Friday, December 30, 2005
Innovation
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The problem i see 'innovation' as talked about, wrote about is: 'inovation' is equate to 'invention'. But is it?
Most of us 'innovate' all the time, but if it not BIG enough that can be noticed, it is not 'inovation', it is NOT new idea.
Before the craz about 'innovation' (the same I feel about all these talks about knowledge management), does it mean that we NEVER inovate? I think the more we talk about things such as inovation, KM, trust, the more we are confusing the 'average person'. THe more we confuse them, the more they become wondering if the belong to the 'inovative' society. All these talks about inovation actually kills innovation. People become scares of doing things that is wrong in the eyes of all these talks from clever researchers.
All these reminds me of the time I took an appetitude test to be a software programmer. In 1980. The report came back and told me/my manager the tests shown that I can do 'simple thing'. I did not get the job of course. Worse still that same casual remark crashed me. For years I walked around wondering how simple is simple enough for me to manage.
And if such a report can crashed a person who has a strong personality like me, can one imagine what it would do to anyone who has lesser self-confidence?
In my observation, we as a people, has one thing to learn: to be less of an individual, and more as a team player and support one another. No matter how clever or inovative you think you are, you need others to support you and your ideas. Inovation can never happen from the idea of JUST ONE SINGLE person. That I think is what is missing in most of the discussions that I read.
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Thursday, November 24, 2005
Who is Cindynics???
Almost 2 years ago, Jacques, alerted me the true meaning of Cindy. Or rather CINDYNICS.
Here I am, at 4am and after 5 unsuccessful attempts, looking for a name for my blog that will not be rejected by Blogger, I decided to give CINDYNICS a try. It works.
CINDYNICS ...
A holistic development of a global, systemic approach to hazards and perils is at the center of the new science of cindynics.
Risk management's future development may be greatly aided by cindynics. Cindynics is derived from "Kindunos," the Greek word for danger, and refers to the new science of hazard identification. The latest developments in cindynics were discussed at a roundtable held last year during the RIMS National Conference in New Orleans, based in part on "Chaos Theory," an article written by Anthony J. Burlando an published in Risk Management magazine in April 1994