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Technology and the urban citizen

The immense popularity of smartphone apps has not only helped to create better interaction between businesses and their customers, but also between cities and their citizens. One example comes from the UK capital, London, with the launch in 2011 of a “Love Clean London” app, which the mayor, Boris Johnson, hopes will help to clean up the city’s streets and parks. Residents can snap a photo of an offending item of litter, graffiti or vandalism; the app files it and records the exact location.

Robotics on the rise

Robots are hardly new to manufacturing. By the end of 2010 over 1m industrial robots had been installed globally. Ongoing improvements in artificial intelligence, as well as faster and cheaper computing, are all helping to drive new advances. The automotive sector has long been the biggest source of robotics demand, but as robots have become cheaper and more sophisticated, other industries are starting to adopt them.

A new model for the law firm

Many experts believe that the legal industry is especially ripe for innovation. Rimon Law Group is one example of a legal partnership that is experimenting with a range of alternative practices to create a smaller, nimbler organisation using technology to network a disparate team of legal specialists.

Shell: new platforms for collaboration

Among the pressing challenges that the energy sector faces in the decade ahead is that demand for its product is surging with the expansion of the global middle class, just as oil and gas are getting technically more challenging to find and extract. This in turn raises enormous engineering challenges.

Bridging the online-physical divide

High Street fashion stores have so far remained largely unaffected by the growth of online shopping. “There is much talk about whether online [shopping] would decimate the sector, but we’re in a better position having brick-andmortar stores to support a digital offering,” says Mike Shearwood, the chief executive officer (CEO) of Aurora Fashions, a global chain of brands that includes Coast, Oasis and Warehouse, with nearly 1,300 stores in 33 countries.

Broad: A new generation

Zhang Yue, the president and chief executive officer of Broad, a private Hunan-based manufacturer of air-conditioners, heating systems and air purifiers, is among China’s new generation of entrepreneurs. While many of China’s companies compete on price, Mr Zhang has put his faith in developing Broad’s technology and a strong service model to build his company.

Competition spurs innovation: Li Ning counts on R&D and supply chain management

Li Ning, China’s largest domestic sportswear brand, not only needs to fend off multinational sportswear giants Nike and Adidas, but also needs to stay ahead of its increasingly savvy domestic rivals, including brands such as Anta and 361°. Such mounting competitive pressure has turned into a major driver for innovation, confirms Guo Jianxin, Li Ning’s chief operating officer.

Delhi’s Mission Convergence: Welfare to the People

Launched in 2008, “Mission Convergence” is an ICT-driven, high-priority and award-winning initiative of the government of Delhi to bring welfare benefits to the city’s poorest residents. It “converges” Delhi’s nine social welfare departments and 46 welfare schemes into a single, eenabled delivery channel. Rashmi Singh, director of the mission, explains, “We are taking welfare entitlements to the poorest’s doorstep, not as a favor but as a duty.” With an estimated 4m of Delhi’s 17m residents now classified as economically vulnerable, this is a much needed effort.

The fertile crescent

Despite its diminutive size, Israel ranks fourth among 66 nations in the R&D category of the IT industry competitiveness index. Home to just 7.3m inhabitants, the Middle Eastern country has an impressive track record of innovation, supported by high levels of military and commercial research and a high-quality education system.

Coping with India’s talent crunch

Rising international competition and the demand for more valueadded services means that India’s IT outsourcers need talent in spades. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), India’s biggest IT company, now employs 14 0,000 workers and is striving to ensure that the supply of skilled, low-cost labour does not run dry.

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