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If you’re not familiar with the term it’s basically trying to help all of us who are deluged with technology to find ways to cope with the masses of information without having it ruin our lives. We were high tech at the very start of the boom. Let me start by saying I’m a huge business book cynic.
In my two previous installments, I talked about the changing dynamics in many tech-centric cities. Today, especially in tech hubs like Silicon Valley, Los Angeles, New York, or Seattle, none of these facts hold. Real estate costs in tech hubs have skyrocketed. In terms of technical expertise. You must figure this out.
It took me some time to figure out a title and I eventually settled for “Building European Champions” as the region has proven its ability to generate very successful venture outcomes and will continue to be the birthplace of many successful technology companies. Why Eastern Europe? mobile phone per person for the Top 4 EE countries (vs.
The iPhone integrated phone, camera, music player and internet access all into one device – and it did it well. The Rubik’s Cube is a run-away success straight from the unlikely homeland of Communist Hungary. But, the touchscreen wasn’t the iPhone’s only major innovation. Rubik’s Cube (1980).
…suddenly, nearly all technical jobs are remote-jobs, all dev-teams are distributed teams, and virtually all hiring is remote hiring. The fact that the Internet and remote work apps are finally fast and robust enough that near-seamless remote collaboration is possible. Here is remote work in the time of COVID-19.
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