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Experiments in artificial intelligence
Project managers have heard time and again about how artificial intelligence (AI) is going to revolutionise the industry.
Project managers have heard time and again about how artificial intelligence (AI) is going to revolutionise the industry.
There’s an inescapable irony to the location of Tony Meggs’ office on the sixth floor of Transport for London’s (TfL’s) shiny glass-and-steel HQ in Stratford, east London.
Major projects are mighty beasts.
It’s a white-knuckle ride for the broadcaster as it goes through unprecedented strategic change.
Changing our expectations of leaders from outdated models of yesteryear will be one of the most challenging yet transformational achievements in the workplace, argues the Royal College of Art’s Rama Gheerawo We spend most of our time at work, either managing or being managed, applying frameworks from tiered hierarchies to flat organisations, from traditional structures to overstretched start-ups.
Climate scientists’ models predict we must accelerate policies to curb CO2 emissions or fall over the cliff edge.
Darryl Grinter, Terminal 5’s baggage project delivery manager, explains how borrowing principles from the world of manufacturing got Heathrow’s upgrade for its hold-baggage screening machines over the line 35 days early.
Boris Johnson, despite previous opposition to Heathrow and scepticism about HS2, appears to want to splash out on major infrastructure.
London City Island welcomes English National Ballet, while ground is broken at Stratford’s East Bank for a cluster of cultural heavyweights.
“Use it or lose it.