Manufacturing Innovation

Posted by Geoff Davis at 10AM on 05/13/08 | Categories: None | 2 comments

There's a fascinating New Yorker article on Nathan Myhrvold's current company, Intellectual Ventures. One of the company's core activities involves getting lots of smart people together in a room for a few days, brainstorming, and patenting the resulting ideas. They're kind of a patent troll outfit, but they do seem to be generating some genuinely interesting ideas and pushing at least some of them into commercialization.

Reading the piece brought to mind the various efforts by NSF and others to push interdisciplinary research. IV's efforts are explicitly interdisciplinary, but they have an extra ingredient that I think is absolutely crucial: they go and talk to people outside of academia who are trying to solve real problems. NSF has had a handful of initiatives that involve getting academics out of the ivory tower - industrial postdocs in math come to mind - but not very many. The real world is a source of a lot of great inspiration for research, and not just applied research. For example, some of my own work on wireless communications led me to some deep problems in number theory (distributions of digits in binary representations of elements of the Cantor set; I never got very far, so it's wide open). I think funding agencies could get a lot of scientific (not to mention political and economic) value from encouraging greater interaction between academics and people in industry.

The researchers involved in IV have rather interesting backgrounds, which the article's author credits in part for their ability to generate novel ideas. Their resumes aren't of the form, "got PhD from X, did postdoc at Y, became faculty at Z, wrote N papers;" rather, these are people who have walked across Texas on a whim / have leveraged careers in astrophysics into paleontology, etc. Two (Myhrvold and Jung) were former bosses of mine at Microsoft, so let's hope I'm on a good track.