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This episode of The 10 Minute Leadership Podcast was inspired by an article I found in the Harvard Business Review named "The Praise of the Incomplete Leader." The article was written by Deborah Ancona, Thomas W. Malone, Wanda J. Orlikowski, and Peter M. Senge. This inspiring article talks about how incomplete leaders are in fact complete. The overarching theme of the article has to do with humility, which is a fantastic leadership trait. Have a good listen, and thank you for tuning in! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/oren-hertz/support
Tom talks to Chris Bishop, a man on his eighth career who now helps others to future-proof theirs. Tom and Chris chat about how music became data in 1985, why the best advice is to "chase the maelstrom", and why the future doesn't care how you became an expert (courtesy of Thomas W. Malone). Find out more about Chris at this places: Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisbishop LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christopherbishop123/ Website: https://improvisingcareers.com/ And check out his Future Career Toolkit - part of his LinkedIn Learning course called "Future proofing your data science career". Interested? There's a 90-second overview on Vimeo here: https://vimeo.com/448958551.
“Nenhum de nós é tão forte quanto todos nós juntos”. Você já deve ter ouvido falar essa frase clichê, mas ela é tão atual hoje quanto nunca, inclusive quando se fala de robôs. Lógico que os robôs podem ser mais fortes, mais rápidos e mais inteligentes, mas cada robô é desenhado para uma solução específica, enquanto nós somos multitarefas e altamente adaptáveis. Juntas, essas características foram uma parceria imparável e este é o tema principal do Digital de Tudo desta edição, baseado no artigo do professor Thomas W. Malone “How Human-Computer ‘Superminds’ Are Redefining the Future of Work” publicado na MIT Sloan Management Review. Neste episódio você também vai ouvir sobre como o Povo Paul é superior a inteligência artificial da Goldman Sachs que tentou prevê o resultado da Copa e não foi tão bem sucedida, ficamos sabendo da patente do Uber que descobre se um passageiro está bêbado e falamos sobre implantes que podem ser controlados à distância.
A conversation about the theory and practice of collective intelligence, with emphasis on Wikipedia, other instances of aggregated intellectual work and on recent innovative applications in product development for both large and small businesses. Thomas Malone, founding director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence, will anchor the discussion. Thomas W. Malone is the Patrick J. McGovern Professor of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management. He is also the founder and director of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence and author of the book The Future of Work. Malone has published over 75 articles, research papers, and book chapters and is an inventor with 11 patents.