Kellogg on Technology & InnovationRanjay Gulati, Mohanbir Sawhney, Anthony Paoni John Wiley & Sons, 2003 M06 16 - 368 pages Ein Buch der Kellogg School of Management. Geschrieben von renommierten Professoren. "Kellog on Technology and Innovation" ist eine umfassende Betrachtung über innovative Technologien und ihre Konsequenzen für Unternehmens- und Finanzwelt. Bei der Untersuchung der neuen Technologien gehen die Autoren ausschließlich von einer unternehmensbezogenen Perspektive aus. Sie vermitteln dabei aber nicht nur einen Überblick über die vielversprechenden Verlockungen dieser Technologiebereiche, sondern geben auch eine fundierte Darstellung über gewinnbringende Geschäftschancen und potentielle Gewinne für Investoren, die sich aus der Kommerzialisierung dieser Technologien ergeben können. |
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Kellogg on Technology & Innovation Ranjay Gulati,Mohanbir Sawhney,Anthony Paoni No preview available - 2003 |
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adoption advertising allow areas bandwidth become billion biotech biotechnology Bluetooth business model cable capabilities chips communications companies competitive component computing power connection consumers content providers costs create customers demand disruptive technologies DNA computer DoCoMo drive drug e-mail emerge enable enhanced equipment fiber Figure firms FTTH functionality growth hardware HomeRF I-Mode increase industry infrastructure innovations Intel Interactive Television Internet investment killer application last-mile location-based services long-haul m-commerce manufacturers metro Microsoft mobile devices Moore’s law nanotechnology Napster network operators nology offer ofthe OpenTV optical networking P2P computing PDAs Peer-to-Peer percent platform players potential programming require revenues segment servers service providers set-top boxes share standards strategy target tion TiVo today’s tracking transactions users value chain value proposition vertical viewers wire wireless applications wireless carriers wireless devices wireless technology
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Page 3 - ... huge amount of electronics, and a technology that exploits what I have often described as an exception to Murphy's Law. By making things smaller, everything gets better simultaneously. There is little need for tradeoffs. The speed of our products goes up, the power consumption goes down, system reliability, as we put more of the system on a chip, improves by leaps and bounds, but especially the cost of doing thing electronically drops as a result of the technology.