Tag Archives: socio-technical systems

What It Means To Be A Business/Technology Architect In A Post Agile, Post AI World

What does it mean to be an architect in a post-agile, post-AI enterprise? This article explores architecture as sense-making, navigation, and organisational memory rather than artefact production. It examines the evolving role of domain and enterprise architects, the value they bring to fast-moving change programmes, and how good architecture enables speed without fragility by preserving coherence, optionality, and shared understanding over time.

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Structuring Cyberpsychology: From Foundations to Practice

This article sets out the structure of a cyberpsychology curriculum designed to address the coherence gap identified in Cyberpsychology Today. Rather than treating cyberpsychology as a loose collection of effects, this framework organises the field from foundational theory through to applied practice. The phases that follow are not arbitrary. They reflect the minimum conceptual spine required to study how persistent, mediated digital environments shape human psychology, and how that knowledge can be responsibly translated into research, policy, and real-world intervention. What follows is not a manifesto, but an architecture for learning.

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Cyberpsychology Today: Signal, Noise, and What We’re Actually Talking About

As cyberpsychology gains visibility, it is also losing precision. This article maps how the term is currently used, identifies common category errors, and explains why collapsing distinct domains into a single label weakens both theory and practice. It clarifies the boundary between cyberpsychology and human-factors work, and positions Psyber Inc as downstream application rather than field definition.

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