Theme: Turning The Hourglass
Technology is both disruptive and constructive. Throughout the ages, whenever superior technologies appeared they tipped society’s hourglass and slowly, inexorably, drained substance out of the reigning economic model, out of the society itself, and filled the then current base with the marvels and tragedies of a new era. There is no going back to the quill, the horse, the telegraph, punch card or the heyday of the bulky black phone.
North America 2005
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 6 Topic: Fibre to the Internet: the last-mile…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 7 Topic: Transforming communities with optical broadband services…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 8 Topic: Integrating IT and telecom Author: Isabelle…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 9 Topic: The new world of voice Author:…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 10 Topic: Seamless mobility: the everything everywhere anytime…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 11 Topic: Convergence, the law and the future…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 12 Topic: The emergence of converged networks Author:…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 13 Topic: Identity and the future of e-commerce…
- North America 2005
Content owner to connected consumer–managing the digital content ecosystem
by david.nunesIssue: North America 2005 Article no.: 14 Topic: Content owner to connected consumer–managing the…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 1 Topic: Canada: taking competitiveness to the next…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 2 Topic: Technology calling! Is society answering? Author:…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 3 Topic: The exciting new world of communications…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 4 Topic: Redefining business communications and business Author:…
Issue: North America 2005 Article no.: 5 Topic: Transforming communications: fixed-mobile convergence Author: Andy…