Innovation: Rivals, Challengers, and Defenders
When most people think about U.S. military innovations developed during the Cold War, they assume those innovations were the result of the U.S./Soviet rivalry. The fact of the matter is many of
In this blog, we discuss cognitive computing and other technologies with a focus on supply chain management and innovation. Other topics of discussion include digital enterprise transformation, marketing, the Internet of Things, and smart cities. Our goal is to advance the public discussion about how cognitive computing and other advanced technologies affect the world in which we live.
Bradd C. Hayes is the active editor of this blog.
When most people think about U.S. military innovations developed during the Cold War, they assume those innovations were the result of the U.S./Soviet rivalry. The fact of the matter is many of
If Tom Vander Ark (@tvanderark), CEO of Getting Smart, is correct, we need to start preparing our children for a future in which a significant portion of the workforce freelances, moving from
It has been nearly two decades since Clayton Christensen’s (@claychristensen) book, The Innovator’s Dilemma, was published. Yet Wall Street Journal columnist Christopher Mims (@mims) notes, “Whatever its explanatory power, the one thing
The phrase “May you live in interesting times” is either an English blessing or a Chinese curse. You choose. Whether you consider it a blessing or a curse, the fact of the
More and more is being written about the need for industrial age organizations to transform themselves into digital enterprises. With the maturation of cognitive computing, organizations can now aspire to go beyond
“To be sure,” write McKinsey analysts Marc de Jong, Nathan Marston, and Erik Roth, “there’s no proven formula for success, particularly when it comes to innovation.”[1] Innovation is difficult because it involves
A million years ago manufacturing was a very personal business. Individuals constructed their own tools and weapons. Those items, however, represented the latest technologies available to mankind. People who possessed them had
The global economy is stuck in a malaise. Economists seem uncertain whether this malaise will worsen and plunge the global economy into a new recession or brighten and help it climb to steady
In March Andy Grove, the former CEO and Chairman of Intel, passed away. Eulogies praising his remarkable life called him “a giant in silicon valley” and “a brilliant technologist.” They also credited
“If we could come up with the next breakthrough technology by sitting around thinking, ‘What will the next break-through technology be?’ then we would all already be rich,” writes Greg Stevens.[1] He’s
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