Recent Posts
- Watch the trailer of Academy Award Nominee for Documentary Short “China’s Unnatural Disaster”, from HBO
- Watch Bruce McCall’s “faux nostalgia” talk at TED
- Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-03-14
- Living in China: Report Shows Severity of Pollution
- Living in China: 85% of Chinese families can’t afford houses
- Watch Xiao Qiang’s “China’s Digital Revolution” Interview for BBC
- Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-03-07
Most Popular Articles
- Look Into the Future with Autodesk Labs: Multi touch wall
- Internet in China: What Do Chinese Internet Users Do Online?
- Autodesk Makes "BusinessWeek 50", A Ranking of the Best Performers in S&P 500 Index
- China, Socialism & Consumer Behavior: In a Tidal Shift, Chinese Spending More Overseas
- China, Socialism & Consumer Behavior
- Finance industry employees in China top salary rankings
- Chinese Calligraphy: Master Yue Le
Most Popular Topics
japan education 3D software Report information technology behavior google Xinhua artist revenue architecture Yuan Asia architect consumer behavior designer Autodesk Internet Users China Interaction Design Living In China United States environment Game entertainment Infrastructure design Mobile Phones energy Living In Shanghai Chinese Government TED conference Shanghai Internet In China Beijing Chinese People internet sustainable sustainability Statistics
Tag Archives: Knowledge worker
Watch Jacob Burghardt’s “UX Opportunity Mapping for Knowledge Work Applications” presentation
Jacob Burghardt collated a lot of interesting thoughts on interaction design in his e-book Working through Screens, to serve as reference for product teams creating new or iteratively improved applications for thinking work (or what Peter Drucker called knowledge workers). He has been talking about his book and posted a few presentations on the web [...]
Posted in design, information technology, software Also tagged design, e-book, Interaction Design, Jacob Burghardt, Peter Drucker, social network, social software, software interfaces 1 Comment

Core77 highlights Brazil’s innovation capabilities as a “natural knowledge-economy”