog content other ways. There are three constituencies in organizations who could benefit from doing some experimentation now with blogs before they're improved: (1) Subject Matter Experts who are inundated with requests for information and advice, who could benefit from having their 'electronic filing cabinet' accessible to and browsable by others in the organization, (2) those in the company who are already publishing newsletters and similar regular bulletins, and (3) those who are coordinating Community of Practice networks. These three groups will more readily see the benefits of using blogs and will be more patient with their current shortcomings.

Q: What are the best KM tools to start with?

Those that are easy to use, free or nearly free, and focused on providing contact or context more than content e.g. Google Desktop (or its imitators), IM, Skype, contact management tools.

Q: How to you measure the impact and success of KM in your company?

This is the question we all shudder to answer, because there are no good answers. I think you have to use a mix of quantitative (e.g. usage stats, average currency of content) and qualitative (e.g. user survey scores). And then you need to find some way to connect improvement in KM infrastructure to improvement in more high-level critical business measures (e.g. revenue per employee, speed-to-market measures). But this is KM's toughest challenge.

Q: What are the characteristics of a good KM implementation?

(1) It clearly meets, in the assessment of users, an urgent, well-articulated and important business need. (2) It was completed on budget and on schedule. (3) It's so easy to use that you don't need training. (4) Users like it so much they spread the word about it, so you don't have to.

Q: What is your preferred framework/model for KM, and how do you see it evolving?

Using the 'information highway' analogy, I've used the Architecture, Infrastructure, Culture model. Architecture: Is it well-designed for 'traffic flow'. Infrastructure: Is there enough (but not too much) in place that the user's experience is a pleasant one, free of bottlenecks and other hassles. Culture: Is it 'friendly' to the users and the communities in which it is placed, consistent and connected with other infrastructure, or is it just contributing to (information) pollution and congestion.

In future I see it evolving quickly to a decentralized model based on Personal Knowledge Management: Decentralized content (on your hard drive, where you'll care enough to maintain it properly, not on some huge impersonal centralized database), Personally-set sharing and permissioning protocols (for subscribing and publishing 'your' content), focus on finding Who to have a context-rich conversation with instead of What context-free content they have produced in past), and a shift from Just in Case knowledge warehousing to Just in Time knowledge canvassing.

Q: What is the CKO's most difficult task? What is KM's greatest risk?

Getting enough budget and resources to do the job right, and assessing the real cost of not knowing. The greatest risk is raising expectations in management's and users' minds that you can't possibly meet.

Q: Which company do you think has an exemplary KM system and why?

I have never seen an exemplary KM system. Ernst & Young's in the 1990s was extraordinary, but it stopped evolving as new needs and new technologies emerged. I've been told by reliable sources that Google, Yahoo and IBM have great knowledge-sharing systems. Hill & Knowlton has a very dynamic system with some real innovation in it.

Q: What will take for KM to make it into the core strategic business goals of organizations?

Unless you work for organizations like NASA, the CDC, the WHO or the CIA where the cost of not knowing is enormous, I believe the only way you're going to tie KM closely to the core strategic values of the organization is by re-branding it as Personal Productivity Improvement or Work Effectiveness Improvement.

Q: Where do you see KM fitting organizationally in the future?

Depending on the nature, culture, structure and industry of the organization, it may find a 'home' as part of IT, Learning or Sales & Marketing, or split between all three.

Q: How do you assess the companies' and employees' readiness for a formal KM system?

This is a great question. I've promised to develop a KM Readiness/Urgency criteria checklist to answer it. I suspect it will entail talking to people on the front lines of the organization to understand what they do and what their 'knowledge problems' are.

Q: What are the biggest "don'ts" in implementing KM?

Don't obsess over content and ignore contact and context. Don't do it all top-down. Don't do it until you understand the culture of the organization and how they're 'working around' knowledge problems now. Don't expect to get credit or insist on taking credit for your success.

How Much Should Downloads Cost?


How Much Should Downloads Cost? 12/08/2003 11:14 PM
While everyone's jumping into the music download store business, some are finally questioning whether or not the $1/song price is the right price. Many people say the price is way too high to get mass adoption on a large scale, but the record labels are complaining that they can barely make any money at that price already - since they need to sell so many songs at $0.99 per song to make up for the loss in album sales. Maybe it's time they started offering things that were worthwhile on top of just the songs to get people to believe it's worthwhile to pay up. If they believe they can't make money selling music at a price people are willing to pay for it, then clearly they're in the wrong business. I'd love to be able to each post of Techdirt for $10,000 per post, but I recognize not enough people are willing to pay that (in other words, no one is) for me to make a living that way. Thus, we had to come up with a different business model here. If the price you want to charge is above what the market is willing to pay, then you're not going to last very long. Sure, some people are buying music at $1/song, but it's still a small segment of the market.

Cost of drugs


Cost of drugs 07/15/2004 05:26 AM
Any of you old enough to be worried about the price of drugs? It goes on and on.

Will like to know what this would cost
in India?


Will like to know what this would cost
in India?
09/09/2004 11:50 PM
TechTree Sep 10 2004 3:39AM GMT

The True Cost of Mac OS X


The True Cost of Mac OS X 12/19/2004 02:58 PM
I've been wanting to write this for quite some time but I could never quite find the time to...

The Cost of Love


The Cost of Love 02/13/2004 11:53 AM
How much financial pain and psychological torture will this Valentine's Day bring you?

The Real Cost of That Car


The Real Cost of That Car 01/22/2004 10:18 AM

What Will College Really Cost?


What Will College Really Cost? 04/19/2004 03:14 PM
You've heard the scary statistics, but the final price tag may not be so bad.

Telstra's 3G network to cost almost $1b


Telstra's 3G network to cost almost $1b 07/22/2004 01:09 AM
Melbourne Age Jul 22 2004 5:16AM GMT

eCrime cost UK.biz £2.4bn in 2004


eCrime cost UK.biz £2.4bn in 2004 04/05/2005 11:49 AM
Soaring losses

cost of the internet connection (PPP)


cost of the internet connection (PPP) 11/15/2003 06:34 AM
pppcounter, v0.3.5 bugfix version released

BT cuts cost of broadband


BT cuts cost of broadband 06/30/2004 10:55 AM
Manchester Online Jun 30 2004 2:33PM GMT

BT cuts cost of SDSL


BT cuts cost of SDSL 07/22/2004 11:40 AM
Tries to tempt SMEs

The Cost of Not Saving for Retirement


The Cost of Not Saving for Retirement 07/22/2004 01:13 PM
You are paying today for every dollar you don't put into your 401(k).

Low cost security from new alliance


Low cost security from new alliance 04/20/2004 10:15 PM
Sunday Times South Africa Apr 21 2004 2:40AM GMT

Cost of Going Digital Up for Debate


Cost of Going Digital Up for Debate 01/18/2004 04:57 PM
Cost of Going Digital Up for Debate
ht tp://www.dlib.org/dlib/december03/connaway/12connaway.html

In a study that compared the perceived costs to libraries of providing print and electronic materials, researchers found that librarians believe that labor, space requirements and material resources would be less costly in an all-digital library than in a paper library. However, those librarians expressed a wide range of views on exactly how much cheaper digital should be. Participants expressed some concern that higher salaries might be needed to attract and retain a more knowledgeable and skilled level of staff needed to effectively manage an all-digital library, thereby balancing out a substantial portion of the potential savings. Respondents also noted concerns related to the costs of managing both the digital and paper library simultaneously, which is the most common current scenario. The authors conclude that these uncertainties warrant the continued study of the resources needed to transition from a paper to a digital library.

Connecticut to Sue U.S. Over Cost of
Testing Law


Connecticut to Sue U.S. Over Cost of
Testing Law
04/06/2005 05:09 AM
The suit would open a new chapter in a struggle between states and the federal government over the law, known as No Child Left Behind.

BT chops cost of UK Wi-Fi access


BT chops cost of UK Wi-Fi access 07/27/2004 05:55 AM
But it's still more expensive here than the US

'Friends' Ads to Cost Up to $2
Million (AP)


'Friends' Ads to Cost Up to $2
Million (AP)
05/04/2004 10:36 PM
AP - Advertisers are paying up to $2 million for 30 seconds on the "Friends" finale this week, making it the Super Bowl of sitcoms.

More hysteria on the "cost of spam"


More hysteria on the "cost of spam" 02/05/2005 09:36 PM
A new study aims for great rhetorical effect by using statistical models and bold assumptions to calculate that spam costs American businesses US$22 billion a year.
Grok Description matches for E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+
GrokA matches for E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+

E-gov to cost Europe ,4bn+

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry:

















Also check out:


Grok

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Toronto police say
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Online
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Bush signs Internet
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Australia police
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EU judge weighs
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U.S. extends
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Police in the
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Google Announces
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Looksmart WiseNut
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Browser Wars : Wells
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Google Local is Live
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MSN Ramps Up
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Yahoo Introduces YQ
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Update Allegra :
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Zeal - From The
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