What Money Can't Buy

Fast Company

Microsoft may be the most striking example ever of the phenomenon that Harvard academic Clayton Christensen famously identified in his 1997 book, The Innovator’s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail (Harvard Business School Press). Good managers, Christensen wrote, tend to direct resources toward protecting established lines of business, usually by investing in incremental improvements that help pad profit margins.

Christensen called these “sustaining innovations.” We call it playing defense. It’s not that Microsoft lacks creative talent or that it simply has run out of ideas. In fact, the company has an abundance of both. But for most of the last quarter century, it has overwhelmingly devoted these vast resources to the innovative defense of its existing franchises. That’s why it has missed opportunity after opportunity to launch important new businesses. And why, in all likelihood, it will miss many, many more.

I can personally attest to this mentality. Talk to folks about some innovative idea at Microsoft and what you will hear is: “Well, that is a great idea, but this could potentially cut into product XYZ’s sales.” Sure, they are intelligent enough to recognize it is a good idea, but they are unwilling to absorb it into their own group for fear of risk to their group’s control or sales. Most often it is the case that the innovative idea gets put into incubation or research purgatory. This is where true innovation takes place at Microsoft. Yes, there is lots of innovation taking place at MS. However, it is almost entirely done outside of product groups. Moreover, it hardly ever is absorbed by product groups. Perhaps this is due in part to the type of person MS has hired in the past. This personality type, generally speaking, is unwilling to assimilate the ideas of others. In the abstract they are may be keen on a given tech/idea, but would rather implement it themselves. Most often this leads to them making the same mistakes another has already learned from. Sure, buying an existing tech (e.g.- purchasing a 3rd party) and forming a group around that is no problem, but try getting one group to absorb ideas from another – innovation seems to rarely bubble down from incubation or research. In general, Microsoft’s products are only innovative when they absolutely have to be and in my honest opinion they are pissing away $6B a year on research which product groups will never integrate. Perhaps they need a different type of personality in management. I don’t know. I wish they would apply more of the innovative stuff that comes out of their incubation teams and MSR.

Read the above FC article. Carleen, the author, is right-on with respect to many of her/his points (got me what gender Carleen is). If you really want to get deep on the topic of MS innovation take a look at the other articles this author has on this subject: “Microsoft Skills” and “Lessons on Innovation from Microsoft“, which seem to all be peices of a three part series. Feel free to give me a summary on the latter two . 🙂

Massive cow manure mound burns for third month

CNN

MILFORD, Nebraska (AP) — Urban dwellers who enjoy dining on filet mignon at five-star restaurants would probably just as soon not know about David Dickinson’s dilemma.

Bad for the appetite, you know.

But Dickinson, who makes his living in the cattle business, has an environmental problem on his hands that is vexing state officials: a 2,000-ton pile of burning cow manure.

Dickinson owns and manages Midwest Feeding Co. about 20 miles west of Lincoln, which takes in as many as 12,000 cows at a time from farmers and ranchers and fattens them for market.

Byproducts from the massive operation resulted in a dung pile measuring 100 feet long, 30 feet high and 50 feet wide that began burning about two months ago and continues to smolder despite Herculean attempts to douse it.

Not at all science or technology related, but too funny not to post. The picture in the article begs the question, is that a mountain or is that the pile? I think nebraska is rather flat…

SBC Said to Be in Talks to Buy AT&T

NY Times

BC Communications, the second-largest regional phone company in the nation, is in talks to buy AT&T for more than $16 billion, according to executives close to the negotiations.

A deal, if reached, would be the final chapter in the 120-year history of AT&T, the first technological giant of the modern age and the original model for telecommunications companies worldwide. A deal would be a reunion of sorts, putting back together some of the largest pieces of the Ma Bell telephone monopoly, which was broken up in 1984.

Animal-Human Hybrids Spark Controversy

National Geographic

Scientists have begun blurring the line between human and animal by producing chimeras—a hybrid creature that’s part human, part animal.

Chinese scientists at the Shanghai Second Medical University in 2003 successfully fused human cells with rabbit eggs. The embryos were reportedly the first human-animal chimeras successfully created. They were allowed to develop for several days in a laboratory dish before the scientists destroyed the embryos to harvest their stem cells.

In Minnesota last year researchers at the Mayo Clinic created pigs with human blood flowing through their bodies.

Da Vinci Workshop Discovered in Italy

Reuters

ROME (Reuters) – A forgotten workshop of Leonardo da Vinci, complete with 500-year-old frescos and a secret room to dissect human cadavers, has been discovered in Florence, Italy, researchers said on Tuesday.

The find was made in part of the Santissima Annunziata convent, which let out rooms to artists centuries ago and where the likely muse of the Renaissance artist’s masterwork, the Mona Lisa, may have worshipped.

Mobile virus infects Lexus cars

SC Magazine

Lexus cars may be vulnerable to viruses that infect them via mobile phones. Landcruiser 100 models LX470 and LS430 have been discovered with infected operating systems that transfer within a range of 15 feet.

“If infected mobile devices are scary, just thinking about an infected onboard computer..,” said Eugene Kaspersky, head of anti-virus research at Russian firm Kaspersky. “We do know that car manufacturers are integrating existing operating systems into their onboard computers (take the Fiat and Microsoft deal, for instance).”

It is understood the virus could affect the navigation system of the Lexus models, it transfers onto them via a Bluetooth mobile phone connection. It is still unclear whether the cars in question use the Symbian operating system which has recently been under attack from various worms and viruses.

“At this stage it’s still early but it just goes to show that technology has consequences,” said David Emm, senior technology consultant at Kaspersky. “It’s scary stuff.”

Vulnerable operating systems are increasingly moving onto a number of different devices. Last year the Slammer worm infected 13,000 Bank of America ATMs as a result of them moving to a Windows-based operating system.

“I’ve even seen screenshots of major commercial aeroplanes with Windows 2000-based operating systems,” said Mikko Hypponen, director of anti-virus research at Finnish firm F-Secure. “Cars are an obvious target for viruses. It’s okay if you don’t use the operating system for the engine and the brakes, but when you do…”

There have been many cases where cars have acted incorrectly due to an over reliance on technology. Some dangerous, some fatal. Is this going to start a grass roots effort to create open source cars? Not sure I’d want to find a bug in a beta version (but on the upside it would get fixed rather quickly).

Preventing comment spam

Google Blog

If you’re a blogger (or a blog reader), you’re painfully familiar with people who try to raise their own websites’ search engine rankings by submitting linked blog comments like “Visit my discount pharmaceuticals site.” This is called comment spam, we don’t like it either, and we’ve been testing a new tag that blocks it. From now on, when Google sees the attribute (rel=”nofollow”) on hyperlinks, those links won’t get any credit when we rank websites in our search results. This isn’t a negative vote for the site where the comment was posted; it’s just a way to make sure that spammers get no benefit from abusing public areas like blog comments, trackbacks, and referrer lists.

Thanks Google.

Goodger down with the Google.

Ployer

Ben Goodger the lead programmer of the Mozilla Firefox Web browser announced Monday on his blog that he took a job with Google, Inc. of Mountain View, California on Jan. 10, adding more oil to the burning rumor mill of Google’s plan to launch a browser. Google’s recent acquisition of the gbrowser.com domain, hiring of key programmers, and sponsorship of a Mozilla programmer meeting fueled speculation that a web browser is in the works, in direct competition with Microsoft. Goodger’s title at Google will be software engineer, he will continue work on the Firefox Web browser continuing with the goals of successful 1.1, 1.5 and 2.0 releases of the Firefox browser.

A Gbrowser could be interesting.