7 Ways BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) Can Boost Business

http://venturebeat.com/2012/05/13/7-ways-byod-will-boost-your-business/

While IT managers may cringe each time they hear “can you help me connect my iPad to the company server,” here are seven reasons businesses should embrace the consumerization of IT.

1. Real-time communication
In their personal lives, people are becoming more and more accustomed to web-based communication channels outside of email. When people are used to FaceTime, chat, and instant messaging at home, the act of sending an email to a vendor, or even sending a fax to a lawyer, seems like an artifact from a different, and far slower, era. If I can chat with my friends on Facebook, why can’t I interact with co-workers on our CRM system? Why I can’t I have a secure instant message session with my lawyer?

The socialization of enterprise applications gives workers, clients, colleagues, customers, and vendors better tools to communicate in real time. These tighter communication loops should ultimately drive key performance goals for any business, including employee productivity, operational efficiency, and customer satisfaction.

2. Greater accessibility
While traditional enterprise systems trap data in a single location, the cloud makes applications and business data available to more users on more devices in more locations. For employees, this can be a game changer, as the information they need is right at their fingertips – whether they’re at a client location, on route to a meeting, at home, or on vacation.

3. End-user buy-in
Ultimately the success of any technology initiative hinges on the ability to convince employees to actually use the software, device, or process. When employees clamor to bring their own tools into the workplace, there’s no risk that a new tool will sit idly by.  Throwing employees in front of a stodgy application is hardly a recipe for success. Rather, end users are more likely to use those tools that evoke the same look and feel of their friendly social networks and consumer apps.

4. Shorter end-user learning curve
A savvy workforce, familiar with its own favorite tools, can dive right into technology that leverages consumer elements in the corporate environment. Training costs go down, and employees can be productive with their new tools right out of the gate.

5. Affordability
Cloud-based applications shift the financial costs from the upfront capital expense of purchasing software licenses to an ongoing operating expense. When calculating the total cost of ownership, the benefits of cloud-based tools go beyond the cost of subscription vs. software seat to include: lower management costs, lower provisioning and upgrade hassles, and lower hardware costs. A 2009 report from Forrester Research concluded that Google Apps costs less than a third as much as on-premise email for equipping 15,000 employees with email.

6. Security
While data is often the chief concern holding businesses back from the cloud, web-hosted applications can actually increase data security, particularly for those small to mid-sized companies that don’t have proper in-house technical expertise or resources like a dedicated, lockable server room. In these cases, off-premise storage removes the company’s sensitive data from on-premise risks, such as access by cleaning staff, employee error, even physical threats like earthquake and fire.

7. Productivity
Consider for a moment who is behind the consumerization of IT. While Apple may benefit greatly as iPads and iPhones cross over to the enterprise, it’s the employee and not Apple who is pushing to use these devices for work. At the heart of this trend is the simple idea that employees know which tools can make their work day easier and, hopefully, happier.

The key question to ask is: If employees are asking to use their own tools so they can be more productive in the office or catch up on work after hours, is that such a scary prospect?

In a Pat of the Head #Obama2012

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When I saw this image, I teared up a bit. Such a moving moment.

“I want to know if my hair is just like yours.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/24/us/politics/indelible-image-of-a-boys-pat-o…

The boy in the picture is Jacob Philadelphia of Columbia, Md. Three years ago this month, his father, Carlton, a former Marine, was leaving the White House staff after a two-year stint on the National Security Council that began in the Bush administration. As departing staff members often do, Mr. Philadelphia asked for a family photograph with Mr. Obama.

When the pictures were taken and the family was about to leave, Mr. Philadelphia told Mr. Obama that his sons each had a question. In interviews, he and his wife, Roseane, said they did not know what the boys would ask. The White House photographer, Pete Souza, was surprised, too, as the photo’s awkward composition attests: The parents’ heads are cut off; Jacob’s arm obscures his face; and his older brother, Isaac, is blurry.

Jacob spoke first.

“I want to know if my hair is just like yours,” he told Mr. Obama, so quietly that the president asked him to speak again.

Jacob did, and Mr. Obama replied, “Why don’t you touch it and see for yourself?” He lowered his head, level with Jacob, who hesitated.

“Touch it, dude!” Mr. Obama said.

As Jacob patted the presidential crown, Mr. Souza snapped [the photo].

“So, what do you think?” Mr. Obama asked.

“Yes, it does feel the same,” Jacob said.

Jacob, now 8, said he […] want[s] to be president. “Or a test pilot.”

The Real Laws

Coworker #1: The Real Laws
1. Law of Mechanical Repair – After your hands become coated with grease, your nose will begin to itch and you’ll have to pee.
2. Law of Gravity – Any tool, nut, bolt, screw, when dropped, will roll to the least accessible corner.
3. Law of Probability – The probability of being watched is directly proportional to the stupidity of your act.
4. Law of Random Numbers – If you dial a wrong number, you never get a busy signal and someone always answers.
5. Variation Law – If you change lines (supermarket or traffic lanes), the one you were in will always move faster than the one you are in now (works every time).
6. Law of the Bath – When the body is fully immersed in water, the telephone rings.
7. Law of Close Encounters – The probability of meeting someone you know increases dramatically when you are with whom you don’t want to be seen.
8. Law of the Result – When you try to prove to someone that a machine won’t work, it will.
9. Law of Biomechanics – The severity of the itch is inversely proportional to the reach.
10. Law of the Theater & Sporting Events – At any event, the people whose seats are furthest from the aisle, always arrive last. They are the ones who will leave their seats several times to go for food, beer, or the toilet and who leave early before the end of the performance or the game is over. The folks in the aisle seats come early, never move once, have long gangly legs or big bellies and stay to the bitter end of the performance. The aisle people also are very surly folk.
11. The Coffee Law – As soon as you sit down to a cup of hot coffee, your boss will ask you to do something which will last until the coffee is cold.
12. YMCA’s Law of Lockers – If there are only 2 people in a locker room, they will have adjacent lockers.
13. Law of Physical Surfaces – The chances of an open-faced jelly sandwich landing face down on a floor, are directly correlated to the newness and cost of the carpet or rug.
14. Law of Logical Argument – Anything is possible if you don’t know what you are talking about.
15. Brown’s Law of Physical Appearance – If the clothes fit, they’re ugly.
16. Oliver’s Law of Public Speaking – A closed mouth gathers no feet.
17. Wilson’s Law of Commercial Marketing Strategy – As soon as you find a product that you really like, they will stop making it, or change it.
18. Doctors’ Law – If you don’t feel well, make an appointment to go to the doctor, and by the time you get there you’ll feel better. But don’t make an appointment, and you’ll stay sick.
09:33 AM – May 21
 
Replier #1: I’m not sure of the name, but you left off the one where, if you’ve held onto some odd spare part, tool, or extra scrap of material for years, it will become essential within a week of being discarded.
10:12 AM – May 21
 
Coworker #1: Good one. It can be called the “Law of Spare Parts”.
10:27 AM – May 21
 
Replier #2: I have one: Law of the D.C. metro – The probability of the metro being delayed increases dramatically when you have to be home at a certain time and the amount of delay is directly proportional to how important your plans are.
11:03 AM – May 21
 
Replier #3: There’s a corollary to the Law of Spare Parts that if a mechanic rebuilds enough carburetors, there will be enough left over parts to make a new one entirely.
12:34 AM – May 22
 

Excel: Split content based on a delimiter

Example for splitting a cell based on spaces:

  1. Select the range of data that you want to convert.
  2. On the Data tab, in the Data Tools group, click Text to Columns.
  1. In Step 1 of the Convert Text to Columns Wizard, click Delimited, and then click Next.
  2. In Step 2, select the Space check box, and then clear the other check boxes under Delimiters.

http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/excel-help/split-names-by-using-the-convert…