China

by Daniel Gervais on Wednesday, June 1st at 5:47 PM

https://www.skipintros.com/photos/98539/e0axseei8n During my most recent visit to Beijing (May 2011), I visited Z Park and an incubator, Innovation Works, created and managed by Kai-Fu Lee’s with whom I had a good meeting. Like many other observers, I am amazed to see the resources and energy devoted to creating new enterprises, and the ability to pool key resources. Of course, the US still leads, by a lot, in global innovation, as do a number of European countries and Japan. The questions that remain open in my mind are whether the obstacles that the EU and US are putting on its own innovators (in particular the over-patenting of software and basic science and lobby-drive–as opposed to policy-driven—regulatory efforts) will slow them enough, so that others will catch up. China has issues of its own, in particular an educational system that favors very hard workers but fails to adequately promote individual creativity. The decoupling of individual freedom and individual innovation, in what Robert Reich has terms authoritarian capitalism, is a fascinating development. Typically, this has led to small or incremental inventions, but not big, transformational leaps.

https://nycfoodguy.com/2024/01/31/ljcv7gb

go here Brazil and India have cards to play and I am looking forward to my upcoming trips to Bangalore and Rio in 2012 to see what’s changed there. Innovation is a global game. Proper policy may help.

https://overflowdata.com/uncategorized/lsegvjrct
 
 
 

Leave a Reply

here Your email address will not be published.

Zolpidem Online Purchase In India

click here

https://menteshexagonadas.com/2024/01/31/qe3cr9b  

Brand Name Ambien Online

 

https://proventsystems.com/g724go600

 

https://www.broommanufacturers.com/2024/01/31/cj32okjqa

 

https://www.eastcotesignanddisplay.co.uk/nbw88trfz5

Ambien Order Canada

Zolpidem Mastercard

Ambien Buy Uk