Free wireless net access for everyone

A Silicon.com leader asks: "Should the UK offer free wireless internet access everywhere and to everyone?" The answer seems to be "yes, but the ISPs won’t like it" – one of the anonymous commenters argues that, because of this, it won’t happen.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/free_wireless_n/

Contract Journal IT survey

Contract Journal reports that ‘Four out of five construction firms plan increased IT spend’, according to a CJ study of 500 people conducted with Causeway Technologies.

It gives a fairly positive view of construction’s attitude to IT, with some 79% saying their firms were increasing their IT spend. Process efficiency and compatibility with existing systems were seen as the most important considerations, scoring more highly than customer and supplier relationships, and, more surprisingly, price.

Perhaps most worryingly, many still felt the industry is regarded as technophobic, making it harder to recruit young people into the sector.

In the print edition of CJ, the survey gets more coverage and includes some findings on collaboration: "collaboration tools are not yet considered highly important. About a quarter of respondents scored them a five, but more than half thought they were only worth one to three in terms of importance. The types of company that saw them as important were civil engineering contractors (30% awarding a five) and building contractors (29%)."

On the face of it, these are disappointing findings for the extranet vendors. But perhaps we should look more closely at the kinds of businesses surveyed. The other three business categories were plant hirers (hardly likely to be heavy users of collaboration), specialist contractors, and "other" (classed as clients and consultants primarily). Arguably, the latter are the ones most likely to benefit from using collaboration tools – certainly, the highest levels of collaboration tend to be experienced during the design phase before contractors get heavily involved. I would like to see the same types of questions asked of architects, engineers, QSs, project managers. I suspect the proportion of these professionals rating collaboration a five would be much higher.

Another interpretation of the numbers could relate to whether the survey respondents had actually ever used the technologies in question. Lack of familiarity may mean individuals persevere with traditional information-sharing methodologies and believe these to be sufficient. Wider experience of extranets may see demand for them grow – certainly, I have met very few project team members who, after using an extranet, want to go back to the old way of doing things.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/contract_journa-2/

Islington mile-long hot-spot

Heading home from London St Pancras station last night, my tube train rumbled through Angel tube station. If I had wanted free wi-fi access, I could have jumped off there and walked along Upper Street. Islington Council has apparently created a mile-long wi-fi hotspot along this busy London thoroughfare – see Silicon.com article Council provides wireless internet.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/islington_milel/

Victim of T-Mobile Hotspot

Mystified by my short post yesterday? Blame the Whitehouse Hotel, Kegworth in Derbyshire (where I was staying prior to talking to the East Midlands branch of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors). While a blessed minority of hotels (and other establishments) treat their guests to free wi-fi access, the afore-mentioned hotel thinks its guests will jump at the chance – not! – of paying £5 for an hour’s broadband access, courtesy of T-Mobile (complete, irritatingly, with a German version of Google!). After entering my credit card details, I got online and, after dealing with my emails, had just two or three minutes in which to complete my post.

As I have said before, I reckon that there are many UK businesses that could improve their reputations and tempt more new customers through their doors if they were to offer free wi-fi access. In the US, numerous sandwich bars and coffee-shops, book-sellers and hotels offer free broadband; in the UK, it’s rarer, but I would certainly put Best Western on my list (the Best Western Westminster in nearby Nottingham, for example, has free Wi-fi in the public areas), and I note that the venue of next Tuesday’s NCCTP conference – the SAS Radisson at Portman Square in London also offers free broadband to its residents.

Meanwhile, I note from Silicon.com yet more announcements about 22Mbps and 24Mbps broadband services.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/victim_of_tmobi/

Construction Computing Show, first day

Met lots of familiar faces during the first day of the Construction Computing Show at the Barbican in London – not least because BIW is sharing a stand with its fellow NCCTP members. Gave a lunchtime seminar presentation with Duncan Mactear of 4Projects which seemed to go well. Pushed the NCCTP conference a bit – it will really be good. Go!!!

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/construction_co-7/

Cadweb say “Death to folders!”

There are new developments afoot at Cadweb. Its latest news release quotes extensively from an Economist Technology Quarterly article which predicts the end of the nested directories of folders and files familiar to many computer users. Instead, it seems we will have built-in powerful search engines, ‘tagged files’ and ‘smart folders’. With version 7 of Cadweb’ extranet apparently now due for release in January 2006, does this mean that Cadweb is finally going to move away from a folders-based extranet system? Or is it simply trying put a positive spin on a system that will still essentially be folders-based?

To be honest, I didn’t find much new in the Economist article (usefully, colleague Steve Cooper had a hard copy of the 17 September Quarterly; online, you need to pay for the premium content – dated 15 September). For instance, relational database-based construction collaboration systems such as BIW’s have been using file ‘attributes’ or ‘tags’ to provide additional ways to search and index files for some years now.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/cadweb_say_deat/

Mangofile

Ever heard of Mangofile? I hadn’t – until I followed this IT Showcase link. Apparently, Mangofile is a virtual filing cabinet solution which, when combined with a PC and scanner, can remove all the piles of paper you might have scattered around your office. One of the case studies is from UK AEC business Carillion.

The "interesting facts from Mangofile about paper document management costs" were, well … interesting:

  • 95% of all information is stored on paper
  • Each document filed costs £14.00.
  • 80% of a secretary’s day is spent finding or filing paper-based information.
  • 60% of the worker’s time is spent working with documents.
  • A Document, once filed, is referred to on average once every 2 years.
  • Documents are copied 19 times on average.
  • Each document misfiled costs £84.00.
  • A company’s stored documents double every 5 years.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/mangofile/

‘old DOS trying to do new tricks’

I liked John Naughton’s article, Pitiful spectacle of an old DOS trying to do new tricks, in yesterday’s Observer newspaper – not least for the witty title, but also for his analysis of Microsoft’s ‘On Demand’ vision announced last week (see my post).

He mentions Harvard academic Clayton Christensen, who looked at why successful companies can fail to cope with disruptive technologies. "[He] shows that even well-managed firms with established products miss the next big wave in their industries unless their leaders know when to abandon their traditional business practices." ‘How can great firms fail?’ Naughton asks, before closing: "Watching Gates and co fudging the issue of web services on Tuesday suggested a simple answer: easily."

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/i_liked_john_na/

Buildingtalk.com

I like the weekly news service from Buildingtalk.com. It’s full of the nitty-gritty of routine UK construction industry PR, with lots of press releases about products and a few about software – most of which are published free – an invaluable service to hard-pressed PR and marketing people.

I recently used it to post a news release about BIW’s support for the forthcoming NCCTP conference (see the result here). If you are interested in learning more about construction collaboration technologies – aka ‘extanets’ – (whether a beginner or someone with a more advanced understanding of the sector), I reckon you would be hard-pushed to find a better conference than this anywhere!

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/buildingtalkcom/

Welcome back, Nathan

My Asite bloggers post has been picked up by one of the chaps I spoke about, Nathan at Free collaboration – fresh back from India and moving house.

(I have pointed out to him that his comment regarding Sainsbury’s being a former BIW client is a little inaccurate – they remain a valued BIW customer and have been since the late 1990s, having undertaken over 600 projects using the BIW Information Channel extranet. Can’t think where he got the impression that I was comparing Asite to "a bulky law firm or a bank in the city", though.)

Nathan is kind enough to say that he has bought (from Amazon) and started to read my book. I look forward to reading the review, Nathan.

Clicking on the Amazon link this evening, I found that I had climbed to 84,694th in the Amazon sales rankings (up from 138,000-ish when I checked around four weeks ago) and second among my various name-sakes.

Permanent link to this article: https://extranetevolution.com/2005/11/welcome_back_na/

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