Vague but complicated turned 1 today!Happy New Year
perfect
Though Google has become the US face of the driverless car movement, other companies have been developing similar technology for more than a decade. Mobileye is one of them, with a $10 billion valuation and a huge head start in a potentially enormous market. Professor David Yoffie discusses why a company many have never heard of will be a linchpin in the future of self-driving automobiles.
Listen here.
Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?
“Fillmore. Geary. Stockton. Mission. Polk. Van Ness. The names of San Francisco’s bus lines still come easily to my mind more than half a decade after working at the city’s transit agency. In my time there, I religiously rode all 66 bus lines, stopwatch and clipboard in hand, trying to find any way to make the buses run faster.
Trundling up, down, and around the city’s iconic hills from downtown to hipster mecca to beachfront village, I saw that the freedom of movement enjoyed by San Franciscans, no matter their age, race, income, or neighborhood, depends on the buses that roll through the city’s streets, like blood running through veins.
Seeing how basic bus service both empowers and limits the lives of San Franciscans, I began to formulate my vision of an ideal city: a place where all people have the freedoms and opportunities they need to pursue their full potential. Over the years, I have found no better way for city governments to work toward this ideal than to apply the lessons of management science to do the things that really matter—keeping the schools open, preventing crime, picking up the trash, and providing public transit, just to name a few.
But improving the way cities are run can’t happen overnight. It will take a collective effort over years, decades even. By definition building an ideal city should be impossible, but to me that’s precisely what makes it worth doing.
I think I’ll start by getting those buses to run on time.” —Tedde Tsang (MBA 2014)
Each year we ask MBA students a question taken from the last lines of a poem by Pulitzer Prize-winning author, Mary Oliver. Read more:
http://hbs.me/1RvpLjp
Only one way?
(via Steven Kenny – Surrealism (A Way of Life) – Guest Blog)
Touch
just a little
Just a little tease
90 posts