Prof. Dr. habil. Christoph Igel from the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI)
Dr. Thomas Lange from the German Academy of Science and Engineering
Reimund Overhage from the Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs
Session management:
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What does the digital transformation of the world of work mean for our society? To what extent are the current developments in digitalization changing social coexistence in our cities and regions? In short – what does living and working in a digital society mean? These are all questions that we addressed together at this year’s #DIV18 conference.
At the Barcamp edition, you determined the program and the topics by proposing sessions yourself and deciding together on site which of the sessions would actually take place. Your topics were discussed with the experts for intelligent networking from the Digital Summit, the Charter of Digital Networking and the MÜNCHNER KREISES. Together, experiences were exchanged, solution ideas reported on and inspiration offered to others. Session submissions addressed, among other things:
The event took place as part of the Informatics Festival of the German Informatics Society and was aimed at movers and shakers, decision-makers and interested parties from business, politics, administration and civil society.
10:00 a.m.
Jens Mühlner, Sherpa and Head of Project Management National Digital Summit
10:15 a.m.
Prof. Dr. habil. Christoph Igel, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI); Dr. Thomas Lange, German Academy of Science and Engineering; Reimund Overhage, Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs
10:45 a.m.
11:00 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
12:30 p.m.
2:00 pm
3:00 p.m.
3:15 pm
4:15 pm
4:15 pm
4:30 pm
5:00 pm
5:30 pm
Session 1: Personal efficiency through digitalization. How do I organize myself with digital tools?
(submitted by: Matthias Brucke, owner of embeteco GmbH & Co. KG)
Session 2: From the pipeline to the platform. What companies and municipalities need to know about digitalization and platform markets
(submitted by: Markus Wartha, Managing Director Charter of Digital Networking e.V. i.G.)
Session 3: Shaping digital transformation: Agility and lifelong learning in focus
(submitted by: Dr. Thomas Lange, acatech and Prof. Dr. habil. Christoph Igel, DFKI)
Session 4: Beyond the hype – Artificial intelligence for professional qualification
(submitted by: Prof. Dr. habil. Christoph Igel, DFKI)
Session 5: Training in VR – a curse or a blessing for employee qualification?
(submitted by: Dr. Maria Walther, Walther Learning Solutions)
Session 6: Overcoming borders, going digital together – (legal) framework conditions and design options for the inter-municipal networking of cities and regions
(submitted by: Dr. Nicolas Sonder and Hartfrid Wolff, KPMG LAW Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft mbH)
Session 7: Relieving employees, supporting customers quickly – potentials and limits of modern, digital decision management in administration
(submitted by: Markus Deutsch and Kaspar Kühl, KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft)
Session 8: Digital business models – the art of how municipalities and regions can conquer new markets together with public and private companies
(submitted by: Markus Deutsch and Dorothee Ebert, KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft)
Session 9: Artificial intelligence in public administration – four future scenarios (for the year 2030)
(submitted by Jens Tiemann and Basanta Thapa, Competence Center Public IT)
Session 10: How does a city become a smart city (motivation, initiative, implementation)?
(submitted by Denes Kücük, City of Dortmund and Heinrich Wienold, VDE e.V.)
Session 11: Where do we stand in the field of tension between the digitalization of the world of work, infrastructures and cities/regions and what does this mean for the need for action in business, politics and society?
(submitted by Jens Mühlner, T-Systems International GmbH)
Session 12: Digital responsibility and ethics in the digitally networked city. What should makers and citizens consider?
(submitted by Jens Mühlner, T-Systems International GmbH)
Sessions 13: What are the biggest challenges of digitalization for the economy and society?
(submitted by Jens Mühlner, T-Systems International GmbH)
Session 14: Sharing knowledge, networked learning
(submitted by Prof. Dr. Bernd Krämer, FernUniversität in Hagen, PG Intelligente Bildungsnetze and Annett Zobel, edu-sharing.net)
Session 15: What can digitalization do for our climate and our environment?
(submitted by Kathrin Pfeifer, Christian Kämmer, Gabi Schumacher, BTC Business Technology Consulting AG)
Session 16: Digitization of states, municipalities and cities requires blockchain technology as a basis to remain digitally competitive
(submitted by Simon Bartmann and Roland Wilken, BTC Business Technology Consulting AG)
Session 17: Co-creation between citizens and local authorities
(submitted by Kathrin Pfeifer, Christian Kämmer, Gabi Schumacher, BTC Business Technology Consulting AG)
Session 18: Digital urban development – modern instruments for activating municipal development potential
(submitted by Stefan Müller-Schleipen, immovativ GmbH)
Session 19: Basic digital infrastructures for the digital society: Necessary prerequisites for the success of digitalization in the area of conflict between requirements and feasibility
(submitted by Sigurd Schuster, Nokia and MÜNCHNER KREIS)
Session 20: Creativity and meta-skills – how important will they be in future working and living environments and how can they be specifically promoted?
(submitted by Dr. Rahild Neuburger, LMU Munich and MÜNCHNER KREIS)
Session 21: IT acceptance and enthusiasm – how can it be promoted in companies and society in order to meet the future challenges of digitally networked working and living environments?
(submitted by Dr. Rahild Neuburger, LMU Munich and MÜNCHNER KREIS)
Session 22: Workplace 2030 – what does it look like and what framework conditions (technical, organizational, institutional) are required?
(submitted by Dr. Rahild Neuburger, LMU Munich and MÜNCHNER KREIS)
Session 23: New forms of work as the basis for efficient mobility management in networked cities
(submitted by Tobias Riasanow, TU Munich and MÜNCHNER KREIS)
Session 24: How will platform companies (Google, Amazon, Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, Uber, Yandex cab) change the world of work? How will they shape the economy?
What should politicians do to guarantee fair competition and good working conditions in the course of digitalization?
(submitted by Klemens Witte LL.M., Dialogue of Civilizations Research Institute)
Details on the submitted session proposals can be found in the interactive #DIV18 board (Trello).
A barcamp is used for discussion and content exchange within the framework of an open conference with workshop sessions. The participants determine the program and content by proposing session topics themselves. On the day of the event, it is decided together on site which of the sessions will actually take place. The #DIV18 Conference – Barcamp Edition offers space for a total of 15 thematic discussions in three blocks of 5 sessions each.
See also wikipedia.org/wiki/Barcamp