This blog is intensely interested in disruption...but in general you expect more disruption around established technologies.
Could it be changing?
- I recently wrote about potential disruption in telepresence, which is hardly mainstream.
- At CTIA last week, everyone seemed to be gunning for iPhone, and a Sprint/Samsung combination certainly beats it handily on TCO.
- Now courtesy of Dennis Howlett I see a poor man's version of Surface computing just as Microsoft starts to roll it out to market.
Of course, the reality check comes in the form of Microsoft's continued domination of the desktop application market.
No, it would be premature to collapse this and the New Florence blog. Still plenty of overpriced, utility IT spend to target on this blog, even as we celebrate innovation on the other.
Comments
Are disruption lifecycles shrinking?
This blog is intensely interested in disruption...but in general you expect more disruption around established technologies.
Could it be changing?
- I recently wrote about potential disruption in telepresence, which is hardly mainstream.
- At CTIA last week, everyone seemed to be gunning for iPhone, and a Sprint/Samsung combination certainly beats it handily on TCO.
- Now courtesy of Dennis Howlett I see a poor man's version of Surface computing just as Microsoft starts to roll it out to market.
Of course, the reality check comes in the form of Microsoft's continued domination of the desktop application market.
No, it would be premature to collapse this and the New Florence blog. Still plenty of overpriced, utility IT spend to target on this blog, even as we celebrate innovation on the other.
Are disruption lifecycles shrinking?
This blog is intensely interested in disruption...but in general you expect more disruption around established technologies.
Could it be changing?
- I recently wrote about potential disruption in telepresence, which is hardly mainstream.
- At CTIA last week, everyone seemed to be gunning for iPhone, and a Sprint/Samsung combination certainly beats it handily on TCO.
- Now courtesy of Dennis Howlett I see a poor man's version of Surface computing just as Microsoft starts to roll it out to market.
Of course, the reality check comes in the form of Microsoft's continued domination of the desktop application market.
No, it would be premature to collapse this and the New Florence blog. Still plenty of overpriced, utility IT spend to target on this blog, even as we celebrate innovation on the other.
April 06, 2008 in Industry Commentary | Permalink