It's easy to call something innovative. People do it all the time. They relaunch their site to include a +1 feature over a competitor and all the sudden they're hailing their product as innovate and new. Really, innovative implies something that hasn't been done before, and should imply something that pretty much makes the alternatives feel obsolete in comparison.
Google released AdSense, a truly innovative way to create an effective advertising network. It, and the ensuing copy cats, took over the advertising world and made publishing online for profit approachable by even the smallest, most obscure people. YouTube, as simple as it may be, made online video accessible and launched an entire genre of copy cats. Friendster, even if it was kind of lame and lacked a sense of purpose, kick started a million social networks. Blogger brought blogging to the masses.
Tough economic times seems to bring out the next generation of innovation. After playing with AppStore and some of the Apple dev tools for the iPhone, we may very well see a slew of truly innovative out of the box thinking come out of the mobile landscape. The stuff that's out there right now is fairly tame, nothing has really blown me away, but no doubt it's coming. It's probably waiting for approval on appstore this very moment. We'll see.
In thinking in terms of the "new web", are there other examples of things that are truly innovative, or are we building better and better variations of existing themes? Any thoughts on real world applications for mobile? I saw some stuff on crowd sourcing traffic data. That may not reach a critical mass, but that's a killer line of thinking in terms of applications.
3 Comments
Comments...
(Page 1)1. I think IVR (interactive voice response) is a great idea that hasn't been very well developed for any practical use. Some of the systems that I install use IVR, but it's pretty limited. It's usually something like "Call ," or "Read my email," but it's been around since, like, early Sprint PCS days, and people rarely use it.
IVR is actually pretty popular in the Customer Service industry, where callers would hit auto-attendants that try to interpret account numbers, names, etc., and try to get you to where you're going. Most people would say that it doesn't work that well.
9:22AM on Jul 17th 2008 by Patrick Payette
2. @Patrick Payette - but for normal people IVR is not popular
4:03PM on Jul 19th 2008 by Mark
3. Personally, I want to throw my phone through a wall when I encounter the IVR stuff. I've never experienced it actually working the way it should and find myself screaming into the phone repeatedly.
In really, is it the type of technology that even when it works, will we be able to imagine the world without it? I know that's a bold definition of the word innovative, but I'm just not sure we'll ever get to the point where we won't remember mashing a couple buttons on the phone here and there. It just makes too much sense on its own (easy, flexible, scalable, low learning curve, etc.)
I think over all, there are broad trends that can be watched. At least in software. The centralization of data storage, the de-centralization of data creation, the de-centralization of data processing, etc. Then there's the data cycle -- data creates information creates knowledge creates wisdom.
Anyhow.. Just some random thoughts on it all.
4:08PM on Jul 19th 2008 by Alex Rudloff