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The Water Cooler
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Who will apply for work at Tesla in Tulsa?
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<blockquote data-quote="Hobbes" data-source="post: 3371139" data-attributes="member: 3371"><p>Reminds me of the clash between the corporate cultures at Microsoft and IBM.</p><p></p><p>In the waning days of MS-DOS Microsoft and IBM formed a partnership program to develop the next generation of personal computer operating systems, 32 bit OS/2.</p><p>Teams from both corporations would hold regular meetings to hammer out architecture and API calls together.</p><p></p><p>The developers at IBM proceeded slowly and methodically at a near snails pace.</p><p>Before long the developers at MS were ready to start writing code.</p><p>The corporate culture at both companies was so different that the collaboration ultimately fell apart altogether.</p><p></p><p>That is how Windows95 was born and OS/2, which eventually turned out to be a fine OS, failed.</p><p>Something happens at large organizations that impedes innovation and gives smaller companies room to exploit opportunity earlier.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hobbes, post: 3371139, member: 3371"] Reminds me of the clash between the corporate cultures at Microsoft and IBM. In the waning days of MS-DOS Microsoft and IBM formed a partnership program to develop the next generation of personal computer operating systems, 32 bit OS/2. Teams from both corporations would hold regular meetings to hammer out architecture and API calls together. The developers at IBM proceeded slowly and methodically at a near snails pace. Before long the developers at MS were ready to start writing code. The corporate culture at both companies was so different that the collaboration ultimately fell apart altogether. That is how Windows95 was born and OS/2, which eventually turned out to be a fine OS, failed. Something happens at large organizations that impedes innovation and gives smaller companies room to exploit opportunity earlier. [/QUOTE]
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