Which company do you consider to be the most innovative?
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Tesla (Score:3, Insightful)
Tesla
Oh please. (Score:4, Insightful)
Tesla
Everything Tesla has done has been done before. Musk is just awesome at self promotion - and he has to be. Because otherwise people will stop giving him money every time Tesla runs short of money.
See, Tesla is incapable of sustaining itself by its own revenues and cash flows. Every quarter it blows through a half a billion dollars just in operations: advertising, salaries, utilities, materials, paying suppliers (no, Tesla is NOT 100% vertically integrated.), other day to day operating expenses and Musk's private jet - you are not naïve enough to think that he pays for that out of his own pocket, are you?
That money is gone. Spent. Forever.
Another half a billion dollars a quarter is spent on capex - plant and equipment for his grandiose building plans.
So, he has to get money from Peter to pay Paul. He tapped out the banks, the equity is so diluted that in a rational market it should sell for $0.25 a share so, he is selling junk bonds.
Eventually, people will smarten up and stop dumping cash into the bottomless pit known as Tesla. It will go bust, The stock and bond holders will lose everything, and people who know what they are doing will buy up Tesla's assets for pennies on the dollar and make it viable - a la Iridium.
This hero worship of Musk was created by his publicists - he's PT Barnum on steroids. Or maybe Richard Branson on steroids.
Whatever - you Tesla/Musk fanboys are really religious fanatics.
So, stick your fingers in your ears and scream "Lalalalalaallala He's an innovative geeeenyus! lalalalalallalalalalalalla He gets things done! alalalalallalalalalalalala" just like the Creationists do about evolution and the denialists do about Global Warming.
Re: Oh please. (Score:1, Insightful)
So what? All the tech companies we get to choose from in the poll constantly rip each other off.
So none of them are more innovative because they are all doing the same exact thing.
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You've convinced me. I'm going to immediately go out and purchase one of the other cars on the market today that are just like a Tesla Model S. I have so many to pick from!
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Actually you really do have many to pick from.
For instance autopilot is integrated in many cars these days. A higher end BMW or Mercedes has it. Lower end models will have radar guided cruises control paired with automatic lane keeping.
Electric is not exclusive to Tesla either. Lots of models to choose from. The Model S isn't even the best selling electric car. I think the Nissan Leaf is the current bestseller.
One can argue Toyota with their Prius was truly innovative when it came out.
Audi's got lots of new
Re: (Score:2)
Near perfect description, well done. Its like he looked at lots of very old cool ideas and said 'I wonder if its time to throw ridiculous amounts of cash at these things and try them again.' I have never been impressed by any so called innovation, but he sure can get the cash rolling in and some people do seem to worship him.
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Is his private jet really financed trough Tesla? Maybe SpaceX? Or maybe his pocket money? I agree that Tesla looks like a pyramid. He manage to sell Tesla shares big time. I also think that his distortion field is much less ugly than this of the other dead guy. It may be however that his project (in this case electric cars) is just an initial push that fails and succeeds later on as most of huge infrastructure projects were. The only thing that annoys the hell out of me is the subsidies that I as a tax paye
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Dude, he got a loan for Tesla which he paid back already. The tax subsidies are given to the purchaser, not Tesla, there is something else which is Californian emissions offsets credits and things like that. But this is a California specific issue. Not an US issue.
Re:Oh please. (Score:5, Insightful)
Everything Tesla has done has been done before. Musk is just awesome at self promotion
And this is precisely what innovation really is.
We have this idealized notion that invention / innovation is some guy who has a lightbulb moment. The truth is, the idea is the easy part. What's hard is execution, and promotion.
When the Wright Brothers came along, lots of people had "ideas" about how to fly. Many of them, such as Curtis, had better ideas than the Wright Brothers. But the Wrights were better at promotion, and got their name out there first. And that's why we all say they invented powered flight, though there were numerous other inventors who were arguably there first.
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Not really. Look at SpaceX. Know any other VTVL orbital rocket launcher? Nope. Because it's the first in history. Know any other orbital launcher which can LAND on a barge in the middle of the ocean? Nope.
As for the Tesla models, most of the innovation is in the battery pack and the charging facilities. There's also some innovation in the aluminum chassis construction and the design with a low drag coefficient, but yeah, most of it was already done. As for bleeding money, would you rather bleed your money o
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Aluminum cars have been around for years, and many people have been working on decreasing drag for a long time too.. Anything from Tesla in these areas really just amounts to incremental improvements on existing designs.
Re: Oh please. (Score:2)
Re: Oh please. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Actually there were electric cars before internal combustion and they were in regular use as recent as the 1940s. The ICE was better on price, range, and refueling time and the electric just faded away until recently starting with the GM EV1 in the late 1990s.
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Electric motors got reasonably good early in the game, but none of those earlier electrics could go far on the lead-acid batteries of the day. Now we have exceedingly good motors with much better batteries.
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It hasn't been done before, but the technology to do it has long existed... The reason it wasn't done was because putting a car in space is pointless.
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That car was sent up in a privately funded spacecraft that could loft 51 Teslas into LEO, with reusable boosters - or send one car to Mars. How long would it have taken the federosaurus, or anyone else, to accomplish that?
Not Tesla, SpaceX (Score:5, Insightful)
Not Tesla, but a definite resounding yes to SpaceX. Reusable rockets delivered faster and cheaper than any company or government in history. Musk is a bit of a showboat, sure, but that comes with the package and is liveable. He's also a visionary and willing to put his own reputation and money on the line. SpaceX is a resounding success story, and looks to be on track for even more.
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Yeah, I think Musk gets the prize not for innovation, but for actually going out and doing all those things I've always dreamed about doing when I was a kid... building the car from Night Rider, flying my friends through space with some Voltron-like gizmos, making vacuum-evacuated trains... you know, all those things featured by those Neil Ardley books visualizing the future in the 70s, before we took a 40-year break to ... make the internet a mainstream thing.
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Yeah, I think Musk gets the prize not for innovation, but for actually going out and doing all those things I've always dreamed about doing when I was a kid... building the car from Night Rider, flying my friends through space with some Voltron-like gizmos, making vacuum-evacuated trains... you know, all those things featured by those Neil Ardley books visualizing the future in the 70s, before we took a 40-year break to ... make the internet a mainstream thing.
What exactly do you think innovation is? The definition of innovate is to make changes in something established, especially by introducing new methods, ideas, or products. That is literally what you described. Terrifying to think you had ANYTHING to do with the Internet if you don't understand basic language logic.
Re:Not Tesla, SpaceX (Score:5, Insightful)
When I was around four, I had this little tin toy airplane. I remember one time bragging that I was going to make it into a real remote control aircraft that could really fly and, waving it around in every direction, I said "I'm going to make it go this way, and this way, and this way, and this way".
Today we really do have drone toy aircraft that can fly any direction. Who innovated? Was it me forty years ago with that silly little tin toy waving it around saying I was going to make go those directions, or was it the people who then went and did it?
I have nothing against science fiction writers, they have an important role. But an idea in a science fiction novel is not innovation. It's the equivalent of me at four saying all the things I wish I could do. Innovation is turning dream into reality. And saying, well, Apollo put over a hundred tons into orbit in the 70's, so Falcon Heavy doing it today then landing the boosters back on the ground is just incremental. No it's fekking not, it's a bloody miracle. Did you watch those two boosters land - synchronized swimmers aren't as choreographed and beautiful as that.
Not to belittle the rocket science achievements, but the actual rocket science SpaceX has done is less than half of SpaceX's innovation. Musk took rocket science and mixed it with business science and economics to come up with a whole new way of doing space flight. He looked at the raw materials that went into a rocket and, realizing that they are two order of magnitudes cheaper than the finished product, said ok, there is zero reason this should cost the national budget of one of the smaller G8 nations to do it. He was laughed at as being hopelessly naive. NASA openly derided him in the beginning. But he was and is right. SpaceX accomplished feats of engineering landing those boosters. They are on the curve to have real SSTO with a spacecraft that is honest-to-goodness refuel-and-relaunch type reusable and give two hours New York to Tokyo at current airfare prices at the same time.
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But an idea in a science fiction novel is not innovation.
I'll go one step further.
Real science fiction is about the impact on society of an invention, a paradigm. It's a tool to make you think about the pitfalls hiding behind a simple "improvement".
Whoever equates a writer's gimmick to an actual real-world commodity lives in a fantasy world where they can effortlessly create a magus opus without blood, toil, tears, and sweat. How sterile can such a mind be.
Forget the gimmick, but discuss how the moral of the story applies to the current situation or its near futu
Re:Not Tesla, SpaceX (Score:5, Insightful)
Trying to do things from a 60's sci-fi novel is not innovation.
Making it work is innovation.
SpaceX is making it work when no other company or government in history has been able to.
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Some good points in the linked piece. But I notice that nowhere was it mentioned that it is routine and standard to place a slab of cement or whatever as a payload on the first test of any rocket, let alone the biggest successful rocket since the Saturn 5. Have all those anxious cube-sat owners approached any other space hardware firms to let their little projects be potentially sacrificed in a big ball of fire and fury?
One thing that this very memorable stunt has done is that it has gotten a lot of people
How much time is a slab of cement worth? (Score:2)
Launching new missiles was NEVER (and still isn't) such a frequent event that anyone can claim that ANY part of the process is "routine" or "standard". On that basis I'm basically dismissing your comment as another religious rant. Elon Musk catches a lot of worship or envy, but I'm not into either. I also feel that I adequately addressed the slim substance of your comment in one (or probably more) of my earlier comments on this topic. If I took you more seriously, then I might dig around a bit for the link,
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What part of Elon Musk's work is actually innovation and which parts are merely technological improvements and refinements or the instantiation of old science fiction novels?
No true scotsman [wikipedia.org]
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Right now I feel link-only responses should be ignored. If you have something to say, then say it and let us decide if you have actually said something that deserves to be supported with a click and a bit more time.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
If you have something to say, then say it
I did. [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
No, you did not. You simply give me a finger, and I'm not interested in following it without any hint where it points. From a naked link the "reader" cannot even infer your agreement or disagreement.
My initial reaction to the orbital car stunt was basically negative even before the innovation aspect was considered. While I wrote why I felt that way, that discussion is not part of this thread and your "contributions" so far don't justify any effort in digging up that link, but I do have another link handy, a
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1) Payload is payload is payload. Cement Blocks behave during a test flight, a car with a dummy ... not so much.
2) The Tesla Roadster was "innovative" for a couple reasons, but the best reason was Marketing. Who else has an orbiting car in space? That's innovation.
But, if you're going to miss the point of Musk, I'll actually point it out to you. YES everything he has done has largely been built by others first (queue "You didn't build that" -Obama quote). The same was said about iPods and iPhones when Jobs
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It's obviously a religious issue and I don't worship Elon Musk, profit, or even innovation. I still think the word "innovation" means something different than you (apparently) think it means.
When I was much younger I frequently indulged in religious arguments, but after a while I figured out that there was no point to it beyond identifying the mismatch of premises. For example, if you're trying to discuss any topic with someone who has the fundamental premise that the Bible is the divinely inspired and iner
Re: Not Tesla, SpaceX (Score:1)
He is clearly saying you are just re-defining the word innovation just so that you can exclude SpaceX - for example making science fiction a reality is as innovative as you can get, and you poo-poo it like writing something in a speculative novel is even remotely similar to making it happen. Or in other words he is calling you something between an idiot and an asshole. My assessment, and I am often correct, is that you are probably both.
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> What part of Elon Musk's work is actually innovation and which parts are merely technological improvements and refinements or the instantiation of old science fiction novels?
Wow are you ever dumb. If I say I can fly, and then someone invents a jetpack to allow me to do so, by your retarded logic I am the innovator.
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Except Blue Origin beat SpaceX to launch and landable re-useable rockets. SpaceX copied their landing solution. They've also never lost a rocket unlike SpaceX that loses one seemingly every other attempt. SpaceX has amazing marketing though.
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Get back to us when Blue Origin puts something in orbit.
Blue Origin hasn't demonstrated much beyond what the DC-X crew (many of whom went on to work at BO) did in the early 1990s. They could, but they haven't yet. I think part of the problem is that their funding is pretty much guaranteed by Bezos for the forseeable future. They're not as desperate as SpaceX was when it was running out of money. It's amazing how that can focus your efforts.
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What? Of the 18 SpaceX launches last year, 14 landed successfully and 4 landings weren't attempted because the mission profile didn't leave enough fuel for landing (though one of those four performed a successful high-thrust landing maneuver over open water). In other words, all the attempted landings succeeded.
You're comparing apples and oranges. The Falcon 9 is big and has 1.5 million pounds of thrust because it's hauling pretty heavy payloads to orbit. The Blue Origin New Shepard is much smaller and has
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Are you seriously trying to argue that SpaceX who had been demonstrating vertical landing capability on the Grasshopper since September 2012 and who landed a Falcon 9 first stage on 22 December 2015, copied Blue Origin who only started demonstrating landing capability on 23 November 2015?
I know Musk is accused of projecting a reality distortion field, but I suggest you check your own one, it's reflecting back on you.
Re: Tesla (Score:1)
I'm going with Musk over those swollen has beens too.
Tie in innovating to invade your privacy (Score:3)
In their never ending quest to invade your privacy, store your data, and profit at your expense, they're each equally innovative in their own ways.
Google invades your privacy in Google's innovative ways.
Amazon invades your privacy in Amazon's innovative ways.
And so on for each.
Few foresaw their innovations in furtively getting into your life unwanted. Few can foresee how they'll do it soon.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
In their never ending quest to invade your privacy, store your data, and profit at your expense, they're each equally innovative in their own ways.
In that regard, Facebook is, by far, the most innovative. People voluntarily add all kinds of personal information. Many are even "addicted" to adding every little detail about their life on a continuous basis.
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In their never ending quest to invade your privacy, store your data, and profit at your expense, they're each equally innovative in their own ways.
In that regard, Facebook is, by far, the most innovative. People voluntarily add all kinds of personal information. Many are even "addicted" to adding every little detail about their life on a continuous basis.
Why "No comment history available" when I click for your [TheGrimReefer's] mod points on that reply? I think you deserve a few, but it shows as a "Score:1" reply and clicking on it is futile. Moot to me, of course, since it appears I'll never see another mod point to give.
Then again, I think both of you [Subm and TheGrimReefer] are misusing "innovative" in your respective comments. How about "diabolical" or "cunning" for how Facebook works to consume (and mostly waste) our time and attention?
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Nobody "invaded" anything. You opened the door and every filing cabinet in the house and installed their cameras and microphones (yes, they are recording your farts while you're on the pot reading the news on your iPod in the morning... And believe me! your wife is much louder.. and it's a girl, due in late October, everything looks healthy), and you gave them a letter opener to read your mail. Nothing was taken without your' full consent. So, stop with the whining already!
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When I think of innovation it's not really advertising companies like google or facebook that I think of, It's also not an on-line store that just branched out into a little bit of hardware and cloud hosting like amazon. Don't get me wrong I like my amazon prime and prime video and google search. Samsung doesn't really innovate they use components originally designed by someone else. MS much like apple hasn't innovated anytime recently.
When it comes right down to it I really haven't seen any innovation rece
Missing Space X (Score:5, Insightful)
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At least someone that's looking ahead. Another inventive idea is 3D-printing of houses, but it came to be a few years ago now.
Anyone thinking Facebook is innovative is just plain stupid - they are just taking the ideas others have had and if you look at some articles below in the stream you'd see what they really are.
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Facebook is good at optimizing, be it fault resistant backend applications, squeezing as much ads in as people will tolerate, and similar.
As for innovations, there really isn't anything Facebook does that can't be done by another protocol. Walls can be done by Wordpress. Groups can be done by forums, NNTP, or E-mail lists. PM can be done via a number of different methods. Facebook is good at putting that all in one spot.
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Google (Score:2, Informative)
Google
- Clean web page (remember what Altavista was when Google started?)
- They started working with self driving car when it was still used as an example of things that computers can't do.
- They created AI that beats best humans in Go a decade ahead of its time and are working to invent general AI. I would also like to add Tensorflow because it really changed how AI apps are made.
- Google glass
- Android (the OS), many tried to do it, but only Google succeeded.
- Cluster or Linux servers instead of expensive
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I'm down with Google. I went to the same HS as Sergei Brin. But out of all the companies on the list, they're the only ones who have made actual progress on all of the things I've ever wanted as a kid...
* Google maps: so I wouldn't have to carry around my laptop plugged into a GPS and loaded with all of the Garmin base maps to see what body of water I was driving next to. I used to love exploring and biking / driving out to the middle of nowhere with or without maps. The first google maps app on my old
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...sinking into toxic feminism because of anger about her sister's divorce...
You know, I have never seen a comment about the personal life experiences of a businessman being emotional or mental justification for the actions that a commenters was bothered by. Is that because men never let those types of personal life experiences influence their business decisions, and thus critics could never use that for criticism, or is it because critics look project different motivations on businesswomen then on men?
Or is this particular case a way to easily dismiss "feminism" by labeling it as "
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Personally, I think that Google topped out around 2011. Since then, they really haven't been innovating and they're just maintaining their search monopoly.
Honestly, it seems like Amazon has been more innovative as of late. Google is now playing catchup in the smart speaker and cloud hosting spaces.
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I will give my nod to Google as one of the top innovators. Things like their Google Authenticator code which is open source have been very useful. Offering a platform that is not MS Exchange for E-mail and collaberation is also useful.
Amiga - since the poll doesn't say current company (Score:3, Interesting)
purchased by Commodore Business Machines. Or Xerox back in the day. They gave us Ethernet and the GUI as a private company.
Re:Amiga - since the poll doesn't say current comp (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's not a current company, I don't see how anything can hold a candle to Bell Labs. I mean, they invented pretty much every kind of hardware relating to the modern world, and C on top of that.
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Bell Labs is a current company. https://www.bell-labs.com/ [bell-labs.com] It's owned by Nokia, but is still doing fundamental R&D on things you'll use, whether you know it or not, in a decade or two.
Use the paradgm-shifting force, Cowboy Luke! (Score:3)
Hmm... This poll seems to be a spinoff of the recent story about hiring for innovation (https://news.slashdot.org/story/18/02/10/2114218/why-hiring-the-best-people-produces-the-least-creative-results), so I guess I'll review and expand a bit on my main comment there (https://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=11729749&cid=56102435).
However, before I really start let me say that it's kind of sad IBM couldn't even get a nomination notwithstanding the company's long-term leadership in sheer numbers of patents. I'm counting that as evidence of the perversion of the fundamental ideas behind patents and copyrights, which were originally intended to encourage innovation, NOT just increase profit.
I nearly did accept the google as the most innovative for the paradigm shift to search over memorization. In epistemological terms, there are various ways of knowing things. One is to carry the knowledge in your own head, but the other is to know where to find the answers, and these days most of us pick Door #2 most of the time. (No nomination for Wikepedia?) However "search" isn't really a new idea, but just one that the google has improved a lot. The real innovator along those lines is probably the first librarian at Alexandria?
Enough with the appetizers. Time for the main course: Real innovation involves breaking the old box, replacing the way we think about things. This is called paradigm shift, and I strongly recommend The Structure of Scientific Revolutions as a starting point. (Anyone know better and newer sources? The google should have a forward search feature.) My favorite example (for the elevator explanation) is the shift from Newton's physics to Einstein's. Newtonian physics still works quite well for most of what we do, but the deeper reality turned out to be different and it was an enormous innovation to switch paradigms there.
In the context of the poll, NONE of those companies are really doing much to change anything important because they all worship at the temple of corporate cancerism. Capitalism is as dead or deader than communism now. "There is no Gawd but Profit, and Apple is Gawd's #1 prophet!" Just the latest results, of course, but profit maximization is a problem with NO solution. There is no biggest profit to satisfy that endless loop. Of course it's impossible to predict or control REAL innovation, but competition is the best driver we know of. That means REAL competition without industry domination, and ALL of the candidate companies are dominators. (Mostly just my personal preference to favor evolutionary competition over revolutionary.)
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However, before I really start let me say that it's kind of sad IBM couldn't even get a nomination notwithstanding the company's long-term leadership in sheer numbers of patents. I'm counting that as evidence of the perversion of the fundamental ideas behind patents and copyrights, which were originally intended to encourage innovation, NOT just increase profit.
Perhaps it is that many people feel that patents have been misused very counter-innovatively over the years. IBM being a big corporation through the 1950s and perhaps still based there may have followed the trend. What trend some may wonder...
Step1. Find an idea.
Step2. Patent it. You may need to buy a company but ideally don't give inventor any money, Sue them if necessary.
Step 3. Bury it. You have the IP. Bury the inventor too, if you can.
Think, Oil industry and car makers over the 20th century
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I think you [Gonoff] are actually focusing on a slightly different problem. I would describe it as the hollowing out of research by the big companies. The bean counters have figured out that real research is expensive and the RoI is shaky. Much better to let lots of small suckers do the real research and buy out the winners.
The brave and innovative losers who couldn't quite get the wrinkles out? The other guys and gals who didn't work quite hard enough or whose timing was off or unlucky? Thanks for playing,
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By the way, Dreyfus was the PhD advisor of Fernando Flores, and Flores
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Surprised this old discussion hasn't been archived already. How did it come to your attention?
Anyway, I'm not disputing the connectivity of everything, but I don't think Page was thinking in terms of philosophy or paradigms, but rather he perceived an interesting mathematical symmetry in the links. Actually it would probably be more accurate to say that the google people noticed something important about the asymmetry? (The original proposal for the Web involved symmetric links, but that would have required
Internet Research Agency (Score:2)
Fine candidates, but honorable mentions (Score:4, Interesting)
Nothing against the suggested ones, but I feel like there are some good other options that deserve at least a mention:
* Boston Dynamics
* Netflix
* Redhat
* AMD
* Intel
* Uber
I'm not saying I approve of everything they have done, but if we're talking about innovation, they shouldn't be overlooked. The thing to remember though, people in authority may make bad decisions but a company is made up of many people and many teams. What they might do wrong based on a few executive decisions shouldn't make us ignore the many contributions of the many people who make the company successful.
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They've even stopped stealing. Other laptop makers have supported > 16 GB of memory for years, but as of next month, Apple will have been stuck at 16 GB for six years!
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It's funny: Netflix is one of the first that popped into my mind.
They completely changed their business model from disks to streaming (with a few hiccups along the way - but they got it done!) and now they're doing it again with going from licensed content to original content.
Along the way they've also been innovative in delivering better and better image / sound quality. They were one of the first with 4k and HDR and they even have some movies that are streaming in Dolby Atmos now (although only when view
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And before they had the telephone and taxi, they had the telephone and horse. And before they had the telephone and horse, they had the telegraph and horse. And before they had the telegraph and horse, they had the pigeon and horse. I guess none of those are innovations. I mean really, when Og grunted at Ug to bring wheel thing, that might have counted as innovation, but surely nothing since.
The only real innovations were the lever, wheel, and fire. Everything since is just modifying somebody else's idea. W
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Kraft (Score:2)
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Stop hating on sodium citrate. It doesn't turn cheese into not-cheese any more than adding marigold petals turns crap cheddar into good cheddar.
Yum! Brands (Score:1)
The stuff advertised for Taco Bell has to be the product of some insane genius. Nacho Fries? Naked Egg Tacos?
Elon (Score:2)
Anything Elon Musk is involved with...
those in 1930s (Score:2)
Innovation is not Invention (Score:2)
When it comes to invention, Google is great at it, I remember when their search engine was launched, that was not just innovation, it worked on different principles from the altavistas of the day. And they have other produ
3D printing (Score:2)
Boston Dynamics and SpaceX (Score:2)
BD's robots are some of the most advanced and impressive to date; beating out even some companies (Honda) that have been banging their head against the problem for decades now.
SpaceX is tied with Boston Dynamics.
Consistently, or one-time for all-time? (Score:2)
Consistently for the longest period of time in all of history would probably have to be Apple, maybe the old Bell Labs, or perhaps even Edison.
The company in business right now making the single greatest innovative leap? My snarky answer would probably be someone most of us (including me) haven't heard of yet.
The single, greatest innovative leap from any individual company in all of history? That's probably the hardest question of all to answer. But chances are they were someone small who was purchased qui
Vivaldi (Score:2)
Definitely not Apple (Score:1)
They are probably the best marketing company in the world right now. They take other people's ideas, make minor changes, and market them to the masses as innovative and elite. They haven't really been innovative for a long time. Tablets had been done before, mp3 players had been done, smartphones had been done, etc... But Apple could make a shit sandwich seem popular and necessary to people with too much disposable income. Also, their tech is usually at least a generation behind others lately. Just my persp
Easy as pie (Score:1)
None of the above. (Score:2)
Nintendo.
Missing option: (Score:1)
The only computer company that ever innovated Hi-Toro.
Musk, Inc. = Tesla, SpaceX (Score:2)
SpaceX (Score:1)
Sales Force (Score:1)
spacex (Score:1)
Fast Company names Apple as most innovative (Score:2)
Don't shoot the messenger here. I'm just sharing the article since it's relevant to this topic. Feel free to flame the Fast Company.
https://www.fastcompany.com/40525409/why-apple-is-the-worlds-most-innovative-company
SpaceX (Score:2)
I'm sure it has been covered, but phone screens are small and my data plan sucks.
People piss-n-moan about the Falcon Heavy dummy payload, but it was more interesting than the usual concrete or hunk-o-metal and got people seriously talking about space for the first time in decades. Plus, if it re-enters Earth's atmosphere, Space Tesla will burn up easier than the other stuff.
I was born and raised in Brigham City, Utah, which is basically a bedroom-community for what was known as Thiokol, now OrbitalATK, the
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Again, I think that the development projects associated with Linus hit their peak (along with Google) a few years ago. All of his big projects are still getting updated, but his team hasn't really innovated anything groundbreaking since Git was released in 2005.
Hey... I hope that he proves me wrong, and releases some amazing new technology tomorrow.
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I will say IBM is one of the top. However, it is a double-edged sword. They invented the PC as we know it, but they invented FUD. They were one of the only companies that could provide a "one stop shop" for every computing need, from the network to the PCs to backups, pretty much everything. Yes, you would pay for that, but you only needed one phone number to call if something, be it hardware, networking, the OS, the database, or the application broke.
These days, I would assert IBM seems like Tata or In