Ideation: Tips from a Year in the JHub
…gate guard with computer vision, it is not hard to envisage replacing the soldier on gate-guard with a camera that recognised your face with computer vision and allowed or denied…
…gate guard with computer vision, it is not hard to envisage replacing the soldier on gate-guard with a camera that recognised your face with computer vision and allowed or denied…
…down on a card. Put the card somewhere in sight to remind you every day. Do what needs to be done Remember what Peter Drucker wrote in Managing for Business…
…This is the minimum commitment expected and many Reserves will complete more days than their minimum requirement. In my squadron for example, most soldiers complete around 45 days a year….
…download! Dr Brian Laslie is the Deputy Command Historian at North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) and United States Northern Command (USNORTHCOM). His first book The Air Force Way of…
Five Reflections on Building a Mission Command Culture – Part 1 By The Army Leader Mission command is more than just the British and US Armys’ philosophy of command –…
…Sub-unit command is a fantastic and exciting level of command. I would like to give some ideas to help those about to embark on this critical level of command. So,…
…find out another way of building a mission command culture in MODEX and Mission Command. Or check out our complete list of mission command articles here. Donate to The Army…
…known as the Dunbar Number. Dunbar took the human pre-frontal cortex size and plotted it on the same scale. He concluded that for humans, the Dunbar Number is 150. But…
…empathy and understanding are more important than details. Without that human communication – and the sense or feel for each other’s perspectives that it creates – a staff will fail….
…masters. ‘Commanders’, wrote Wavell, ‘must have a background of solid common sense, and a knowledge of humanity, on whose peculiarities, and not those of machines, the whole practice of warfare…