Week 1 Agenda Course Outline Course Overview Lecture

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Week 1 Agenda Course Outline Course Overview Lecture Topic: The Evolution of Telecommunications into

Week 1 Agenda Course Outline Course Overview Lecture Topic: The Evolution of Telecommunications into the Internet, and the Internet into Business • First, a little housekeeping • Office Hours: Normally Friday 13: 00 -14: 00 ish in WMC 3327 • •

Objectives of BUS 466 • To establish a general sense of literacy about the

Objectives of BUS 466 • To establish a general sense of literacy about the Internet, how it is applied to Business, and specifically about new applications and opportunities, such as Web 2. 0 • To explore Web applications and technologies, and discuss how they are or can be applied in a business environment • To go in-depth to a particular sub-topic and research its application, and possibly develop a prototype to show its function 2

The Genesis • Social Networking/Web 2. 0 is somewhat revolutionary in terms of its

The Genesis • Social Networking/Web 2. 0 is somewhat revolutionary in terms of its rate of development • Millenials ‘reverse mentoring’ Boomers 3

Skills • To understand key issues in the digital networked economy • to get

Skills • To understand key issues in the digital networked economy • to get in the habit of critically reading and understanding news in the area • Facebook faces constant challenges about its privacy implications • Will Google+ make Facebook Myspace? • Is the cloud the end of privacy? 4

Skills • To understand the fundamentals of networking, and Internetworking • how the Internet

Skills • To understand the fundamentals of networking, and Internetworking • how the Internet works, and how applications can, and do function on the Internet • how Web 2. 0 technologies, such as MUVEs, blogs, wikis, mashups, RSS, and others work • how these Web 2. 0 technologies are being, or could be, used in business 5

Course Outline • 15% Participation / Seminar Contributions • 30% Technology Presentations • 30%

Course Outline • 15% Participation / Seminar Contributions • 30% Technology Presentations • 30% Final Examination • 25% Term Project 6

Reference Materials • Discussion questions are assigned periodically on the course web page •

Reference Materials • Discussion questions are assigned periodically on the course web page • http: //bus 466. com • Usually they focus on some posted reading, supplemented either by a library article downloadable for reading, or a reference to information or an article on a website • The first one will start next week… 7

Final • A case situation where we will look at how a business could

Final • A case situation where we will look at how a business could use the materials we have discussed over the term. 8

Technology Presentations • Every week group(s) will bring forward a relevant technology and present

Technology Presentations • Every week group(s) will bring forward a relevant technology and present for discussion what the technology is, where it fits in relation to Internet applications, how businesses are using it, and why it is interesting. • MUVE • Wiki • blogs • social networking apps 9

Gartner’s 2013 Hype Cycle

Gartner’s 2013 Hype Cycle

Technology Presentations • I will start the presentations in week 3 with a discussion

Technology Presentations • I will start the presentations in week 3 with a discussion of a Web 2. 0 technology that has some interesting business opportunities • Yammer 11

Technology Presentations • Your task in the next two weeks is to form a

Technology Presentations • Your task in the next two weeks is to form a group of 4 (a group of 4 is typically comprised of between 3 and 5 persons) • You are to meet and discuss Web 2. 0 applications and technologies, find one of mutual interest • In week 3, we will discuss your selections • There is a course wiki being set up on which you can discuss ideas online. I will demonstrate it at the beginning of next week. • https: //wiki. sfu. ca/summer 14/bus 466 d 100 12

Technology Presentations • Once approved (dealing with duplications, clarifying the issues, etc. ), you

Technology Presentations • Once approved (dealing with duplications, clarifying the issues, etc. ), you should explore the technology • general classification • related alternatives • The private course wiki will have a page with schedule preferences starting next week. • Then go look at who is using it, and what innovative business opportunities there are for this technology 13

Technology Presentations • First come, first served. There is a course wiki. We will

Technology Presentations • First come, first served. There is a course wiki. We will discuss how to access and use it, and the first group to post their topic on a wiki page about group presentations owns that topic. • The wiki is linked on the course web page. • https: //wiki. sfu. ca/fall 14/bus 466 d 100/ 14

Term Papers • There is another wiki, on which past term’s students prepared entries

Term Papers • There is another wiki, on which past term’s students prepared entries in lieu of term papers. We tried a couple of different media, but the consensus so far was this format: http: //parker. bus. sfu. ca/bus 466 bok • It is my hope that we can extend this to continue evolving a ‘body of knowledge’ • We will discuss topics next week • For this term, I hope we can find new topics to add to this project 15

Weekly Seminar Format • • • 30 - 50 minutes What’s new in technology

Weekly Seminar Format • • • 30 - 50 minutes What’s new in technology this week? new applications legal issues significant, interesting events ~ up to 1 hour Seminar discussion text and readings material ~ 1 to 1. 5 hours Technology presentations, discussions 16

General Topic Suggestions • • Explore a web technology in depth what it is

General Topic Suggestions • • Explore a web technology in depth what it is who is using it, and for what purpose describe an application of it in depth • • • Such as. . . Mashups describe their origins, development, growth give examples of applications of mashups do a case study of an organization cleverly using them, and what they gain from them OR, build a mashup to show its potential for a club, business, or key application If you are curious, have a look at Yahoo Pipes • • 17

General Topic Suggestions • Compare a business that is using an innovative Web 2.

General Topic Suggestions • Compare a business that is using an innovative Web 2. 0 technology with one that isn’t • what is the cost of the investment? • what are they gaining? • who is winning? 18

General Topic Suggestions • You could also look at a phenomenon, like the permanent

General Topic Suggestions • You could also look at a phenomenon, like the permanent loss of control of peoples’ privacy with new Web 2. 0 applications • For example, a group presented ‘freeconomics’ and discussed the notion of ‘free’ things on the web, and what the costs are, and what the business models are. • Google doesn’t sell much, but they could buy General Motors if they felt like it. 19

General Topic Suggestions • I am open to suggestions • Form a group, discuss

General Topic Suggestions • I am open to suggestions • Form a group, discuss the topic for your technology presentation • We will spend some time next week discussing both the technology presentations and the term paper topics 20

General Topic Suggestions • Explore a general Web 2. 0 technology in an overview

General Topic Suggestions • Explore a general Web 2. 0 technology in an overview format • what is it • where did it come from • how old is it • who is using it • what are they gaining from it 21

General Topic Suggestions • Advocacy of a Social Media technology that could change something…

General Topic Suggestions • Advocacy of a Social Media technology that could change something… – Online cyberbullying, and the devastating consequences – Facebook’s automatic facial tagging technology – Couldn’t they work to fix this?

Another potential twist • Want to try a backchannel here? http: //todaysmeet. com/bus 466

Another potential twist • Want to try a backchannel here? http: //todaysmeet. com/bus 466 • Twitter: #bus 466 23

Discussion Question How old is the Internet? 24

Discussion Question How old is the Internet? 24

The Internet • It actually evolved over a long, long time… 25

The Internet • It actually evolved over a long, long time… 25

Telegraph • Samuel F. B. Morse received a patent in 1838 • Hence the

Telegraph • Samuel F. B. Morse received a patent in 1838 • Hence the name Morse code • The first message was sent from Washington to Baltimore on 24 th of May 1844 • Western Union Telegraph & Co was founded in 1856 • Morse code was dropped as a US Navy communication medium in 1998 26

Transatlantic Cable • London was still world financial centre in the mid 1800 s

Transatlantic Cable • London was still world financial centre in the mid 1800 s • Peabody & Company (predecessor of J. P. Morgan & Company) funded a project to lay the first transatlantic cable for telegraph • Started in 1856, completed 1858 • Queen Victoria’s congratulatory message to President Buchanan took 16 hours to transmit • Three weeks later the cable broke • A more reliable cable was laid in 1866 between St. Johns, Newfoundland Valentia, Ireland • Immensely useful business tool 27

Telephone • Charles Bourseul had the original idea of transmitting sound over electric waves

Telephone • Charles Bourseul had the original idea of transmitting sound over electric waves • 1876 Alexander Graham Bell patented his telephone • He asked Western Telegraph Company to buy his patent for $100, 000: • "What shall we do with a toy like that? " 28

Wireless • Friedrich Hertz discovered the electromagnetic wave in 1888 • Wireless was born

Wireless • Friedrich Hertz discovered the electromagnetic wave in 1888 • Wireless was born • Guglielmo Marchese Marconi exploited this discovery • 1901 he bridged the Atlantic with his wireless telegraphy 29

Bell Labs • Lucent Bell labs is the springboard of many of today’s communications

Bell Labs • Lucent Bell labs is the springboard of many of today’s communications (and computer) technologies • “Its employees have generated more than 40, 000 inventions since 1925. The average home contains at least 25 products that stem from Bell Labs innovations, including phones, TVs, remote controls, VCRs, radios, stereos, CD players, and computers” 30

Transistors • 1947 Bell labs invented the transistor • Some team members left Bell

Transistors • 1947 Bell labs invented the transistor • Some team members left Bell Labs and founded Fairchild semiconductor • Gordon Moore, Robert Noyce left Fairchild in 1967 to found Intel • Gordon Moore made a famous prediction in 1965 • “the doubling of transistors every couple of years“ • Now known as Moore’s Law 31

Newer Technologies Yet • Satellites were developed in the 1960 s for communication purposes

Newer Technologies Yet • Satellites were developed in the 1960 s for communication purposes • Optical fiber in 1966 (use of light to transmit data) • 1995: Nortel has a ‘proof of concept’ school in the United Kingdom that runs packets over electricity transmission lines 32

DARPANET (WAN) • DARPANET, Interface Message Processors (later know as routers), and TCP/IP were

DARPANET (WAN) • DARPANET, Interface Message Processors (later know as routers), and TCP/IP were invented • First attempt at data networking 33

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1969: First IP packet sent 1969:

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1969: First IP packet sent 1969: Arpa. NET commissioned by US DOD 1973: England Norway Join 1981: BITNET emerges at CUNY 1983: Domain Names were invented 1986: NSFNet created 34

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1990: First web server online 1991:

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1990: First web server online 1991: Commercial Access 1993: Mosaic hits WWW 1994: Yahoo arrives 1994: NREN established 1995: e. Bay, Amazon and Craigslist 1995: Commercial ‘Ownership’ 1995: August 9 – Netscape IPO 1996: Governmental Control Issues Emerge 35

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1996: Intranets Emerge 1996/1997: Extranets Appear

Evolution of the Internet Itself • • • 1996: Intranets Emerge 1996/1997: Extranets Appear 1997: Birth of Internet 2 Back to its roots Research Institutions Pulling Out 1998: Google’s IPO 2000: Dot Com Fiasco 2001: First Wikipedia entry 2003: Friendster 2004: Web 2. 0 36

The PC Revolution • Microsoft was founded in 1975 • “A PC on every

The PC Revolution • Microsoft was founded in 1975 • “A PC on every desk and in every home” • The proliferation of PCs gave the world an access device • Now it is a matter of connecting them 37

Novell • The company that brought the world Novell Netware • Local Area Networks

Novell • The company that brought the world Novell Netware • Local Area Networks were born 38

Telecom • Deregulation and new forms of competition has changed the industry significantly •

Telecom • Deregulation and new forms of competition has changed the industry significantly • Convergence is finally starting in earnest – – Telephone Mobile Phone Television Internet Access 39

For Next Week • Read the chapter and Mc. Kinsey article linked on the

For Next Week • Read the chapter and Mc. Kinsey article linked on the course website: http: //bus 466. com/schedule. html 40

A small favor • In order to get to know you, I would appreciate

A small favor • In order to get to know you, I would appreciate access to your name, a photograph, and your concentration(s). – I will show you how to post them on the private wiki. – This is not mandatory. – Would you rather email them to me privately? • Please email me with ANY concerns. I respect your privacy. 41

For next week • There is an article by Kim, Lee and Lee available

For next week • There is an article by Kim, Lee and Lee available in the library. – Please go to the course website bus 466. com and get the reference for the article in the syllabus. – Then go to the ‘library quick links’ link, and highlight the article name. It will find it within the Simon Fraser University library, and you can read or copy it. We will briefly discuss its implications next week.

For next week • Please give Media. Wiki a try and introduce yourself •

For next week • Please give Media. Wiki a try and introduce yourself • Your name, major, relevant interests… – Note: This is a private wiki that only current BUS 466 registrants can access – If you are not comfortable putting a photo of yourself online, I understand. Please let me know in confidence. wiki. sfu. ca/summer 14/bus 466 d 100 Go to the ‘about us’ page, log in, choose ‘edit’ and see if you can figure out how to upload a photo and add it to the list (hint: upload the file first, then link to it. Note it is case sensitive)