Technology fusion

Technology fusion involves a transformation of core technologies through a combination process facilitated by technological advances such as the phone and the Internet, which ensure that labs are no longer isolated.[1] This results in profitable advances that can be made cheaply by combining knowledge from different fields, companies, industries, and geographies.[1] The technological fusion is distinguished from the so-called breakthrough approach, which is the linear technological development that replaces an older generation of technology through its focus on combining existing technologies into hybrid products that can revolutionize markets.[2]

Fusion

The fusion of technologies goes beyond mere combination. Fusion is more than complementarism, because it creates a new market and new growth opportunities for each participant in the innovation. It blends incremental improvements from several (often previously separate) fields to create a product.[3]

An example is the fusion of mechanical and electronic engineering to create mechatronics. There is also the case of fusing chemical and electronics technology to produce the Liquid Crystal display (LCD) technology.[4]

gollark: "Some phenomeon exists" != "some phenomenon exists in whatever context you're on about"
gollark: Some sort of convoluted new model of the universe based on electricity or something does *not* do that.
gollark: Are you aware of the "correspondence principle"? It basically just means that your new theory has to match with all the previously found empirical evidence for other theories.
gollark: I don't think you understand what I'm asking here.
gollark: How can you distinguish these "birkeland currents" from the well-known and documented phenomenon of "gravity" and whatever else?

References

  1. Phillips, Fred (2013). Market-Oriented Technology Management: Innovating for Profit in Entrepreneurial Times. Berlin: Springer. pp. 21. ISBN 9783642074561.
  2. Kodama, Fumio (1992-07-01). "Technology Fusion and the New R&D". Harvard Business Review. Retrieved 2018-09-25.
  3. Kodama, Fumio (September 1991). Analyzing Japanese High Technologies: The Techno-Paradigm Shift. Thomson Learning. ISBN 978-0-86187-835-2.
  4. Kim, Junmo (2005). R&D and Economy in Korea: With Selected Multinational Cases & Theories. Lincoln, NE: iUniverse. p. 111. ISBN 9780595375257.


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