Skip to main content

Home/ Advanced Concepts Team/ Group items tagged open innovation

Rss Feed Group items tagged

LeopoldS

Open innovation and Apple .... - 6 views

  •  
    interesting blog entry
  • ...3 more comments...
  •  
    Your link points to a restricted LinkedIn page... Here's the original link: http://www.15inno.com/2010/06/07/apple/
  •  
    A pretty standard Apple-o-getic (ah ah) blog post. How many times does the guy say 'I like Apple'? Anyway, I'm having a hard time understanding the point he is trying to make. Apple should open up its innovation? It shouldn't because they are so hip, cool, a 'unique company' and an 'exception to the rule'? Mah..
  •  
    I think the point is the guy bashes the "open innovation theory" (whatever the theory is) with his main argument being that Apple is not open and at the same time very successful.
  •  
    this guy is actually one of the most fervent supporters of open innovation and tries to promote it whereever he can ... his problem is that at least at first view Apple does not confirm his theory ...
  •  
    lol, the 'about' page is priceless bullshit: http://www.15inno.com/about-15inno/ "Corporate Mind Exchange (CMX) events in which corporate innovation leaders discuss relevant challenges and issues. No academics, consultants or start-ups; just corporate practitioners." We are doing it wrong, Leo. We don't need no stinking Universities! "Network groups in which 12-20 innovation leaders from different companies meet 4-6 times annually to discuss challenges and issues. Workshops and events with thought leaders and practitioners." What the hell are "innovation/thought leaders"?
LeopoldS

IdeaConnection: Open Innovation success story: Open Innovation Boost to Space Exploration - 4 views

  •  
    nice
  •  
    Is it a yearly thing?
LeopoldS

Global Innovation Commons - 4 views

  •  
    nice initiative!
  • ...6 more comments...
  •  
    Any viral licence is a bad license...
  •  
    I'm pretty confident I'm about to open a can of worms, but mind explaining why? :)
  •  
    I am less worried about the can of worms ... actually eager to open it ... so why????
  •  
    Well, the topic GPL vs other open-source licenses (e.g., BSD, MIT, etc.) is old as the internet and it has provided material for long and glorious flame wars. The executive summary is that the GPL license (the one used by Linux) is a license which imposes some restrictions on the way you are allowed to (re)use the code. Specifically, if you re-use or modify GPL code and re-distribute it, you are required to make it available again under the GPL license. It is called "viral" because once you use a bit of GPL code, you are required to make the whole application GPL - so in this sense GPL code replicates like a virus. On the other side of the spectrum, there are the so-called BSD-like licenses which have more relaxed requirements. Usually, the only obligation they impose is to acknowledge somewhere (e.g., in a README file) that you have used some BSD code and who wrote it (this is called "attribution clause"), but they do not require to re-distribute the whole application under the same license. GPL critics usually claim that the license is not really "free" because it does not allow you to do whatever you want with the code without restrictions. GPL proponents claim that the requirements imposed by the GPL are necessary to safeguard the freedom of the code, in order to avoid being able to re-use GPL code without giving anything back to the community (which the BSD license allow: early versions of Microsoft Windows, for instance, had the networking code basically copy-pasted from BSD-licensed versions of Unix). In my opinion (and this point is often brought up in the debates) the division pro/against GPL mirrors somehow the division between anti/pro anarchism. Anarchists claim that the only way to be really free is the absence of laws, while non-anarchist maintain that the only practical way to be free is to have laws (which by definition limit certain freedoms). So you can see how the topic can quickly become inflammatory :) GPL at the current time is used by aro
  •  
    whoa, the comment got cut off. Anyway, I was just saying that at the present time the GPL license is used by around 65% of open source projects, including the Linux kernel, KDE, Samba, GCC, all the GNU utils, etc. The topic is much deeper than this brief summary, so if you are interested in it, Leopold, we can discuss it at length in another place.
  •  
    Thanks for the record long comment - am sure that this is longest ever made to an ACT diigo post! On the topic, I would rather lean for the GPL license (which I also advocated for the Marek viewer programme we put on source forge btw), mainly because I don't trust that open source is by nature delivering a better product and thus will prevail but I still would like to succeed, which I am not sure it would if there were mainly BSD like licenses around. ... but clearly, this is an outsider talking :-)
  •  
    btw: did not know the anarchist penchant of Marek :-)
  •  
    Well, not going into the discussion about GPL/BSD, the viral license in this particular case in my view simply undermines the "clean and clear" motivations of the initiative authors - why should *they* be credited for using something they have no rights for? And I don't like viral licences because they prevent using things released under this licence to all those people who want to release their stuff under a different licence, thus limiting the usefulness of the stuff released on that licence :) BSD is not a perfect license too, it also had major flaws And I'm not an anarchist, lol
Francesco Biscani

Tom Sawyer, whitewashing fences, and building communities online - 3 views

  • If you are looking to ideas like open source or social media as simple means to get what you want for your company, it’s time to rethink your community strategy.
  • I’ve talked to people at companies who are considering “open sourcing” their product because they think there is an army of people out there who will jump at the chance to build their products for them. Many of these people go on to learn tough but valuable lessons in building community. It’s not that simple.
  •  
    Illuminating article about corporations trying to exploit "open source" and not getting what they want.
  •  
    I like the red had definition: "To be the catalyst in communities of customers, contributors, and partners creating better technology the open source way."
  •  
    yeah, it is the same with crowdsourcing in general, when some company "managers" see how much cheaper they could do it but don't understand where it comes from...
LeopoldS

HP Slashes R&D Spending By $228 Million - Global CIO Blog - InformationWeek - 0 views

  •  
    interesting move towards open innovation by HP ...
Luís F. Simões

The Truth About Google X: An Exclusive Look Behind The Secretive Lab's Closed Doors - 4 views

  • Space elevators, teleportation, hoverboards, and driverless cars: The top-secret Google X innovation lab opens up about what it does--and how it thinks.
  •  
    Interesting insight indeed, I see quite some overlap with the ACT mantra, athough they have 250 people and an outdoor playground.. To Teller, this failure-loving lab has simply stepped into the breach. Small companies don't feel they have the resources to take moonshots. Big companies think it'll rattle shareholders. Government leaders believe there's not enough money, or that Congress will characterize a misstep or failure as a scandal. These days, when it comes to Hail Mary innovation, "Everyone thinks it's somebody's else's job," Teller says.
nikolas smyrlakis

DIME | Dynamics of Institutions and Markets in Europe - 4 views

  •  
    an active and open community for whoever interested and the new YGTs RFs in Innovation/ Economics/ CMS etc.
LeopoldS

Always Innovating: MeCam - 2 views

  •  
    open source open hardware quadrocopter ! next platform for Astrodrone ?
  •  
    MSRP suggests it's not designed to survive landing.
Joris _

DailyTech - NASA Releases iPhone App - 2 views

  • The U.S. space agency has worked more diligently the past few years to better interact with the public.
  •  
    what about ESA?
  • ...3 more comments...
  •  
    have already sent it as a suggestion to our com department ... btw: installed the app and its really well done!!
  •  
    God no, why give more taxpayers' money to the shittiest, greediest and most closed company out there??
  •  
    why "more" ... do they get any taxpayers money? answer to your question: because its the most efficient (and coolest) platform to convey your message to a larger audience with relatively little effort ... btw: just ordered a time capsule for home :-)
  •  
    I said "more" because we already gave them money in the form of Sophia and Atlas :) If we want to be consistent in promoting "open" efforts (open innovation, open source, open governance, etc.) we should avoid Apple like the plague. They are far far worse than Microsoft in terms of closedness, secrecy, shady market practices and vendor lock-in. Just google a bit and you will find lots of example of their behaviour.
  •  
    cant' really argue about the Apple practices, although I ve read some things. I think the NASA app is more like a news feed and nothing more. But that online crowdsourcing game we had in mind, now that would be cool in a mobile version - new mobiles also have accelerometers nowadays
LeopoldS

ACT - Opportunities - 3 views

  •  
    spread the news - we have re-opened the RF position in innovation dynamics and computational economics ...
LeopoldS

University Industry Series: Nestle and IBM - National Coun... - 0 views

  •  
    just registered to this webseminar on open innovaiton .... could be fun ...
ESA ACT

DIY Robotics: The Rise of Open Source Hardware - 0 views

  •  
    we should try out some of these kits? anyone interested? LS
LeopoldS

NASA's New LEED Platinum Sustainability Base is the Greenest Federal Building in the US... - 2 views

  •  
    Ideas for ESTEC 2 ...
Thijs Versloot

This "Space Glass" Lets You Drink Whiskey In Orbit - 3 views

  •  
    Photo credit: The glass has a number of interesting innovations. Ballentine's. A liquor company has created a " Space Glass" that they say can work in the microgravity environment of space. The Open Space Agency's James Parr was commissioned to create the product, and the results are actually quite interesting.
  •  
    Makes sense specially after seeing very good japanese whiskey arriving at the ISS :-) http://phys.org/news/2015-08-japanese-whisky-international-space-station.html
LeopoldS

Virtual Teams - 0 views

  •  
    this might come very handy in case we explore further the idea of a virtual ACT - one of the key points: you still have to meet from time to time physically ...
ESA ACT

Posts tagged BugLabs at Engadget - 0 views

  •  
    look at these bugs .... can't we do something with them? they look nice for sure ....
LeopoldS

Main Page - FreeMind - free mind mapping software - 0 views

  •  
    anybody has experience with this already?
1 - 17 of 17
Showing 20 items per page