Early Indications

Early Indications is the weblog version of a newsletter I've been publishing since 1997. It focuses on emerging technologies and their social implications.

Monday, November 19, 2007

November 2007 Early Indications: 10 Predictions for the Next 10 Years

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As promised last month, here are ten information-technology-related areas to watch over the next ten years. Rather than attempting to be sy...
Wednesday, October 24, 2007

October 2007 Early Indications II: Ten big technology-related busts in the past ten years

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Earlier this month we marked ten years of this newsletter's publication by noting ten developments that quickly permeated the market aft...
Sunday, October 21, 2007

Early Indications October 2007 issue 1: 10th Anniversary Breakthroughs

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In October 1997, the Ernst & Young Center for Business Innovation in Cambridge, Mass had just hosted its first meeting of a corporate co...
Sunday, September 30, 2007

Early Indications September 2007 - Web 2.0 and the Enterprise: Beneath the Surface

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As managers of enterprise computing environments confront both perennial and emerging challenges, a new set of technologies is complicating ...
Friday, August 24, 2007

August 2007 Early Indications: China's Changing Role in the Tech Sector

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At base, technological change and globalization cannot be cleanly distinguished, and thus will be interlinked for the foreseeable future. T...
Friday, July 27, 2007

July 2007 Early Indications: From Programming to Programming

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In the past ten to fifteen years, many barriers between traditional industries have broken down. We're in the early stages of another b...
Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Early Indications June 2007: Miles Davis, CEO?

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As technologies, cultural attitudes, demographics, and economics change, people have both the opportunity and the need to reinvent organizat...
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About Me

John M. Jordan
John Jordan is a professor of practice at the Syracuse University School of Information Studies. He joins the iSchool from the Department of Supply Chain & Information Systems at Penn State, where he taught in the master's and undergraduate business programs. Formerly a principal with Ernst & Young/Capgemini, he directed research at the Center for Business Innovation and the Americas Office of the CTO. John holds a Ph.D. from the University of Michigan as well as a master’s from Yale University, and graduated from Duke University. Prior to entering consulting, he won teaching awards at the University of Michigan and Harvard University; in 2011, 2012, and 2013 he was honored among the best 2nd-year MBA professors at Penn State's business school. A new book on 3D Printing was published by MIT Press in 2019. His book on robotics was published by MIT Press in 2016 and is being translated into six languages. In 2012 he published Information, Technology, and Innovation with John Wiley.
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