Sunday's Boston Globe Magazine section had a feature on "best places to work" and many smaller articles on the modern workplace. I thought a few of these had bearing on knowledge workers.
All tagged cycling
Sunday's Boston Globe Magazine section had a feature on "best places to work" and many smaller articles on the modern workplace. I thought a few of these had bearing on knowledge workers.
Chris Grams writes "Three tips for escaping the creativity peloton without giving up on collaboration" and Robert Scoble gives us "Coming soon: the disruptive molecular age of information." Both contain interesting metaphors.
Tour de France 2007: Vinokourov tests positive; Astana withdraws from Tour. Too bad.
Someone from my local cycling club forwarded a link to David Byrne's journal entry on "Bicycles in NYC." While I've never had the pleasure of cycling in NYC, I have biked in Philadelphia and Chicago.
I just rediscovered this ride report from my friend Barry Reich. Several of us went on the 1994 Pennsylvania Dutch MS150 together. Barry recounts the fun and the misery with brevity and wit.
This isn't a full report on knowledge management at Cervelo, but a reference from Cycle Sport on how they use some intelligence when working with professional cyclists.
This is a wonderful rememberance from Chris Carmichael on just how bad things had gotten for Lance when he attempted to come back to the professional peloton in 1998.
I really need to come up with more non-home-office destinations, so I can cycle to them. Even worse, I'll be traveling during the Tour de France, and I am worried that I won't have Outdoor Life Network at the hotel.