Why could a small start-up build Instagram, a photo app, and sell it for $1 billion while companies like Eastman Kodak, steeped in photography and the emotionalism of photography, could not? Culture got in the way.
- Business
- Clayton M. Christensen
- Disruptions
- Disruptive technology
- disruptive technology
- disruptive technology
- Eastman Kodak
- Eastman Kodak
- Edwin H. Land
- Edwin Land
- Farmville
- Film formats
- Harvard Business School
- Hasbro
- innovation
- innovators dilemma
- Instant camera
- Instant film
- internet
- iPhone
- Kodak
- Kodak
- Kodak
- Land Camera
- Massachusetts
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Media Lab
- Michael Hawley
- Mobile
- Nikon
- Olympus
- Optics
- photography
- Polarization
- Polaroid
- Polaroid
- San Francisco
- social
- start-up
- start-ups
- SX-70
- Yale School of Management
Jim Wilson covered his first presidential primary in 1976, shooting for The Charlotte Observer. Covering politics over the decades, he has seen tremendous changes - both in the style of the campaigns and the technology used to photograph them.
- ?re using wireless transmitters
- Associated Press
- Campaign trail
- Campaigns
- Changing Times
- CNN
- Derry
- digital and cellular technology
- digital and cellular technology
- Iowa
- James Estrin
- James Estrin
- Jim Wilson
- Jim Wilson
- Jimmy Carter
- Lincoln cent
- Manchester
- New Hampshire
- On Assignment
- Politics
- Q & A
- Q&A
- Republican presidential campaign
- Secret Service
- Technology hasn
- the New York Times
- the Times
- The Associated Press
- The Charlotte Observer
- the New York Times
- the Times
- Washington
- Washington Post
- Washington Post