Tuesday, December 2, 2003

MIT'S TECHNOLOGY REVIEW AND I BONDED

It's funny that yesterday I wrote my entry on technology, innovation, and economic growth, and today I went to News.com and came across a link to MIT's Technology Review. Under "Today's Featured Stories", were two articles related to my post yesterday (i was wondering if they actually change this column daily). Though I don't read their journal regularly, I feel a special bond now. Almost similar to my special bond with Buffalo Joe's chicken wings in Evanston, IL (i'm convinced they drug it. why else would i still crave it across the Pacific?) or an Italian sausage and beef combo (if you haven't tried it, just fly to Chi-Town for this!) from any decent joint in Chicago or falafel from any good street vendor in NYC or a fat pastrami sandwich with mayo and mustard from any good deli in NYC... so hungry right now.

Anyway, the first one pasted below isn't the full article and I didn't want to subscribe to obtained it. Second article is in full, but I don't know for how long the links will be active.


Academic Patent Binge

By Tracy Staedter
Innovation News

December 2003/January 2004

Patent activity at colleges has jumped in both quantity and quality over the last five years. Data provided exclusively to Technology Review by CHI Research in Haddon Heights, NJ, which ranks universities by technological strength (a measure combining both the number of patents issued and their relevance) reveal how great the upsurge is. In fact, in 2002, 13 of the top 25 universities saw a 50 percent or greater increase over the number of patents issued in 1997, six of which have seen increases of 100 percent or more...


The Corporate R&D Scorecard 2003
The R&D spending of 150 top technology companies.

December 2003/January 2004


For many of the world’s top 150 technology companies, spending on research and development continues to take a beating. A quick scan of the R&D Corporate Scorecard reveals an abundance of negative numbers, especially in electronics and telecommunications: Ericsson, Lucent, and Nortel Networks have cut budgets more than a third, while Cisco Systems is down by a quarter. The semiconductor sector is also unsteady, with Intel’s and Texas Instruments’ expenditures flat.

The good news is that R&D spending as a whole is up more than $4 billion compared to last year, with bright spots in biotech and automotive. Spending by biotech companies has more than doubled, and automakers are shelling out $5 billion more for research and development than they did last year. In fact, Ford Motor and DaimlerChrysler rank number one and two among all corporations worldwide, laying out $7.4 billion and $6.4 billion, respectively.

A few of the unusually large increases in spending can be attributed to acquisitions. For example, Hewlett-Packard’s R&D expenditure jumped more than 53 percent after its merger with Compaq Computer in May 2002. Amgen is up 375 percent after buying Immunex in July 2002, and MedImmune shows a whopping 1,495 percent increase after its January 2002 acquisition of Aviron.

In total, the top 150 companies spent more than $236 billion on research and development. Ultimately, however, the success of R&D investment is best measured by the brilliant ideas coming out of corporate labs, so in “Seven Hot Projects,” Technology Review profiles some of the most promising technologies that will soon affect your life.

And while a prominent handful of companies continue their robust R&D spending, the general frugality is, some argue, beginning to hamper the innovation process. In “Our Innovation Backlog,” innovator and entrepreneur Kenan Sahin makes a strong case that although technological advances are continuing at a steady pace, there is often a failure to invest enough money to commercialize them. The result: an excess of great ideas gathering dust. Sahin lays out the problem and offers a few solutions.


Download the R&D Scorecard (Excel spreadsheet)

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