Engines Of Tomorrow: How The Worlds Best Companies Are Using Their Research Labs To Win The FutureSimon and Schuster, 14 juil. 2000 - 448 pages The U.S. economy is the envy of the world, and the key to its success is technological innovation. In this fascinating and in-depth account reported from three continents, Robert Buderi turns the spotlight on corporate research and the management of innovation that is helping drive the economy's robust growth. Here are firsthand communiqués from inside the labs of a reborn IBM, resurgent GE and Lucent, research upstarts Intel and Microsoft, and other leading American firms -- as well as top European and Japanese competitors. It was only a few years ago that competitiveness experts -- U.S. well-wishers and naysayers alike -- concluded that America had lost its business and technological edge. The nation's companies, they asserted, couldn't match the development and manufacturing efficiency of overseas rivals. Yet now the nation is humming along, riding an unparalleled wave of innovation. Buderi tells us this turnaround has come on many fronts -- in marketing, sales, manufacturing, and the creation of start-up companies. But Engines of Tomorrow deals with a central element that has gone largely unexamined: corporate research. It's the research process that provides the technologies that spur growth. Research is behind the renaissance of IBM, the stunning growth of Lucent, and much of the steamrolling American recovery. Focusing on the fast-moving communications-computer-electronics sector, Buderi profiles some of the world's leading thinkers on innovation, talks with top inventors, and describes the exciting technologies coming down the pike -- from information appliances to electronic security and quantum computing. In the process, he examines the vital strategic issues in which central labs play a determining role, including:
With authority and undaunted optimism about the underlying vitality of the research process, Buderi discusses these issues and reveals the future of some of the world's best and most powerful companies. |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Engines of Tomorrow: How the World's Best Companies Are Using Their Research ... Robert Buderi Aucun aperçu disponible - 2001 |
Engines of Tomorrow: How the World's Best Companies are Using Their Research ... Robert Buderi Aucun aperçu disponible - 2000 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
areas Arno Penzias Arun Netravali AT&T basic research Bayer Bell Labs Birnbaum budget business units BusinessWeek central lab central research chemical chemists chips company's corporate research create decade director e-mail early Edelheit effort Electric electronic engineers firms fundamental funding future German Gomory Hewlett-Packard Hounshell 1996 HP Labs ibid IBM's images industrial research information appliances innovation Intel interview invention Japan Japanese John Seely Brown July lab's laser launched Lucent Lucent Technologies machine managers manufacturing McGroddy Microsoft million NEC's Nobel operations Palo Alto PARC patents Penzias percent personal computer physicist physics pioneering Princeton projects Redmond research and development research arm Research Laboratory research labs research organization says Schenectady scientific scientists semiconductor Siemens Siemens AG speech recognition studies technical things tion transistor Uenohara University users Watson Weyrich Xerox Xerox PARC Yorktown Heights
Fréquemment cités
Page 26 - RESEARCH is a high-hat word that scares a lot of people. It needn't. It is rather simple. Essentially, it is nothing but a state of mind - a friendly, welcoming attitude toward change.
Page 15 - I am telling you you have got to make them— not because I say so, but because old Father Time will take care of you if you don't change. . . . Consequently you need a procurement department for new ideas.
