Storage Industry Dynamics and Strategy
The Information Storage Industry Center (ISIC) at the University of California, San Diego is a non-profit research program studying the rapidly-evolving and highly-competitive information storage industry. ISIC's research areas include product development, manufacturing, competitive dynamics, economics of organization, and storage system reliability and data integrity. Established in 1998 with a grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, ISIC is affiliated with UCSD's Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies (IR/PS), one of world's top international graduate programs specializing in the Pacific Rim.
There are 8 publications in this collection, published between 1999 and 2003.
Greg Linden: Optical Storage In China: A Study in Strategic Industrial Policy, 2003
Olga M. Khessina: EFFECTS OF ENTRY MODE AND INCUMBENCY STATUS ON THE RATES OF FIRM PRODUCT INNOVATION IN THE WORLDWIDE OPTICAL DISK DRIVE INDUSTRY, 1983-1999, 2002
David G. McKendrick; William P. Barnett: The Organizational Evolution of Global Technological Competition, 2001
Olga M. Khessina; Glenn R. Carroll: Ecological Dynamics of De Novo and De Alio Products in the Worldwide Optical Disk Drive Industry, 1983-1999, 2001
Bohn, Roger E.: The Low-Profit Trap in Hard Disk Drives, and How to Get Out of It, 2000
David G. McKendrick; Jonathan Jaffee; Glenn R. Carroll; Olga M. Khessina: In the Bud? Disk Array Producers as a (Possibly) Emergent Organizational Form, 2000
David G. McKendrick; Glenn R. Carroll: On the Genesis of Organizational Forms: Evidence from the Market for Disk Arrays, 2000
Ron Adner: A Demand-based View of Technology Competition: Demand Structure and Technology Displacement, 1999