The Future of Manufacturing Is in America, Not China

iFab and Making Things are trends we will be talking more about here at Longvie.ws.

All of these advances play well into America’s ability to innovate, demolish old industries, and continually reinvent itself. The Chinese are still busy copying technologies we built over the past few decades. They haven’t cracked the nut on how to innovate yet.

  1. Belief: Company X could have came to market with product Y Z years ago!
  2. Implied: Company X would have owned the market like Company A does now.
  3. Reality: Product Y would have sucked and nothing would be different.

Today Nokia announced that it lost $1.7 billion in the second quarter, its fifth quarterly net loss in a row. Just a few hours before the announcement, the WSJ published a great piece revealing how, as early as 2000, the Finnish phone maker had designed a proto-iPhone – complete with a color touch screen and geo-location, gaming, and e-commerce capabilities. The phone, though, never moved into the mass production phase because of ”a corporate culture that lavished funds on research but squandered opportunities to bring the innovations it produced to market.”

While it’s not surprising that a lumbering, oversized multinational corporation failed on the innovation front, it’s clear that Nokia does not suffer from a dearth of ideas: It spent $40 billion on research and development over the past decade, almost four times what Apple spent over the same period. Nokia also developed and ultimately discarded not one but two operating systems, Symbian and MeeGo. Nokia’s deficiency lies in what Vijay Govindarajan and Chris Trimble call “the other side of innovation,” or the problem with executing new ideas, not just thinking them up.

Wrong.

Nokia had a nice piece of hardware in tablet form years ago based on Linux: it never took off. This mythical iphone-pre-iphone would also have had no traction. Nokia phones have always sucked software-wise (if you don’t think so, you just didn’t know any better). Basically no one knew any better until the iPhone arrived (except Palm Treo users to some extent).

The truth is that getting the software right was the hard thing. For that, you need an ecosystem for both developers (a real OS, API libraries, etc.) and for consumers (applications, other users, media). That’s why Palm’s come out of nowhere dominance of the handheld space back in the 90s was really remarkable (and why, incidentally, Steve Jobs was interested in buying Palm). Google, too, should be given credit for bringing to market a true OS for a phone with basically no experience in the area (they bought a company, but still). Microsoft had an OS and the ability, but did nothing with Pocket PC for ten years. Only Apple went the distance first.

Microsoft taps spinmeister Mark Penn as special projects chief

A pollster won’t take you where you need to be, just where you should have been.

 

Macbook Air

Simply the best computer ever made; I can’t recommend it enough.

Walker admits during testimony that collective bargaining law doesn’t save money

Short sighted is an understatement.

PS: Walker was an impetus (one of many) for starting Longvie.ws

A few other links I’ve saved to refresh your memory; his day of reckoning awaits.

 

The Top of My Todo List – Paul Graham

Don’t ignore your dreams;
don’t work too much;
say what you think;
cultivate friendships;
be happy.

If you haven’t read Hackers & Painters yet, you need to. (Especially you coders and makers out there).
Look ahead at longvie.ws

Welcome to Longviews and a diet of strong opinion.

Welcome to Longvie.ws!