Brightening the black box of R&D

McKinsey’s take on measuring productivity of R&D.  This is a very contentious area, and many have criticized companies for spending too much or too little on R&D.  It’s largely based on hypotheticals however, because it is hard to guess what a project is going to contribute.  And it’s worse at small innovative enterprises, which are mostly R&D, because there is little info on what the impact of new products will be. The formula would seem to work well at Clayton Christensen’s large stable companies which are simply innovating to please a large group of present and demanding customers, rather than disrupt through spectacular new innovation to gather new customers.  Still, it’s good reading and extends the thinking in this area.

Brightening the black box of R&D | McKinsey & Company.

Robust Westbound Trans-Atlantic Adds Pressure on East Coast Ports

This article ponders the factors influencing the fast-growing westbound ocean freight traffic to the US.  Not least of the reasons is the higher US dollar with respect to Europe.

Piers

Robust Westbound Trans-Atlantic Adds to Pressure on East Coast Ports.

So I guess we can expect labor disputes reaching a crescendo on the East Coast next.  It’s their turn to capitalize on the increasing business to get better working conditions and a bigger share of the pie.  Shipping companies and port terminal managers need to look for bottlenecks now and work on getting the operational issues fixed before they become contentious.

Festo Demonstrates Robots Based on Nature

This article shows that autonomous agents– something only talked about years ago– are becoming a reality. It’s just a matter of time before they take over many routine jobs in factories, and elsewhere.

Festo Demonstrates Robots Based on Nature | Robotics content from IndustryWeek.

Gary Knotts’ paper (with Moshe Dror and me) some 20 years ago about autonomous agents and project scheduling was ahead of its time, and many others ahve refined the concepts since then.