The IT industry loves the concept of “innovation,” but many vendors’ hearts largely belong to just the most conventional sorts of wisdom. That adoration takes a number of shapes: Stone Age business models; dusty Neolithic technologies and architectures; fossilized go-to-market strategies. In point of fact, such vendors are more similar to staid industries and companies, where dependability trumps progress, than they might like to think. I was considering this on May 4th when Intel announced the next “tick” of its continuing “tick-tock” development evolution.
Intel Defines 22nm Innovation with '3D' Tri-Gate Transistors
Posted by: Charles King May 17, 2011 05:00 AMThe IT industry loves the concept of “innovation,” but many vendors’ hearts largely belong to just the most conventional sorts of wisdom. That adoration takes a number of shapes: Stone Age business models; dusty Neolithic technologies and architectures; fossilized go-to-market strategies. In point of fact, such vendors are more similar to staid industries and companies, where dependability trumps progress, than they might like to think. I was considering this on May 4th when Intel announced the next “tick” of its continuing “tick-tock” development evolution.