MUSIC: Coldplay European Tour

I have received yesterday some information about the Colplay European Tour. I will try to go to Zurich, Switzerland on Nov.12, 2005.

Coldplay are excited to announce several new tour dates across Europe later this year.

The band will play at the following venues:

26/10/05 Sports Palace – Antwerp, BELGIUM
28/10/05 Arena – Oberhausen, GERMANY
30/10/05 Forum – Copenhagen, DENMARK
31/10/05 Spektrum – Oslo, NORWAY
7/11/05 Globe – Stockholm, SWEDEN
9/11/05 Arena – Leipzig, GERMANY
10/11/05 Maimarkhalle – Mannheim, GERMANY
12/11/05 Hallenstadion – Zurich, SWITZERLAND
14/11/05 Fillaforum – Milan, ITALY
15/11/05 Palamalagott – Bologna, ITALY
17/11/05 Dome – Marseille, FRANCE
18/11/05 Zenith – Toulouse, FRANCE
20/11/05 Palau Saint Jordi – Barcelona, SPAIN
22/11/05 Palacio de Deportes – Madrid, SPAIN
23/11/05 Atlantico Pavillion – Lisbon, PORTUGAL
25/11/05 Velodromo Anoeta – San Sebastian, SPAIN
28/11/05 Tony Garnier Hall – Lyon, FRANCE
29/11/05 Bercy – Paris, FRANCE

Tickets for France, Italy and Denmark go on sale in the next few days.

eCENTER: IT Strategy Forum

Nick and I (Nick is deputy head of the eCenter) are very kindly invited by Mr. Selçuk Boydak, owner and founder of Boydak Management Consulting, to the coming IT Strategy Forum on 15th September 2005 in Zurich, Switzerland.

What is the IT Strategy Forum?

The IT Strategy Forum is a non-commercial promotional-free conference at the Lake of Zurich, Switzerland. It provides a communication and networking platform, not industry specific, for IT Executives from all German-speaken countries.

The target groups are CIO, IT Executives and Managers. It will be the third edition of this Forum.

Motto this year: IT as innovation driver.

This year, all the presentations are linked with the usage of IT as a strategic innovation driver. Interesting.

eCenter presentation

Practical Example: setup of an innovative Sales and Consulting platform in the Financial Services Industry.

  • Development of the strategic initiative, objective and target business needs
  • Actual outcome and added value
  • Procedure and Key Success Factors of the execution

Other participants

Zurichsee

BUSINESS: IT skills deficit by 2006

[via Forrester Research]

Interesting. I am convinced, since I started to work, that you have to understand the Business, and if possible the specificities and business challenges of the industry you are working for (this takes quite a long time), to be able to *really* deliver some added value as an IT worker… and to avoid to be “offshored” or “nearshored” ;-)

The combination of accelerating retirement rates with a significant decline in the number of European students graduating from IT-related courses leads many firms to fear an IT skills shortage beginning in 2006. However, the reality is more complex, according to a recent report by Forrester Research, Inc. (NASDAQ: FORR). In the future, companies will see their IT skills requirements shift away from technicians and more toward business-oriented profiles. They will continue to outsource more routine activities. This shift in the enterprise impacts education and recruitment. In theory, the educational system should be able to rapidly create new programs to train IT/business analysts, architects, enterprise program managers, and vendor managers — skills that firms expect to need in greater numbers in the future; however, Forrester believes that, in practice, this will take too long to meet company demands.

While some companies may have a clear picture of their future IT skills needs in mind, few academic IT departments yet reflect this profile in their curricula; and — as Forrester uncovered in a parallel study of European technical universities and engineering schools — academia has barely begun to transform its IT programs. Meanwhile, many European countries can’t even generate a respectable level of enthusiasm for computer sciences among young people planning to enter higher education.

Forrester reports that many companies don’t renew “routine” positions in development and operations simply because they will outsource them. This trend is particularly evident in the finance and public sectors. However, outsourcing does not mean simplification. Companies that opt for global or selective outsourcing can’t afford to move all responsibilities and decisions to service providers. Security, enterprise and technical architecture, innovative solutions, new technologies, and evolving business remain critical challenges. The decisions should be made internally by people with high skill levels — positions that Forrester believes are not “offshorable.”

MUSIC: Mercedes Mixed Tape 08

Mercedez-Benz launched its Mixed Tape 08, released…today! Let’s discover it, it is free ;-)

The wait has come to an end: with Mixed Tape 08 Mercedes-Benz introduces the latest edition of its hugely successful free music compilation.
Until the 4th of October 05, we invite you to explore, download and enjoy 15 exclusive new tracks by bright young hopefuls at http://www.mercedes-benz.com/mixedtape.

Kicking off with one of the world’s most-sampled artists, renowned vibraphone virtuoso and soul specialist Roy Ayers, Mixed Tape 08 features a plethora of fresh musical talent.
London’s soul and jazz scene, for example, features prominently with a range of instant classics: while Colonel Red excels at warm, funky beats, D’Nell and Low Budget Soul prefer to blend modern trip hop rhythms with timeless soul harmonies.
With their exuberant disco funk, German collective Flowarea add a breath of fresh, continental air to the proceedings and whet your appetites for the compilation’s many further, exciting forays into beats and tunes from around the globe.

Mercedes MixedTape08

NEWS: World population hits 6.5 billion

[via The Australian]

Earth contains nearly 6.5 billion inhabitants […] Of every 100 people in the world, 61 live in Asia, 14 in Africa, 11 in Europe, nine in Latin America, five in North America and less than one in Oceania […] The six most populous countries – China, India, the US, Indonesia, Brazil and Pakistan – contain between them 3.3 billion inhabitants.

Life expectancy is longest in Japan at 82 years, followed by Iceland and Switzerland at 80. But people can expect to live just 36 years in Zimbabwe, 38 in Zambia and 40 in Malawi – mainly as a result of the AIDS epidemic in those southern African states.

Agronomists say the earth has the potential to support many more inhabitants – up to 15 billion. The question is how to share out the resources rather than whether we can produce enough.

NEWS: Yahoo buys Konfabulator

[via Heiko & Russel & BetaNews]

First contact with this geek’s tool in October 2004, then in November 2004, again in December 2004, and finally in April this year.

Let’s just get this out of the way… Konfabulator is now free. Yup. If you download version 2.1 you know what you’ll never ever see? That’s right a registration reminder. Fear not, there’s nothing sneaky in there, no spyware, no ads, nothing that’s keeping track of information and sending it to us… it’s pure, uncut Konfabulator goodness.

Now, we can currently hear the cries of all those people who’ve recently purchased Konfabulator. Fear not, people, for you will be given the gift of a refund if you purchased Konfabulator 2.0 or later. Revel in the glory of it.

Konfabulator

BUSINESS: founder CEO and VC Board Members

[via Jeff Bussgang]

Great post from Jeff: Why Being A VC-backed Founder Can (Sometimes) Suck

[…] The primary issue is that you’re always afraid your VC is going to fire you. It’s the unspoken thing that founders live in fear of. They work like hell to create something from nothing, take this great VC’s money, get invited to all their great parties, get told how much everyone loves them, but live in fear that after each board meeting, they’re going to get the call. “Hi Joe – it’s your VC. Listen, we need to get together for breakfast.” Uh oh.

Let’s put it right out on the table – VC board members are always evaluating the performance of the CEO. That’s the fundamental job of the board of directors: hire, fire and compensate the CEO. When you’re a “hired gun”, professional manager, you know the drill. You’re only as good as your last quarter, goes the old board room yarn. But founders are typically less glib about it all, because a founder can’t just bounce from one CEO gig to another – they’ve put their blood, sweat and tears into this start-up and it may be their only ticket to the big time. And they’re damned if they let some pencil-pushing VC who simply doesn’t “get it” ruin it for them.

On the VC side of the table, watching a founder run out of steam and lose their ability to manage and build the company is incredibly frustrating. Great company, great technology, great market position and a huge opportunity, but the founder just won’t let go and let the best people in the world come in and take the company forward. It’s like watching a train wreck – you know exactly how it will end and it’s impossible to stop. Founders love to cite Bill Gates, Larry Ellison and Michael Dell as young, founding CEOs who run their companies from the garage through multi-billion dollars in revenue. Why can’t they do the same? If it were that easy, there would be far more than a mere handful of Fortune 1000 companies still run by their founders. A friend of mine used to talk about the three stages of a company’s life: the jungle, the dirt road and the highway. The right CEO and executive team in the jungle tends to be very different from who you need when you’re on the highway. Founders very rarely can be effective leaders during through all these complex transitions.[…]

NEWS: MS FY 2005

[via Microsoft]

Again, quite impressive results of Microsoft for the Fiscal Year 2005 (closed end of June).

Income FY 2005

Microsoft FY 2005

More than $12 bn net income. Wow. What an incredible margin. And $6.2 bn invested in R&D.;

Segment revenues FY 2005

Microsoft FY 2005

Segmentation:

  • server&business;
  • business solutions (eg: Navision, CRM, Solomon)
  • server&tools; (eg: Windows Server, SQLServer, developer tools)

  • pc eXPerience
    • client (eg: WindowsXP, MediaCenter, TabletPC)
    • information worker (eg: Office, Project, Visio, OneNote)

  • consumer&devices;
    • mobile&embedded; devices (eg: Mobile SW, MapPoint)
    • home&entertainment; (eg: Xbox, PC and online games)
    • MSN (eg: MSN Search)

    WinXP and Office generate, as usual, a *lot* of cash for MS, definitely their cash-cows. A great positive development concerning the Server and Tool segment. The other segments are still losing money, excepted MSN.

    Revenues 1985 – 2005

    MS revenues 85-05

    Net income 1985 – 2005

    MS net income 85-05