<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<!--Web 2.0 Content Powered by MyST Blogsite® (http://blogsite.com)-->
<!--A service of MyST Technology Partners, Inc. (http://myst-technology.com)-->
<?xml-stylesheet href="http://myst-technology.com/public/styles/etc/object.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>

<?myst-baseUrl http://myst-technology.com/public/?>

<MySmartChannels Public="true" UserID="125119" dT="240" t0="1268557287417">
     <GetChannelItem_Result>
      <Item>
       <Resource>
        <ObjectID>12485</ObjectID>
        <ObjectClass>Resource</ObjectClass>
        <OwnerID ObjectClass="Domain" Title="[Weblog] Think Outside the Feed">11678</OwnerID>
        <CreatedByID ObjectClass="User" Title="aseidl">21</CreatedByID>
        <ModifiedByID ObjectClass="User" Title="aseidl">21</ModifiedByID>
        <CreateTime Title="2003-09-07 12:29:20 EDT">1062952160946</CreateTime>
        <ModifyTime Title="2008-01-21 16:40:49 EST">1200951649041</ModifyTime>
        <SecurityModel>Controlled</SecurityModel>
        <Name>RSS: Disruptive Technology Hiding in Plain Sight</Name>
        <Summary>Disruptive technologies have a way of sneaking up on established markets, even when they see it coming.</Summary>
        <Description>&lt;p&gt;When philosopher &lt;a href="http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/santayana/" target="_blank"&gt;George Santayana&lt;/a&gt; said, &amp;quot;Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it,&amp;quot; he could have been talking about the adoption of a disruptive technology like RSS.&amp;nbsp; History has shown that disruptive innovations have toppled established solution providers&amp;mdash;not because the providers were unaware of the innovation, but because they believed it incapable of satisfying the demands of their established market.&amp;nbsp; &lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In &lt;i&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=blueskycolora-20&amp;creative=9361&amp;camp=1793&amp;link_code=st1&amp;path=ASIN/0060521996" target="_blank"&gt;The Innovator's Dilemma&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/i&gt;, Clayton Christensen makes the following observations:&lt;/p&gt;&lt;blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;&lt;i&gt;&amp;quot;Generally, disruptive innovations were technologically straightforward, consisting of off-the-shelf components put together in a product architecture that was often simpler than prior approaches.&amp;nbsp; They offered less of what customers in established markets wanted and so could rarely be initially employed there.&amp;nbsp; They offered a different package of attributes valued only in emerging markets remote from, and unimportant to, the mainstream.&amp;quot;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/p&gt;&lt;/blockquote&gt;&lt;p&gt;RSS fits nicely into this model.&amp;nbsp; RSS is technologically straightforward, is built on widely accepted standards, and offers simplistic functionality.&amp;nbsp; Indeed, RSS lacks capabilities demanded by various established markets.&amp;nbsp; For example, &lt;a href="http://marylaine.com/exlibris/xlib189.html" target="_blank"&gt;Steven J. Bell&lt;/a&gt;, Director of the Library, Paul J. Gutman Library, Philadelphia University, recently wrote, &amp;quot;Nothing I&amp;rsquo;ve read or experienced while using RSS and news aggregators convinces me they are yet perfected enough to offer the fine-grain tuning that produces the control required for a true strategic approach to keeping up.&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; However, RSS has attributes that &lt;i&gt;are&lt;/i&gt; highly valued in numerous &amp;quot;emerging markets remote from, and unimportant to, the mainstream.&amp;quot;.&amp;nbsp; This last point is key to understanding why (and how) RSS is, in fact, a disruptive innovation.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;As Christensen also points out, &amp;quot;the purpose of advanced technology development [is] to &lt;i&gt;sustain&lt;/i&gt; established trajectories of performance improvement...&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp; RSS &lt;i&gt;has been &lt;/i&gt;widely adopted in several sizeable markets (e.g., weblogs, news syndication, corporate portals) and these markets will continue to demand improvements.&amp;nbsp; From the perspective of &lt;i&gt;established RSS markets&lt;/i&gt;, these will be sustaining improvements.&amp;nbsp; However, it is likely that many of these improvements will address requirements of unrelated markets&amp;mdash;say, for example, university library systems.&amp;nbsp; From the perspective of unrelated markets, these will be disruptive improvements; that is, &amp;quot;all of a sudden&amp;quot;, RSS will become an attractive alternative to existing solutions.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;This phenomenon is nothing new.&amp;nbsp; In response to Bell's article, &lt;a href="http://rss.lockergnome.com/archives/opinion/007021.phtml" target="_blank"&gt;Chris Pirillo&lt;/a&gt; offers a nice collection of examples of history repeating itself: the Web, NCSA Mosaic, and Windows.&amp;nbsp; In each case, its not like the established solution providers were unaware of the new technology.&amp;nbsp; In fact, they were the people explaining how and why the new technology was insufficient to meet the requirements of &lt;i&gt;their &lt;/i&gt;market.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;History is repeating itself with RSS.&lt;/p&gt;</Description>
        <ResourceTypeID ObjectClass="ResourceType" Title="Item:Content">10</ResourceTypeID>
        <ContentType>application/xml</ContentType>
        <ContentDocument>
         <ItemProperties>
               <CommonProperties>
                <Hidden>false</Hidden>

                <Keywords>
                 <Keyword>disruptive innovation</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>disruptive technology</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>innovators dilemma</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>RSS</Keyword>

                 <Keyword>RSS adoption</Keyword>

       </Keywords>

      </CommonProperties>

               <RemoteInfo>
                <UserAgent>Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322; .NET CLR 2.0.50727)</UserAgent>

                <RemoteHost>127.0.0.1</RemoteHost>

                <RemoteAddr>127.0.0.1</RemoteAddr>

                <RemoteUser>aseidl</RemoteUser>

                <ForwardedFor>68.40.167.222</ForwardedFor>

      </RemoteInfo>

     </ItemProperties>
        </ContentDocument>
       </Resource>
       <Shares/>
       <Subjects/>
       <UserPermissions>
        <CanDelete>false</CanDelete>
        <CanDiscover>true</CanDiscover>
        <CanEdit>false</CanEdit>
        <CanEditPermissions>false</CanEditPermissions>
        <CanRead>true</CanRead>
       </UserPermissions>
       <CommentInfo>
        <CommentChannelRef AllowAnonymous="true" Inherited="true">
         <ChannelID ObjectClass="Channel" Title="[Public] Public Comments">190014</ChannelID>
         <UserPermissions>
          <CanCreateChannelItem>false</CanCreateChannelItem>
          <CanDelete>false</CanDelete>
          <CanDiscover>true</CanDiscover>
          <CanEdit>false</CanEdit>
          <CanEditPermissions>false</CanEditPermissions>
          <CanPublish>false</CanPublish>
          <CanRead>true</CanRead>
         </UserPermissions>
        </CommentChannelRef>
        <Comments/>
       </CommentInfo>
       <Views>
        <SourceID ObjectClass="Channel" Title="[Weblog] Think Outside the Feed">11678</SourceID>

               <View>
                <Name>blog</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>edit-item</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>left</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/left-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>right</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/right-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

               <View>
                <Name>wide</Name>

                <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/wide-content</Model>

                <Style/>

                <Scheme/>

       </View>

      </Views>
        <Views>
         <SourceID ObjectClass="Channel" Shared="true" Title="[Public] What's New">192423</SourceID>

                <View>
                 <Name>blog</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/whatsnew</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>edit-item</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/web</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>left</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/left-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>right</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/right-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

                <View>
                 <Name>wide</Name>

                 <Model>blogsite/MySTHome/wide-content</Model>

                 <Style/>

                 <Scheme/>

       </View>

      </Views>
        </Item>
       </GetChannelItem_Result>
      </MySmartChannels>
