Archives For Disruptive innovation

In less than 3 years RIM has gone from controlling 87% of the smartphone market share in the US to hanging onto only 30% in the first quarter 2011. Even the 30% is a drop from 35% in 2010 and one can only speculate how far their market share will drop by the end of 2011.

Can Adobe, Microsoft and Facebook deals help revive Blackberry? I would speculate that they would not. First of all Microsoft’s extremely slim markets share is also dropping and if you look at the ratio of the drop they are loosing market share at a faster rate than Blackberry–Bing has a very long way to move Google from its position of dominance. Second, Adobe’s battle with Apple over Flash has really forced everyone to move to HTML 5 so I don’t know how much of an impact Adobe will be able to make. Facebook is a significant player in the emerging digital economy so having an deal with this powerhouse is very valuable but this doesn’t prevent Facebook continuing to develop strategies for the market leader Android and the IOS. When you combine those to platforms you have close to 2/3 of the market share that Facebook will also be focusing on.

Back in 2008 I wrote a short post Blackberry Torch – Sustaining Innovation regarding RIM’s first response to the iPhone as an example of how a market leader can so completely miss the “next big thing”. I speculated that time would only tell how far RIM would fall. When you start to see headlines in the media about deals that would “help revive Blackberry” you know that RIM’s fall is not only continuing but that the end may be in sight.

University of Waterloo’s Stratford Institute is a think-tank, integrator and training institute devoted to collaboration between digital media, international commerce and culture. When the institute opens the are plans to have 20 students enrolled in a master’s program in business, entrepreneurship, and technology with hopes that the number will increase to 2000 within 10 years. Ian Wilson the director of this new institute boldly points Canadian universities lack of ability to graduate students prepared for a digital economy with the following statement:

A few recognize it. But many of the students are doing it themselves. They are far more adept at using this technology than most faculty are. I’ve been known to criticize governments for … working in narrow, subject-based silos. They don’t exchange information with each other. Then I come to one of Canada’s high-tech universities, and it is as siloed as government ever is, and the communication across the disciplines is not there.

While it is good to see a university in my home country finally responding re-actively to the need for preparing students for a digital world it is even better to acknowledge the work that has been going on at ACU for the past several years and the development of the Digital Media Center and its evolution into the AT&T Learning Studio. These types of articles and press releases confirm ACU’s proactive vision and leadership in the digital and mobile learning.

Read the full article…
Read the University of Waterloo Press release…

Jason Hiner the Editor in Chief of TechRepublic makes the argument that Microsoft’s misguided tablet is the apothesis of the company. Balmer’s notion that Windows 7 will run on Slate PC’s in 2010 has not and will not realized because a tablet PC are much more than just another form factor for Windows. All one has to do is look at the success of the iPad and the forthcoming Android tablets to see that these devices are much more like smartphones than they are like PC.

HP and ASUS have both dropped their intentions to create a Windows 7 tablet due to the excessive power consumption of Windows 7. Hiner goes onto blame the lack of leadership or poor leadership for Microsoft’s current plight. Perhaps this is just the latest example of the impact of disruptive innovation. The iPhone and now the iPad have radically changed the tech industry in the past 2-3 years so perhaps we are starting to see the beginning of the end of Microsoft’s dominance.

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In the Tech Sanity Check article/poll Jason Hiner askes if Blackberry OS6 will keep up with iPhone and Android. When I took the poll the nays have it by a significant share. Hiner points out that many Blackberry users are dumping their phones in 2010 for either an iPhone or Android. Those who want the voice capability migrate toward the Android and those who want to much more move toward the iPhone. I dumped my Blackberry for an iPhone over two years ago so you can guess how I voted. I suspect that we are seeing the impact of the disruptive innovation of the iPhone and now Android movement. Time will tell if Blackberry makes it.

Take the poll and read the full article…

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The Future of Mobile Media and Communication in the year 2020 is visualizing the future vision of the MOCOM 2020 project. The trends, facts and thesis in this video are collected through an international crowdsourcing process and methodology at www.mocom2020.com