On Sun, 23 Mar 2014, lee wrote:

[snip]
If she had known that she didn`t need to throw in this or that, wouldn`t
that be easier for everyone?



Not necessarily.  Sometimes neither that absent-minded aunt nor the
avaricious nephew know what is most pleasing until it's taken out and
played with.  Much of what we consider very important today was
considered stupid when it first came out.

I've had good friends who worked at Xerox PARC back it its heyday,
others who worked at Bellcore, and another who worked at that ivory tower
in Redmond whose name I forget.  They all tell the same story of coming
out with neat stuff that the mother ship thought would never catch on.
Which is why those neat places almost always end up getting closed down
or changed -- not because they don't come up with great ideas, but
because nobody in corporate knows what to do with them, or because they
are disruptive and corporate doesn't want to change how they do things
(e.g. Kodak).

And it's not just the corporate heads that get it wrong.  Sometimes
consumers don't take to an idea before they taste the real thing.

So, for new stuff, maybe you just don't know whether you "need" to throw
something in until you do throw it in, keep doing it for awhile, and see
if it catches on.


billo
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