際際滷shows by User: scapecast / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: scapecast / Tue, 13 Mar 2018 14:16:56 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: scapecast World-class Data Engineering with Amazon Redshift /slideshow/worldclass-data-engineering-with-amazon-redshift/90516457 redshifttraining-webinar-february2018fordistribution-180313141656
These are the slides used in the Redshift training by intermix.io. This class introduces you to strategies and best practices for designing a data platform using Amazon Redshift. For a link to the video, please contact nikola@intermix.io.]]>

These are the slides used in the Redshift training by intermix.io. This class introduces you to strategies and best practices for designing a data platform using Amazon Redshift. For a link to the video, please contact nikola@intermix.io.]]>
Tue, 13 Mar 2018 14:16:56 GMT /slideshow/worldclass-data-engineering-with-amazon-redshift/90516457 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) World-class Data Engineering with Amazon Redshift scapecast These are the slides used in the Redshift training by intermix.io. This class introduces you to strategies and best practices for designing a data platform using Amazon Redshift. For a link to the video, please contact nikola@intermix.io. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/redshifttraining-webinar-february2018fordistribution-180313141656-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> These are the slides used in the Redshift training by intermix.io. This class introduces you to strategies and best practices for designing a data platform using Amazon Redshift. For a link to the video, please contact nikola@intermix.io.
World-class Data Engineering with Amazon Redshift from Lars Kamp
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Accenture - Bubble over Barcelona 2013 MWC - Mobility Trends /slideshow/accenture-bubble-over-barcelona-2013-mwc-mobility-trends/16782785 accenture-bubbleoverbarcelona2013mwc-mobilitytrends-130226101825-phpapp02
An overview of recent trends in the mobile computing and mobile Internet space.]]>

An overview of recent trends in the mobile computing and mobile Internet space.]]>
Tue, 26 Feb 2013 10:18:25 GMT /slideshow/accenture-bubble-over-barcelona-2013-mwc-mobility-trends/16782785 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture - Bubble over Barcelona 2013 MWC - Mobility Trends scapecast An overview of recent trends in the mobile computing and mobile Internet space. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-bubbleoverbarcelona2013mwc-mobilitytrends-130226101825-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> An overview of recent trends in the mobile computing and mobile Internet space.
Accenture - Bubble over Barcelona 2013 MWC - Mobility Trends from Lars Kamp
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Accenture technology vision_2013_feb_18[1] /slideshow/accenture-technology-vision2013feb181/16634092 accenturetechnologyvision2013feb181-130219175952-phpapp01
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Tue, 19 Feb 2013 17:59:52 GMT /slideshow/accenture-technology-vision2013feb181/16634092 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture technology vision_2013_feb_18[1] scapecast <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenturetechnologyvision2013feb181-130219175952-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
Accenture technology vision_2013_feb_18[1] from Lars Kamp
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A Simple Technology Framework: Mobile - Social - Cloud - Big Data /slideshow/a-simple-technology-framework-mobile-social-cloud-big-data/15714188 accenture-technologyframework-121220093824-phpapp02
A simple framework that our team created this summer to talk on one page about the major 5 trends: mobile, social, cloud, big data and of course APIs]]>

A simple framework that our team created this summer to talk on one page about the major 5 trends: mobile, social, cloud, big data and of course APIs]]>
Thu, 20 Dec 2012 09:38:24 GMT /slideshow/a-simple-technology-framework-mobile-social-cloud-big-data/15714188 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) A Simple Technology Framework: Mobile - Social - Cloud - Big Data scapecast A simple framework that our team created this summer to talk on one page about the major 5 trends: mobile, social, cloud, big data and of course APIs <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-technologyframework-121220093824-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A simple framework that our team created this summer to talk on one page about the major 5 trends: mobile, social, cloud, big data and of course APIs
A Simple Technology Framework: Mobile - Social - Cloud - Big Data from Lars Kamp
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Accenture CIO Mobility Survey /slideshow/accenture-cio-mobility-survey/13395524 accenture-cio-mobility-survey-2012-keeping-up-mobility1-120620120248-phpapp02
To gauge the perceptions of mobility among IT professionals, Accenture Research surveyed several hundred CIOs and several thousand application developers in North America, Europe, Asia and South America in January 2012. The results were startling. When asked to tally their priorities, 78 percent of CIOs placed mobility in their top five.]]>

To gauge the perceptions of mobility among IT professionals, Accenture Research surveyed several hundred CIOs and several thousand application developers in North America, Europe, Asia and South America in January 2012. The results were startling. When asked to tally their priorities, 78 percent of CIOs placed mobility in their top five.]]>
Wed, 20 Jun 2012 12:02:46 GMT /slideshow/accenture-cio-mobility-survey/13395524 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture CIO Mobility Survey scapecast To gauge the perceptions of mobility among IT professionals, Accenture Research surveyed several hundred CIOs and several thousand application developers in North America, Europe, Asia and South America in January 2012. The results were startling. When asked to tally their priorities, 78 percent of CIOs placed mobility in their top five. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-cio-mobility-survey-2012-keeping-up-mobility1-120620120248-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> To gauge the perceptions of mobility among IT professionals, Accenture Research surveyed several hundred CIOs and several thousand application developers in North America, Europe, Asia and South America in January 2012. The results were startling. When asked to tally their priorities, 78 percent of CIOs placed mobility in their top five.
Accenture CIO Mobility Survey from Lars Kamp
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Accenture Mobility MWC 2012 - Bubble over barcelona - lars kamp /slideshow/accenture-mobility-mwc-2012-bubble-over-barcelona-lars-kamp/11803253 accenturemobility-mwc2012-bubbleoverbarcelona-larskamp-120229134614-phpapp02
A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&feature=youtu.be]]>

A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&feature=youtu.be]]>
Wed, 29 Feb 2012 13:46:12 GMT /slideshow/accenture-mobility-mwc-2012-bubble-over-barcelona-lars-kamp/11803253 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture Mobility MWC 2012 - Bubble over barcelona - lars kamp scapecast A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&feature=youtu.be <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenturemobility-mwc2012-bubbleoverbarcelona-larskamp-120229134614-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A perspective on the major trends shaping mobility in the coming decade. A video of the talk is on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plbFgus5puY&amp;feature=youtu.be
Accenture Mobility MWC 2012 - Bubble over barcelona - lars kamp from Lars Kamp
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Accenture Technology Vision 2012 /slideshow/accenture-technology-vision-2012/11224327 accenture-technology-vision-2012-120123174954-phpapp02
Accenture publishes its technology vision annually. It is a distillation of our extensive research over the course of the previous 12 months, the experiences of our research teams and the input of our clients. In it, we outline the emerging technology trends that forward-thinking CIOs will use to position their organizations to drive growth and high performance, rather than just focusing on cost-cutting and efficiency improvements. Business leaders now accept that their organizations future success is bound up with their ability to keep pace with technology. CIOs have to play a key role in helping these business leaders recognize and seize the opportunities enabled by new trendsbut the price of progress will have to be paid, along with new risks assumed. We believe six technology trends will influence business over the next three to five years: Context-based services. Where you are and what you are doing will drive the next wave of digital services. Converging data architectures. Successfully rebalancing the data architecture portfolio and blending the structured with the unstructured are key to turning data into new streams of value. Industrialized data services. The ability to share data will make it more valuablebut only if it is managed differently. Social-driven IT. Realize that social is not just a bolt-on marketing channel. It will have true business-wide impact. PaaS-enabled agility. The maturing platform-as-a-service (PaaS) market will shift the emphasis from cost-cutting to business innovation, supporting rapid evolution for business processes that need continuous change. Orchestrated analytical security. Organizations will have to accept that their gates will be breached and begin preparing their second line of defensedata platformsto mitigate the damage caused by attacks that get through.]]>

Accenture publishes its technology vision annually. It is a distillation of our extensive research over the course of the previous 12 months, the experiences of our research teams and the input of our clients. In it, we outline the emerging technology trends that forward-thinking CIOs will use to position their organizations to drive growth and high performance, rather than just focusing on cost-cutting and efficiency improvements. Business leaders now accept that their organizations future success is bound up with their ability to keep pace with technology. CIOs have to play a key role in helping these business leaders recognize and seize the opportunities enabled by new trendsbut the price of progress will have to be paid, along with new risks assumed. We believe six technology trends will influence business over the next three to five years: Context-based services. Where you are and what you are doing will drive the next wave of digital services. Converging data architectures. Successfully rebalancing the data architecture portfolio and blending the structured with the unstructured are key to turning data into new streams of value. Industrialized data services. The ability to share data will make it more valuablebut only if it is managed differently. Social-driven IT. Realize that social is not just a bolt-on marketing channel. It will have true business-wide impact. PaaS-enabled agility. The maturing platform-as-a-service (PaaS) market will shift the emphasis from cost-cutting to business innovation, supporting rapid evolution for business processes that need continuous change. Orchestrated analytical security. Organizations will have to accept that their gates will be breached and begin preparing their second line of defensedata platformsto mitigate the damage caused by attacks that get through.]]>
Mon, 23 Jan 2012 17:49:53 GMT /slideshow/accenture-technology-vision-2012/11224327 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture Technology Vision 2012 scapecast Accenture publishes its technology vision annually. It is a distillation of our extensive research over the course of the previous 12 months, the experiences of our research teams and the input of our clients. In it, we outline the emerging technology trends that forward-thinking CIOs will use to position their organizations to drive growth and high performance, rather than just focusing on cost-cutting and efficiency improvements. Business leaders now accept that their organizations future success is bound up with their ability to keep pace with technology. CIOs have to play a key role in helping these business leaders recognize and seize the opportunities enabled by new trendsbut the price of progress will have to be paid, along with new risks assumed. We believe six technology trends will influence business over the next three to five years: Context-based services. Where you are and what you are doing will drive the next wave of digital services. Converging data architectures. Successfully rebalancing the data architecture portfolio and blending the structured with the unstructured are key to turning data into new streams of value. Industrialized data services. The ability to share data will make it more valuablebut only if it is managed differently. Social-driven IT. Realize that social is not just a bolt-on marketing channel. It will have true business-wide impact. PaaS-enabled agility. The maturing platform-as-a-service (PaaS) market will shift the emphasis from cost-cutting to business innovation, supporting rapid evolution for business processes that need continuous change. Orchestrated analytical security. Organizations will have to accept that their gates will be breached and begin preparing their second line of defensedata platformsto mitigate the damage caused by attacks that get through. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-technology-vision-2012-120123174954-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Accenture publishes its technology vision annually. It is a distillation of our extensive research over the course of the previous 12 months, the experiences of our research teams and the input of our clients. In it, we outline the emerging technology trends that forward-thinking CIOs will use to position their organizations to drive growth and high performance, rather than just focusing on cost-cutting and efficiency improvements. Business leaders now accept that their organizations future success is bound up with their ability to keep pace with technology. CIOs have to play a key role in helping these business leaders recognize and seize the opportunities enabled by new trendsbut the price of progress will have to be paid, along with new risks assumed. We believe six technology trends will influence business over the next three to five years: Context-based services. Where you are and what you are doing will drive the next wave of digital services. Converging data architectures. Successfully rebalancing the data architecture portfolio and blending the structured with the unstructured are key to turning data into new streams of value. Industrialized data services. The ability to share data will make it more valuablebut only if it is managed differently. Social-driven IT. Realize that social is not just a bolt-on marketing channel. It will have true business-wide impact. PaaS-enabled agility. The maturing platform-as-a-service (PaaS) market will shift the emphasis from cost-cutting to business innovation, supporting rapid evolution for business processes that need continuous change. Orchestrated analytical security. Organizations will have to accept that their gates will be breached and begin preparing their second line of defensedata platformsto mitigate the damage caused by attacks that get through.
Accenture Technology Vision 2012 from Lars Kamp
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Accenture Mobility - Trends for the Next Decade /slideshow/accenture-mobility-trends-for-the-next-decade/10572658 accenturemobility-trendsforthenextdecade-november2011-111213035801-phpapp01
From a deck that I presented at the SIIA All About Mobile conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more I had no clue faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moores Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones. An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burdens Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant Adams Plant was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of enterprise power generation. Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the Computer Utility. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moores Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons Paradox. Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka Consumerization of IT). What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in 90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: its increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazons AWS. And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldnt be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of accelerated acceleratio]]>

From a deck that I presented at the SIIA All About Mobile conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more I had no clue faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moores Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones. An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burdens Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant Adams Plant was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of enterprise power generation. Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the Computer Utility. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moores Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons Paradox. Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka Consumerization of IT). What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in 90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: its increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazons AWS. And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldnt be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of accelerated acceleratio]]>
Tue, 13 Dec 2011 03:57:59 GMT /slideshow/accenture-mobility-trends-for-the-next-decade/10572658 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture Mobility - Trends for the Next Decade scapecast From a deck that I presented at the SIIA All About Mobile conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more I had no clue faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moores Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones. An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burdens Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant Adams Plant was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of enterprise power generation. Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the Computer Utility. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moores Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons Paradox. Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka Consumerization of IT). What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in 90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: its increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazons AWS. And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldnt be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of accelerated acceleratio <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenturemobility-trendsforthenextdecade-november2011-111213035801-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> From a deck that I presented at the SIIA All About Mobile conference in November 2011 in San Francisco. It starts with the usual set of slides on the recent history of mobility (and I will keep presenting them until I see no more I had no clue faces in an audience), and then goes deeper into Moores Law and how we see it continuing for cell phones. An additional journey back in history to the early days of the industrialization and electricity. Companies had to generate their own power (by using wind, water, animals, etc.) and Burdens Wheel is a good example of one big, giant monolithic effort to do so. Along came Tesla and Westinghouse, and the first power plant Adams Plant was able to provide about 3x the power, but over a much further distance, and to multiple customers. The concept of an electric utility was born, and what we saw happening was the fall of enterprise power generation. Fast forward to 1969, and Douglas Parkhill and John McCarthy came up with the concept of the Computer Utility. Today we see multi-$B investments into public cloud infrastructures. In very simple terms, if history in the utility industry is any indicator, we will see enterprise clouds disappear. And as cloud infrastructures scale and get more efficient, and the price of computing goes down (Moores Law), developers will find a way to use and instrument that computing power, and make it consumable to enterprises and consumers, which gets us to Jevons Paradox. Jevons observed how consumption of energy in England went up as coal power plants got more efficient. All the way to today where we keep the lights on in our homes 24/7, and darkness has actually become a scarce good in some metropolitan areas. Switching to enterprise computing and looking at BEA data on IT assets for the past four decades, we see that prices for IT assets are falling, whereas other assets follow an inflationary path. And as computing gets cheaper, enterprises consume more and more of it (and you can argue so do consumers, aka Consumerization of IT). What is striking that with the arrival of the public Internet in 90-95 and web companies like Yahoo and Amazon, the mix in consumption is shifting: its increasingly going towards software, up from a SW:HW ratio of roughly 1:1 over three decades, to now 3:1. So today, for every $1 spent on hardware, enterprises spend $3 on software. Hence, it seems like enterprises are making use of the public cloud, which would explain the rise of SaaS companies, such Salesforce, SuccessFactors and also Amazons AWS. And as the rise of smartphones is only beginning, enterprise mobility will likely drive the trend of an increasing SW:HW ratio further up. I wouldnt be surprised to see the mix go to 10:1 in the next five years as smartphones proliferate and the amount of on-deck and off-deck computing power available to a single device is growing exponentially, the concept of accelerated acceleratio
Accenture Mobility - Trends for the Next Decade from Lars Kamp
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Destination South East Asia - Opportunities for Regional Expansion /slideshow/destination-south-east-asia-opportunities-for-regional-expansion/9555561 destinationsoutheastasia06may2011-111005063158-phpapp02
A guide to South East Asia - some deep, data-driven analysis of growth opportunities in South East Asia, prepared by our Accenture team in Singapore. The paper covers macro-economic factors (e.g. GDP, population and income trends) and vertical, industry-specific research across the ASEAN countries. If you want to get your head wrapped around South-East Asia and start with the basics, this paper is the perfect place to begin with!]]>

A guide to South East Asia - some deep, data-driven analysis of growth opportunities in South East Asia, prepared by our Accenture team in Singapore. The paper covers macro-economic factors (e.g. GDP, population and income trends) and vertical, industry-specific research across the ASEAN countries. If you want to get your head wrapped around South-East Asia and start with the basics, this paper is the perfect place to begin with!]]>
Wed, 05 Oct 2011 06:31:56 GMT /slideshow/destination-south-east-asia-opportunities-for-regional-expansion/9555561 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Destination South East Asia - Opportunities for Regional Expansion scapecast A guide to South East Asia - some deep, data-driven analysis of growth opportunities in South East Asia, prepared by our Accenture team in Singapore. The paper covers macro-economic factors (e.g. GDP, population and income trends) and vertical, industry-specific research across the ASEAN countries. If you want to get your head wrapped around South-East Asia and start with the basics, this paper is the perfect place to begin with! <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/destinationsoutheastasia06may2011-111005063158-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A guide to South East Asia - some deep, data-driven analysis of growth opportunities in South East Asia, prepared by our Accenture team in Singapore. The paper covers macro-economic factors (e.g. GDP, population and income trends) and vertical, industry-specific research across the ASEAN countries. If you want to get your head wrapped around South-East Asia and start with the basics, this paper is the perfect place to begin with!
Destination South East Asia - Opportunities for Regional Expansion from Lars Kamp
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Founder Labs - Summer 2011 - The Mobile Ecosystem /slideshow/founder-labs-san-francisco-summer-2011/8995230 founderlabssanfranciscosummer2011-110824133129-phpapp02
The "standard" Founder Labs deck for kicking off the Summer 2011 program in San Francisco; updated sections on Silicon, Apple Retail Stores, Ephemeralization]]>

The "standard" Founder Labs deck for kicking off the Summer 2011 program in San Francisco; updated sections on Silicon, Apple Retail Stores, Ephemeralization]]>
Wed, 24 Aug 2011 13:31:28 GMT /slideshow/founder-labs-san-francisco-summer-2011/8995230 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Founder Labs - Summer 2011 - The Mobile Ecosystem scapecast The "standard" Founder Labs deck for kicking off the Summer 2011 program in San Francisco; updated sections on Silicon, Apple Retail Stores, Ephemeralization <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/founderlabssanfranciscosummer2011-110824133129-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The &quot;standard&quot; Founder Labs deck for kicking off the Summer 2011 program in San Francisco; updated sections on Silicon, Apple Retail Stores, Ephemeralization
Founder Labs - Summer 2011 - The Mobile Ecosystem from Lars Kamp
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Founder labs new york may 2011 /slideshow/founder-labs-new-york-may-2011/8131182 founderlabsnewyorkmay2011-110527194606-phpapp01
The entry lecture for the New York edition of Founder Labs - it's an evolution of the deck that was presented in Q1 in San Francisco, with more details on business models, the cloud stack, silicon evolution and on Apple's retail stores.]]>

The entry lecture for the New York edition of Founder Labs - it's an evolution of the deck that was presented in Q1 in San Francisco, with more details on business models, the cloud stack, silicon evolution and on Apple's retail stores.]]>
Fri, 27 May 2011 19:46:03 GMT /slideshow/founder-labs-new-york-may-2011/8131182 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Founder labs new york may 2011 scapecast The entry lecture for the New York edition of Founder Labs - it's an evolution of the deck that was presented in Q1 in San Francisco, with more details on business models, the cloud stack, silicon evolution and on Apple's retail stores. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/founderlabsnewyorkmay2011-110527194606-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The entry lecture for the New York edition of Founder Labs - it&#39;s an evolution of the deck that was presented in Q1 in San Francisco, with more details on business models, the cloud stack, silicon evolution and on Apple&#39;s retail stores.
Founder labs new york may 2011 from Lars Kamp
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A Mobile Centric View of Silicon Valley - January 2011 /slideshow/a-mobile-centric-view-of-silicon-valley-january-2011/6791403 amobile-centricviewofsiliconvalley-january2011-110202141333-phpapp02
A presentation held at Opinno in San Francisco to a delegration from PromoMadrid. Goal was to provide a quick overview of major trends in mobile in 30 min.]]>

A presentation held at Opinno in San Francisco to a delegration from PromoMadrid. Goal was to provide a quick overview of major trends in mobile in 30 min.]]>
Wed, 02 Feb 2011 14:13:28 GMT /slideshow/a-mobile-centric-view-of-silicon-valley-january-2011/6791403 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) A Mobile Centric View of Silicon Valley - January 2011 scapecast A presentation held at Opinno in San Francisco to a delegration from PromoMadrid. Goal was to provide a quick overview of major trends in mobile in 30 min. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/amobile-centricviewofsiliconvalley-january2011-110202141333-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> A presentation held at Opinno in San Francisco to a delegration from PromoMadrid. Goal was to provide a quick overview of major trends in mobile in 30 min.
A Mobile Centric View of Silicon Valley - January 2011 from Lars Kamp
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Accenture Global Consumer Tech Research 2011 /slideshow/accenture-global-consumer-tech-research-2011/6550903 accentureglobalconsumertech20111-110113104643-phpapp02
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Thu, 13 Jan 2011 10:46:39 GMT /slideshow/accenture-global-consumer-tech-research-2011/6550903 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture Global Consumer Tech Research 2011 scapecast <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accentureglobalconsumertech20111-110113104643-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br>
Accenture Global Consumer Tech Research 2011 from Lars Kamp
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Accenture - A Primer in Wireless Broadband /slideshow/accenture-a-primer-in-wireless-broadband/6518302 accenture-aprimerinwirelessbroadband-110111094849-phpapp02
An introduction to spectrum fundamentals and wireless networking.]]>

An introduction to spectrum fundamentals and wireless networking.]]>
Tue, 11 Jan 2011 09:48:46 GMT /slideshow/accenture-a-primer-in-wireless-broadband/6518302 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) Accenture - A Primer in Wireless Broadband scapecast An introduction to spectrum fundamentals and wireless networking. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-aprimerinwirelessbroadband-110111094849-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> An introduction to spectrum fundamentals and wireless networking.
Accenture - A Primer in Wireless Broadband from Lars Kamp
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SF Mobile: Founder Labs Mobile Edition /slideshow/sf-mobile-founder-labs-mobile-edition/6499868 sfmobilefounderlabsmobileedition-week1lecture-110109194223-phpapp02
This deck was prepared for a lecture for week 1 of Founder Labs Mobile Edition. The audience was a mix of developers, UI/UX designers and hardware engineers. The goal was to provide a baseline ecosystem overview and talk about technology drivers and business models in mobile. Most of the slides in the deck are derived from work with my clients at Accenture.]]>

This deck was prepared for a lecture for week 1 of Founder Labs Mobile Edition. The audience was a mix of developers, UI/UX designers and hardware engineers. The goal was to provide a baseline ecosystem overview and talk about technology drivers and business models in mobile. Most of the slides in the deck are derived from work with my clients at Accenture.]]>
Sun, 09 Jan 2011 19:42:19 GMT /slideshow/sf-mobile-founder-labs-mobile-edition/6499868 scapecast@slideshare.net(scapecast) SF Mobile: Founder Labs Mobile Edition scapecast This deck was prepared for a lecture for week 1 of Founder Labs Mobile Edition. The audience was a mix of developers, UI/UX designers and hardware engineers. The goal was to provide a baseline ecosystem overview and talk about technology drivers and business models in mobile. Most of the slides in the deck are derived from work with my clients at Accenture. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sfmobilefounderlabsmobileedition-week1lecture-110109194223-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This deck was prepared for a lecture for week 1 of Founder Labs Mobile Edition. The audience was a mix of developers, UI/UX designers and hardware engineers. The goal was to provide a baseline ecosystem overview and talk about technology drivers and business models in mobile. Most of the slides in the deck are derived from work with my clients at Accenture.
SF Mobile: Founder Labs Mobile Edition from Lars Kamp
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-scapecast-48x48.jpg?cb=1676386332 Started at the bottom. Now I'm here. https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/redshifttraining-webinar-february2018fordistribution-180313141656-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/worldclass-data-engineering-with-amazon-redshift/90516457 World-class Data Engin... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenture-bubbleoverbarcelona2013mwc-mobilitytrends-130226101825-phpapp02-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/accenture-bubble-over-barcelona-2013-mwc-mobility-trends/16782785 Accenture - Bubble ov... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/accenturetechnologyvision2013feb181-130219175952-phpapp01-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/accenture-technology-vision2013feb181/16634092 Accenture technology v...