OTHER TITLES OF INTEREST.In Radical Innovation (Harvard Business School Publishing Harvard Business School Publishing is a not-for-profit, wholly owned subsidiary of Harvard Business School. It operates as an umbrella corporation to manage a group of publishing products associated with the School, including Harvard Business Review (management journal), Harvard ) authors Richard Leifer, Lois S. Peters and Gina C. O'Connor point out that the innovations in technology and in business models that have dominated electronic commerce, computers, biotechnology and wireless telecommunications have rarely been conceived in large corporations. Studying 10 multinationals, including General Electric, IBM (International Business Machines Corporation, Armonk, NY, www.ibm.com) The world's largest computer company. IBM's product lines include the S/390 mainframes (zSeries), AS/400 midrange business systems (iSeries), RS/6000 workstations and servers (pSeries), Intel-based servers (xSeries) , Nortel Networks (Nortel Networks Limited, Brampton, Ontario, www.nortelnetworks.com) A world leader in telecommunications products, which includes switching, wireless and broadband systems for service providers and carriers, telephones and systems for residential and business users, computer telephony , DuPont and Texas Instruments See TI. (company) Texas Instruments - (TI) A US electronics company. A TI engineer, Jack Kilby invented the integrated circuit in 1958. Three TI employees left the company in 1982 to start Compaq. , the book discusses seven challenges that large companies must overcome to make radical innovations. In IBM and the Holocaust (Random House), Edwin Black, a son of Holocaust survivors, places IBM on the stand and accuses the giant computer maker of complicity with the Nazi regime through its branch in Germany. According to Black, IBM technology proved indispensable in classifying prisoners, filling the trains with captives, counting those massacred and organizing military campaigns. The book's decisive question: How much did IBM in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of know about what IBM Germany was doi ng? |
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