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Groups > comp.databases.pick > #2145
| From | sldfj <slfj@sdflkj.org> |
|---|---|
| Subject | was like a kick in the teeth from the start you know |
| Newsgroups | comp.databases.pick, uk.politics.misc |
| Message-ID | <_5GdnbhLIbU1i57PnZ2dnUVZ8smdnZ2d@bt.com> (permalink) |
| Date | 2013-08-07 22:55 -0500 |
Cross-posted to 2 groups.
@ UCL walking past bank of monitors the white rat talking to someone else "he won't be able to program pages" I could program anything pages weren't an issue - it was over 2k kick in the teeth - on lunch hour had gone through their system written documentor - everything - queriable showed it to the person look it documents its a database its queriable - its your system it documents no response zero same with reti - look - it does your whole system "this is a selection prompt" here, press F2 and you will see a sorted *sorted* *in date order* list of *blood types* *ward manager* *ICD9* whatever here reti heres the window framework before my processing heres it cleaned up look 40% faster zero nothing don't let him get ahead its the UK -- thats what it's like thats what it's like to work here innovate anything - try to do anything you will be stamped out in every single technological organisation there is a sociopathic blocker you will be stamped out you will not be allowed to deliver because then they have to give somebody credit/reward/recognition/power sociopaths within business would rather let a business enterprise fail than let that happen thats how it works --- thats how people like rob donnelly (LAB) basingstoke get ahead with their allied groups of sociopaths thats how filth like paul roscoe just rape the market, the NHS - get out and found some sleazy outfit like crimson "texas" to do the same thing again with obamacare in the UK and probably the USA now --- engineers are secondary sales people and technological sociopaths such as karl reti (also now a fucking "professional" (right)) fuckit why bother read "the gentleman and the technologist" --- peter f drucker The new industries that emerged after the railroad owed little technologically to the steam engine or to the Industrial Revolution in general. They were not its "children after the flesh" - but they were its "children after the spirit". They were possible only because of the mind-set that the Industrial Revolution had created and the skills it had developed. This was a mind-set that accepted - indeed, eagerly welcomed - invention and innovation. It also created the social values that made possible the new industries. Above all, it created the "technologist." Social and financial successs long eluded the first major American technologist, Eli Whitney, whose cotton gin, in 1793, was as central to the triumph of the Industrial Revolution as the steam engine. But a generation lateer the technologist - still self-taught - had become the American folk hero and was both socially accepted and financially rewarded. Samuel Morse, the inventor of the telegraph, may have been the first example: Thomas Edison became the most prominent. In Europe the "businessman" long remained a social inferior, but the university trained engineer had my 1830 or 1840 become a respected "professional". By the 1850s England was losing its predominance and beginning to be overtaken as an industrial ecomony, first by the United States and then by Germany. It is generally accepted that neither economics nor technology was the major reason. The main cause was social. Economically, and especially financially, England remained the great power until the First World War. Technologically it held its own throughout the nineteenth century. Synthetic dye-stuffs, the first products of the modern chemical industry, were invented in England, and so was the steam turbine. But England did not accept the technologist socially. He never became a "gentleman." The English built first-rate engineering schools in India but almost none at home. No other country so honored the "scientist" - and indeed, Britain retained leadership in physics throught the nineteenth century, from James Clerk Maxwell and Michael Faraday to Ernest Rutherford. But the technologist remained a "tradesman" (Dickens for instance showed open contempt for the upstart ironmaster in his 1853 novel Bleak House.) Nor did England develop the venture capitalist, who had the means and the mentality to finance the unexpected and unproved. A French invention, first portrayed in Balzacs monumental La Comedie humaine, in the 1840s, the venture capitalist was institutionalized in the United States by J.P. Morgan and, simultaneously, in Germany and Japan by the universal bank. But England, although it invented and developed the commercial bank to finance trade, had no institution to finance industry until two German refugees S.G. Warburg and Henry Grunfeld, started an entrepreneurial bank in London, just before the Second World War. Bribing the Knowledge Worker What might be needed to prevent the United States becoming the England of the twenty-first century? I am convinced that a drastic change in the social mind-set is required - just just as leadership in the industrial economy after the railroad required the drastic change from "tradesman" to "technologist" or "engineer". What we call the Information Revolution is actually a Knowledge Revolution. What has made it possible to routinize processes is not machinery; the computer is only the trigger. Software is the reorganisation of traditional work, based on centuries of experience, through the application of knowledge and especially of systematic, logical analysis. The key is not electronics; it is cognitive science. This means that the key to maintaining leadership in the economy and the technology that are about to emerge is likely to be the social position of knowledge professionalss and social acceptance of their values. For them to remain traditional "employees" and be treated as such would be tantamount to England's treating its technologists as tradesmen - and likely to have similar consequences. Today, however, we are trying to straddle the fence - to maintain the traditional mind-set, in which capital is the key resource and the financier is boss, while bribing knowledge workers to be content to remain employees by giving them bonuses and stock options. But this, if it can work at all, can work only as long as the emerging industries enjoy a stock-market boom, as the Internet companies have been doing. The next major industries are likely to behave far more like traditional industries - that is, to grow slowly, painfully and laboriously. The early industries of the Industrial Revolution - cotton textiles, iron, the railroads - were boom industries that created millionaires overnight, like Balzac's venture bankers and like Dickens's ironmaster, who in a few years grew from a lowly domestic servant into a "captain of industry". The industries that emerged after 1830 also created millionaires. But they took twenty years to do so, and it was twenty years of hard work, of struggle, of disappointments and failures, of thrift. This is likely to be true of the industries that will emerge from now on. It is already true of biotechnology. Bribing the knowledge workers on whom these industries depend will therefore simply not work. The key knowledge workers in these businesses will surely continue to expect to share financially in the fruits of their labor. But the financial fruits are likely to take much longer to ripen, if they ripen at all. And then, probably within ten years or so, running a business with (short-term) "shareholder value" as its first - if not its only - goal and justification will have become counterproductive. Increasingly, performance in these new knowledge-based industries will come to depend on running the institution so as to attract, hold, and motivate knowledge workers. When this can no longer be done by satisfying knowledge workers' greed, as we are now trying to do, it will have to be done by satisfying their values, and by giving them social recognition and social power. It will hyave to be done by turning them from subordinates into fellow executives, and from employers, however well paid, into partners. (1999) Peter F Drucker The Information Society - Beyond the Information Revolution "Managing the next Society" 2002
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was like a kick in the teeth from the start you know sldfj <slfj@sdflkj.org> - 2013-08-07 22:55 -0500
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