We Were Burning: Japanese Entrepreneurs and the Forging of the Electronic Age Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

We Were Burning: Japanese Entrepreneurs and the Forging of the Electronic Age Book

Freelance journalist Bob Johnstone shatters the stereotypes of Japanese entrepreneurs as uncreative copycats and reveals the spirit, competitive zeal, and perfectionism that drive high-tech companies like Sony, Sharp, and Canon. "It is hard to imagine such faceless drones as brave risk takers, betting their companies on some new and unproven technology," Johnstone writes about the Japanese in We Were Burning. The book documents how Japan launched the revolution in consumer electronics--often by seizing on technology initially developed in the U.S. and vastly improving it. For instance, it was an American company, RCA, that announced the creation of liquid crystal displays (LCD) in New York in 1968. Another American giant, Hewlett-Packard, pursued the technology and then abandoned it out of frustration by 1980. But Japan's Seiko and Sharp persisted in the development of LCDs: the devices now are now found in everything from watches to calculators and laptops to flat-screen TVs. The book profiles people like Sharp's Sasaki Tadashi, nicknamed "Doctor Rocket" for his boundless energy, and companies like Seiko, which began more than 100 years ago as a maker of clocks and watches. It also offers some insights about the future of such technologies as digital photography. At the same time, We Were Burning provides a historical and cultural context for Japan's incredible technological achievements. The book contains some valuable lessons for U.S. business managers. It's also worthwhile reading for people interested in the technology underpinning modern machines, including compact-disc players, laser printers, and multimedia computers. Johnstone, who has written for New Scientist and Wired and been a journalism fellow at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is convinced that the entrepreneurial spirit of the Japanese people will pull the country back from any economic mess. "In the past, the Japanese have repeatedly demonstrated their resilience-- especially when their backs are against the wall." --Dan RingRead More

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  • Product Description

    Bob Johnstone, with "a sharp eye for drama" (Kirkus Reviews), traces the rise of the electronics industry in Japan and the United States.

    "[P]rovides a much-needed human dimension to the strange and wonderful threads of technology with which we weave our world." -Nature

    "Comprehensive, smartly written and accessible." -Publishers Weekly

    "A must-read." -Salon

    "A fascinating history of the silicon era in the land of the rising sun." -Business 2.0

    Presenting a wealth of new material, including interviews with key players past and present, Bob Johnstone introduces us to a new and very different kind of Japanese worker-a dynamic, iconoclastic, risk-taking entrepreneur.

    Incorporating American inventions such as microchip cameras, liquid crystal displays, and sound chips, Japanese companies created products that are now ubiquitous facets of the modern world: digital calculators and watches, synthesizers, camcorders, and compact disc players. Without these creative men and women, Seiko, Canon, Casio, Sharp, and Yamaha could not have turned obscure American inventions into profitable, useful gadgets for the consumer.

  • 0465091180
  • 9780465091188
  • Bob Johnstone
  • 3 September 1999
  • Basic Books
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 448
  • New edition
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