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Musings

Junk Technology

Have you noticed that there are so many technology features that put you in double whammy. Firstly you had to pay a premium to have this unproved, untested feature with dubious claims of efficiency/coolness. Secondly they make you spend more and increase the ownership cost of your assets. Essentially they turn out to be a marketing channels that does not serve your interests.
car diagnostics
It is easy to add sensors and technology into anything but does this do any good? Our phones and gadgets are over-loaded with features that we have never used. When will technology stop being a tick in a check-box of a comparison sheet and start playing a vital role. To me a useful technology is one that boosts productivity and reduces wastage. Am I asking too much?

Categories
Musings

Diye ke tale andhera

Tools and processes are there to facilitate people and foster productivity & compliance. An ideal tool would enable its users to create reports, submit forms, automate the approvals, track progress and check eligibility and get reimbursed without having to run around the office getting signatures of concerned persons/departments. They need to have a standardized interface that will allow the necessary person see a summary (with items relevant to them) while having flexibility of drilling down to details, statistics of similar claims & trends. It should guide
However today tools & IT/ERP systems have become counter-productive and have forgotten its original purpose. Tool down/ system down are common. Deviation/exception required to conduct normal business, manual intervention to expedite the process, manual follow-ups/reminders, paperwork should happen once in a blue moon. If their frequency is rising, then the tool has lost its relevance and should be scrapped in favor of a better process. Sometimes the whole process is so frustrating that you believe that a non IT enabled company with manual book-keeping is more efficient.
For those of you who are wondering the meaning of the title, it means “base of a lamp is always dark”. Indian IT firms are providing technology & ERP solutions to the world, but somehow they forgot implementing some of these best practices in-house. Could somebody educate them that for any tool/system the stake holders are not just the department that commissioned the implementation, but actual employees who are going to use the system & do the data entry.