Slashdot: Users as innovators – why open source works

By  | 4/18/2005 | Filed under: General, Innovation, Technology

Shamelessly cut-and-pasted from Slashdot: eaglemoon writes “Many people still have difficulty understanding why open source software projects are successfull. The Boston Globe has an interview with Eric von Hippel, a Professor at MIT Sloan School of Management, on users as innovators. In his new book, von Hippel, discusses how open source projects draw on the creativity of ”lead users,” who are often ahead of the curve on technology and marketplace trends. Von Hippel shows the trend already is more advanced than is generally known, and users often freely reveal their innovations for the common good. The social efficiency of a system in which individual innovations are developed by individual users is increased if users somehow diffuse what they have developed to others…..he also notes that the transition to user-centered innovation is hard for some companies to swallow. The online version of the book is available under a Creative Commons license.”

Can this same principle be applied to the creation of knowledge in universities, where individual members of the university community use technology to diffuse new knowledge generated; thus propelling innovation and continuous, new context creation for knowledge production and innovation?

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Dr. John Moravec is a faculty member in the Department of Organizational Leadership, Policy, and Development and the Innovation Studies/Master of Liberal Studies graduate programs at the University of Minnesota. He is the principal of Education Futures LLC; a co-founder of the Horizon Forum, a roundtable on the future of education at all levels; and is the editor of Education Futures. He can be emailed at john@educationfutures.com.

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