Thursday, June 9, 2011

This movie was about the future of technology and its use and effect on our daily life in 30 years. I consider this development as one of most potentially dangerous threat on humanity. By that time, robots will be dominant over us. Maybe they will become the manager and us their employee. Because they will be smart and thereby dominant, they will control us and we cannot defeat them in any case needed.
GINA:  one thing that impressed most in my life was GINA. I love BMW cars so much that I everyday go on the Internet and look at BMW cars. I have a collection nicest and best BMW’s photos. I even sometimes dream about BMW. I have watched several movies that are about the future and use cars like GINA. But the cars weren’t real, and I wonder if there will be a day when we can see those cars with our eyes. Now I saw my favorite car having this quality. Since I saw the movies, I have been thinking about it anytime I go to bed.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

In this chapter, Friedman talks about the policies developing countries must have succeed in the flattening world. The first step should be taken for a country is to look at the ten flatteners an d consider their place.  And the next step after that is having open or free marketing, which can rescue countries from poverty. A nation needs three things for development: infrastructure, appropriate education, and the right governance.
Besides those, nations should create “business-friendly environments” that make easy for businesses to be started, handled, and stopped.  Friedman talks about Ireland as the example of developing nation; as he said “the sick man of Europe to the rich man” and building infrastructure, education, and governance were what made them so. This proves that capital seeks for the most productive labor at the cheapest price rather than only the cheapest labor.
In addition, Friedman thinks that culture, which is a very controversial topic, influences a country’s economic performance, but it is one of the many elements. He says that open cultures can best apply and willing to the changes in the flattened world and closed cultures are fully the opposite.  He says that Arab-Muslim world has narrowed many nations’ growth.  The main phenomena in these countries is preventing women from working and entering public, which stop their development. 
Friedman believes that sometime a country has all proper elements, such as education, governance, and infrastructure, etc. except one. He names this missing element “the intangible things” and they are a willing society and leaders’ vision.  He gives China and Mexico as examples when China succeed but Mexico didn’t.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Freidman starts his presentation talking about how he got the idea of writing his book. After the big event of 9/11, he did some research in many places about how those people think of America. Once in India, he interviewed a man called Nandan. He said something to Friedman that made him think wonder it, which was “the global economic plain field has been leveled and you Americans are not ready”. Then he discovered that that man meant that world is becoming flat, and that is how he started his book. Then he makes an analogy between himself and Christopher Columbus. Columbus had to go west to get to India and he came up with the idea that the world is round. However, Friedman took east to get to India and he came up with that the world is flat.
Then, he explains the first chapter in his book and he divides globalizations into three eras. The first era is from 1492 till 1800s. The dynamic agent in this globalization era was countries and it converted the world from large to medium. The second era is from 1800s till 2000 which converted the world from medium to small, and the dynamic agent for this era companies. The last era is from 2000 and on which has converted the world from small to tiny and individuals are the dynamic agent of this era.
After that, he talks about the ten factors that made the world flat which he calls them “the flatteners”.  The first flattener is the fall of Berlin wall in 11/9/1989. This enabled the west and east communicated better. The second is the release of Netscape which enabled everyone uses the Internet for free. He called that “this brought the internet alive” because it was only for scientists and researchers before.  The next flattener is work flow which made possible for applications to be connected. This made easy and possible for people to work together from different places. These three created collaboration and other several things made this collaboration much easier which were: outsourcing, offshoring when China joined the world, open sourcing when Firefox and Linux were released, supply chining, insourcing and informing when Google was created and people could inform themselves by themselves. And the last flattener is the steroids which are wireless, voice over internet, file sharing, etc.
Finally, he explains the three convergences. The first convergence is when all the ten flatteners came working together and make everything in the world easier. After that, the businesses and everything in the world have had to horizetalize. This is a long process that continues for a long time. The last convergence is when China, India, and Russia began opening their economies to the world. He goes to the last chapter about the phenomena can be used. Now those tools are available for everyone, so they can be used for bad things and good things. He gives an example, and the example is an analysis between 9/11, the fall of the two trade tower in New York, and 11/9, the fall of Berlin Wall.
Now individuals are free and able to participate in the globalization very easily. Also because the world is flat, the next generation will be different from us. Also, governments and system affect the way countries participate in globalization. Some countries like Iraq, war has made so much effect. However, globalization cannot end wars and end the effect of geopolitics.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

In this blog post, I would like to talk about the four “flatteners” Thomas L. Friedman discussed in his book “The World Is Flat.”
·         Supply-Chaining:  Friedman makes a comparison between the modern retail supply chain and a river. He gives us his best example of a company using technology to streamline item sales, distribution, and shipping, which is Wal-Mart
·         Insourcing: FedEx and UPS not just delivering packages anymore. They are synchronizing global supply chains large and small.”  Insourcing is when a company's employees perform services – “beyond shipping” – for another company.  Friedman uses UPS as the prime example.
·         In-Forming:  Yahoo, MSN Web Search, and mainly Google are examples of In-Forming. However, Friedman uses Google as the prime example.  As he says, "now processing roughly one billion searches per day, up from 150 million just three years ago". Now people can get answers for any question they have in the world by simply writing it in Google search engine. From the creation of Goggle it has become possible and very easy to find so much information about so many things.
·         The Steroids: steroids are Personal digital devices like mobile phones, iPods, personal digital assistants, instant messaging, and voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP).

Besides the ten flatteners, Friedman gives "the triple convergence," three additional components that acted on the flatteners to create a new, flatter global playing field.

1.     Before 2000, the ten flatteners were semiautonomous from one another. However, around the year 2000, all the flatteners met in a point.  Each flattener improved the other flatteners; “the more one flattener developed, the more leveled the global playing field became.”
2.     After the appearance of the ten flatteners, businesses needed to collaborate horizontally instead of vertically, which means companies and people team up with other departments or companies to adjoin value creation or innovation.
3.     After the fall of the Berlin Wall, countries with Soviet economic model, such as India, China, Russia, and the nations of Eastern Europe, Latin America, and Central Asia, started opening up their economies to the world. This enhanced horizontal collaboration. Friedman names the Convergence III as the most effective factor of determining politics and economics in the early 21st century.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

In this blog post, I would like to talk about three of the ten “flatteners" Thomas L. Friedman discussed in his book “The World Is Flat”.
1.      Uploading is the third “flatteners" in his book. He thinks of it as "the most disruptive force of all."  Examples of uploading are open source software, Wikipedia, and blogs.
2.      Outsourcing is the fifth “flattener” in his book.  Friedman argues that outsourcing has permitted companies to divide service and manufacturing activities into parts that can be “subcontracted and performed in the most efficient, cost-effective way.”  Also, this became easier with the invention of World Wide Web
3.      Offshoring is the sixth flattener Friedman discusses. By offshoring, he means moving the interior company to other parts of the world.  For example, China goes in the World Trade Organization, and companies in United States go in job in China. 
In the last presentation for IT class, my group did something good or right and some other things wrong.  The first bad thing we did was that one of my team members was standing in front of the screen which blocked the audience from seeing the staff on the screen.  Second, the same member was very hesitant and so nervous that he couldn’t explain the staff he was responsible for well. His pronunciation was very bad. Also, we didn’t have the final draft of the presentation document. We played a rough draft which had many mistakes and less information.
My team did two things very good. First, we presented enough information, or a lot of information, about the topic. Second, we were able to answer to answer all of the audience’s questions correctly.
My team members and I should do several things for the next information. First, we all should work with our pronunciations and how stand, or in other word, how we act.  Also, we should make sure that we have the right data so that we will present everything we want.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

The writer, Thomas L. Friedman by the word “Flatteners” mean that nothing can be separated from each other because everything in the world is interconnected with each other through technology.
1.      The Collapse of Berlin Wall: on 11/09/1989, the Berlin Wall collapsed. In Friedman’s opinion, this event changed the world. He considers it a symbol as a general global shift toward democratic governments and free-market economies. After this, India changed its economy from a centrally planned economy to a free market economy.  Also after six months, Microsoft published Windows 3.0 which popularized personal computing.
2.      Netscape:  it was 8/9/1995 when World Wide Web was created. Before that, using the Internet required considerable computer expertise.  In the early 1990s, a scientist created named Tim Berners-Lee created a programming language for writing WebPages. It allowed users to store and share things. Netscape was available for every operating system like Microsoft, Apple and UNIX.
3.      Work Flow Software: Work flow software is software that enables workers in different locations to work together efficiently. Friedman gives the popular children’s program Higglytown Heroes as an example. The writers work at home different places far from each other.

I cannot imagine how our life would be now if these changes didn’t happen completely agree with the idea. I think it shifted our daily life. Now we can do things much easier and faster
The writer, Thomas L. Friedman by the word “Flatteners” mean that nothing can be separated from each other because everything in the world is interconnected with each other through technology.
1.      The Collapse of Berlin Wall: on 11/09/1989, the Berlin Wall collapsed. In Friedman’s opinion, this event changed the world. He considers it a symbol as a general global shift toward democratic governments and free-market economies. After this, India changed its economy from a centrally planned economy to a free market economy.  Also after six months, Microsoft published Windows 3.0 which popularized personal computing.
2.      Netscape:  it was 8/9/1995 when World Wide Web was created. Before that, using the Internet required considerable computer expertise.  In the early 1990s, a scientist created named Tim Berners-Lee created a programming language for writing WebPages. It allowed users to store and share things. Netscape was available for every operating system like Microsoft, Apple and UNIX.
3.      Work Flow Software: Work flow software is software that enables workers in different locations to work together efficiently. Friedman gives the popular children’s program Higglytown Heroes as an example. The writers work at home different places far from each other.

I cannot imagine how our life would be now if these changes didn’t happen completely agree with the idea. I think it shifted our daily life. Now we can do things much easier and faster

Sunday, April 17, 2011

The World Is Flat
While I was Sleeping

Thomas Friedman, the American genius writer, in the first chapter, While I was Sleeping, in his book, the World is Flat, talks about some facts and identifies some terms, concerning globalization and outsourcing.  Friedman divides human history into three different eras: globalization 01, 02, and 03. According to Friedman, Globalization began the moment that Columbus discovered that the world was round. He also goes further and shows how the stages affect life.  The main effect of globalization on society is acceleration and advancement of trade. In the end of the chapter, Friedman travels through Japan, China and back to America, and talks about different types of business outsourcing. He saw many things that show the phenomenon of business outsourcing, such as Pizza Hut, Epson, HP and Texas Instruments during a round of golf in India.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

As it is defined in Wikipedia, “open source” software is software that provides the source code. The source code which is copyrighted by the holder is available to all users. Therefore, the users can edit the software. When people hear the term “open source” software, they immediately think of Linus Torvalds, who founded Linux, a UNIX based operating.
Examples of open source software are Perl, PHP, and Python, which are computer programming languages.  Another example is Linux, which is an operating system. Also, Apache, which is server software, and OpenOffice, which is a desktop application, are examples of open source software
Actually, it is not appropriate to whether open source is better than proprietary software because both have benefits. Open source developers get the software and they are not doing that for profit, which is the sole open source’s copyright. However, proprietary software companies‘main intent is to profit. If they don’t work to protect their product, somebody will steal the software and sell it, in  which case they will lose their money they have invested in and their entire job.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Kurzwel wants to show us how significantly shift the world and many issues we have had. He shows why some people make wrong prediction about the future; he says that when people make a prediction about solving a problem, they use the same tools and technology we have today. However, he says we have to consider the changes and the growth in all the part will occur in our prediction.  He gives an example to show what he says; several decades ago, more than 5oo million people were in poverty, but now it is becoming about 200 million. So, technology growth can help us solve many problems like it is mentioned. Also, He talks about how the insisters are becoming smaller and smaller and cheaper at the same time. He believes that nano-engineered designs have a huge significant role in this growth. From his study, he makes some prediction about where technology would be in the next decades