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A Modest Proposal to Kick Off the Ultimate User Revolution

by Joe McKendrick

In the old days, radicals talked about workers owning the means of production.

What about owning the means of production in today’s information age?

Bob Lewis has a 21st Century take on this: why not leave it up up to the end users to supply their own computers on the job?

Here’s the lay of the land, as Bob puts it:

“When using their home computers, end-users experience a vast array of possibilities, but at the office they operate in a very constrained space; and increasingly, ‘work/life balance’ is giving way to “‘live your life wherever you are.’”

As we’ve seen from the many insights coming out of FastForward ‘08, users need to be unleashed to get their jobs done with the tools they see fit. So why not let employees do their thing with their own PCs? As Bob Lewis put it:

“No corporate-owned PCs at all. Let employees buy their own — whatever they think they need to do their jobs. It’s Nicholas Carr’s vision in reverse: Only central IT remains. Employees take over ownership of the periphery, including responsibility for their own PC support.”

We already see plenty of instances of employees using their own mobile devices for work-related connectivity. And, countless users log in from their homes to check into the intranet or for updated communications.

Of course, the legal departments would pull their hair out at the notion of everyone bringing in their own machines to work, especially in light of fears of data being taken out the door. But if there were a way to effectively lock down data either online or offline, wouldn’t this idea make a lot of sense?

So, Bob put another idea out there — virtualize. “Give end-users two virtual machines.” One virtual machine — the corporate virtual machine — could be “buttoned-down, corporate, protected, fully supported, and strongly connected.” The personal virtual machine could be the “sandbox,” on which users can do anything their hearts desire.

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3 Comments »

  Paula Thornton wrote @ March 5th, 2008 at 5:39 pm

Ah, but Joe, that would require some really smart architects (wink).

  Jon Husband wrote @ March 5th, 2008 at 5:55 pm

If cloud computing happens in a big way (as some predict) won’t this eventually become almost a non-issue ? .. just log in by password (from wherever) and get to work !! ??

  Alexis Perrier wrote @ March 6th, 2008 at 6:11 am

That’s a brilliant idea. I am so much more efficient with my own laptop (I’m a web Project Manager) than with the constrained laptop given by my current company. But seeing how constrained these company’s laptops are it’s really far fetch.
People like to be taken care of and freedom is scary.
Unfortunately !

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