Archive for 2007

FORTUNE Innovation Forum interview with Brad Anderson of Best Buy

Friday, January 5th, 2007

Brad%20Anderson%20Best%20Buy.jpgAt the FORTUNE Innovation Forum last year in New York, Geoffrey Colvin of FORTUNE magazine interviewed Brad Anderson, CEO of Best Buy, live on stage at the Time Warner Center. You can click on the links below to listen to the three parts of the interview:

Part 1 of Interview with Brad Anderson

Part 2 of Interview with Brad Anderson

Part 3 of Interview with Brad Anderson (including questions from audience)

If you’d like to follow along with a (partial) text transcript of the interview, please check out the following post on the Business Innovation Insider: Day 1, 4:45 pm: Bradbury Anderson of Best Buy.

The New York Times Magazine: The Year in Ideas

Thursday, January 4th, 2007

New%20York%20Times%20Year%20in%20Ideas%206.jpgOne of my favorite year-end lists comes from The New York Times Magazine, which for six years has been putting together a list of the most important and influential ideas of the year every December. Even if you read an impressive number of blogs, subscribe to FORTUNE magazine and occasionally pick up the random issue of Scientific American or Popular Science, there’s a good chance that you would have missed about half of the 70-75 ideas the Times comes up with each year. Anyway, here’s the intro to the 6th annual Year in Ideas from New York Times Magazine:

“This month, as in the past five Decembers, the magazine looks back on the passing year from a distinctive vantage point: that of ideas. Our editors and writers have located the peaks and valleys of ingenuity - the human cognitive faculty deployed with intentions good and bad, purposes serious and silly, consequences momentous and morbid. The resulting intellectual mountain range extends across a wide territory. Now it’s yours for the traversing in a compendium of 74 ideas arranged from A to Z.”

Among the ideas worth checking out: empty-stomach intelligence, digital Maoism, psychological neoteny, the truth of workplace rumors, the LifeStraw, smart elevators, and my personal favorite: walk-in health care.

The Web 2.0 companies you can’t live without

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007

Web%202.0%20cloudmap.jpg

Michael Arrington of the influential Tech Crunch site has put together a list of his favorite Web 2.0 companies and products of 2006. The list includes the fifteen products or services that he uses everyday and couldn’t do without:

* 800-Free-411
* Amie Street
* Ask City

* Blue Dot
* Digg
* Flickr
* Flock
* Gmail
* NetNewsWire
* NetVibes
* Pandora
* Skype

* TechMeme
* WordPress
* YouTube

[image: Web 2.0, courtesy of Markus Angermeier]