As I logged into www.library.utoronto.ca and started my first dig into this topic, I came across this article:
Sun, W., Peng, J., Ma, J. & Wang, S. (2009). Market, regulation and technology regime: implications for China Mobile Phone Industries. Journal of Technology Management in China, 4(3), 250. Retrieved January 22, from
http://link.library.utoronto.ca/eir/EIRdetail.cfm?Resources__ID=789547
&T=J University of Toronto Library Database.
A summary of this journal:
This journal's objective was to prove that technology which is accepted by consumers (customers) might not be the most advance. They explained that sometimes this could be looked "backwards" in which using different technologies could coexist under certain market situations and government regulations.
This journal article shows the prudence and predictability of Personal Handy Phone System (PHS) technology market successes and points out that government regulations would impact technological choice.
The design and methods used for the paper is by analyzing the choice of technology under the evolution of market demand and government regulations by evolutionary economics in China.
The findings the authors discovered that market demands and government regulations can affect the change of technology regimes deeply (despite the level of that specific technology). China's mobile phones technological evolution was affected with the change of environment factors.
The authors concluded that government regulations would impact the technological choice and lead to technology market success but it would lead to the low efficiency of resources allocations.
Saturday, January 23, 2010
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