innovation and its history
Hi,
I'm in the midst of starting a paper on the history of innovation. I'm interested how new technologies are accepted, incorporated, rejected, or killed and how they are agents of transformation (I'm aware of the work of Elizabeth Eisenstein) - basically I will do research on the language and the concepts that are used/created. I'm especially interested in internet technologies and webpublishing technologies (... social software).
Now I wonder if you could point me to some relevant literature on that topic that could help me to jumpstart into my research.
Thanks for your help
Thomas
----------------------------------------- Thomas N. Burg Center for New Media Danube University Krems http://randgaenge.net http://wiki.randgaenge.net http://blogtalk.net http://www.donau-uni.ac.at/znm
Hi Thomas, Check out Everett Rogers' "Diffusion of Innovations" - his work is canonical for work in this area. Even those who disagree with his thinking cite it... :) --elijah
From: Thomas N.Burg <editor@randgaenge.net>
Hi,
I'm in the midst of starting a paper on the history of innovation. I'm interested how new technologies are accepted, incorporated, rejected, or killed and how they are agents of transformation (I'm aware of the work of Elizabeth Eisenstein) - basically I will do research on the language and the concepts that are used/created. I'm especially interested in internet technologies and webpublishing technologies (... social software).
Now I wonder if you could point me to some relevant literature on that topic that could help me to jumpstart into my research.
Thanks for your help
Thomas
----------------------------------------- Thomas N. Burg Center for New Media Danube University Krems http://randgaenge.net http://wiki.randgaenge.net http://blogtalk.net http://www.donau-uni.ac.at/znm
try Clayton Christensen disruptive innovation stuff and also there's a good book edited by John Seely Brown - Insights on Innovation. you might want to rummage through here too: http://les1.man.ac.uk/cric/welcome.htm On 21 Jul 2004, at 20:32, Thomas N.Burg wrote:
Hi,
I'm in the midst of starting a paper on the history of innovation. I'm interested how new technologies are accepted, incorporated, rejected, or killed and how they are agents of
---- Dr Ben Anderson Chimera, University of Essex, UK t: +44 (0) 7710 187 806 f: +44 (0) 1473 614 936 http://privatewww.essex.ac.uk/~benander
Hi,
I'm in the midst of starting a paper on the history of innovation. I'm interested how new technologies are accepted, incorporated, rejected, or killed and how they are agents of
Also check out Eric von Hippel's "Source of Innovation" - Oxford University Press - he discusses the front-end of the innovation process - where innovations are actually developed. K
participants (4)
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Ben Anderson -
elijah wright -
Karim R. Lakhani -
Thomas N.Burg