Technology and innovation perspectives from The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
IoT Business Index 2017: Transformation in Motion

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Moving towards real-time commerce

Retailers, particularly high-street fashion buyers, have traditionally decided what to put in their shops with a mixture of finger-in-the-air speculation and their own attempts to influence the market. Last year’s trends are no predictor of what will be popular this year, so there is a substantial element of gut and guesswork.

The Paris climate change talks: what will success look like?

As the Paris Climate Change Conference (also known as COP21) gets underway, The EIU's senior editor, Martin Koehring, examines what it will take for the talks to deliver ambitious outcomes that will have a real impact on tackling climate change.

Unlocking innovation in China

Staying the course?

To invest or not to invest

Computing with emotions

Affective computing is the use of sensors and data analytics to detect human emotions. Do we need new rules to govern its use?

The economic impact of energy storage

The ability to store energy effectively has the potential to revolutionise the energy market – and the global economy too

Harnessing cloud technology

While there are plenty of agile, ambitious start-ups set on using cloud technology to disrupt and innovate businesses models, multinationals too can be found at the bleeding edge of cloud-based business innovation. If these multinationals succeed, expect seismic shifts across both the public and private sectors, reverberating across all industry sectors.

Harnessing cloud technology

"Virtual” instructors help Ambow personalise education

Ambow Education is a Beijing-based, privately held company founded in 2000 that provides personalised online and in-class education to schoolchildren and university students, as well as online educational programs for corporate clients. Its business model relies on personalisation in several ways. For example, Ambow has relationships with more than 100 universities to deliver vocational training that is customised according to the needs of businesses near each university.

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