Title: Networks
1Networks Positive Feedback
22 Types of networks in the information economy
- Physical networks telephone, tv-cable, GSM, fax,
ATM - Virtuale networks Linux-users, Mac users, MP3.
3The biggr the network, the more attractive
- Network effects
- Network externalities
- Demand side economies of scale
4In comparison with classical economy
- Demand side economies of scale, with diminishing
scale effects. (E.g. General Electric, or the
mythical man month, IBM) - Netwerk economics are however not new logistics
service providers, airline industry, shopping
malls (postal service, telecommunication
networks).
5What is already known
- Large companies try to maintain a network which
is as large as possible
connections 54321 1/265 15 After
the red node has joined connections 615
1/276 Network of n nodes 1/2n(n-1)
6Network externalitiesMetcalfes law
- The value of a network goes up as the square of
the number of users. - Externalities activities of market participants
influence one another without payments being
exchanged.
7Tippy markets markets in which one player will
survive
- Eventual resultat of strong network effects
- winner takes all (for the time being)
- Video (VHS, Betamax, Philips 2000)
- modems
- pc operating systems
8Example gamecomputers
- 1985 Atari rules,
- 1985 Nintendo enters with Nintendo Entertainment
System - 1986 Nintendo has mor sales
- Development companies want to work fir Nintendo,
Nintendo forces that games are constructed
exclusively for them.
9Collective Switching Costs
- 1870 type machines machine with which copying
was easier than by hand - Qwerty keyboard
- Introduced in 1870 to slow the typist down!
- Besides, it made it very easy for
salesrepresentatives to type typewriter.
10Collective switching cost (cont.)
- Typewriters were technically improved
significantly during the 19th century - The Dvorak keyboard (AOEUIDHTNS) turns out te be
much faster (and there is no need to slow down
anymore) - No one switche because
- Individual switching costs
- We want to stay with the big network
- Collective switching costs (coordination)
11Under what circumstances are markets tippy?
12Strategies to create a network that is large
enough for positive feedback
- Evolution high downward compatibility(low
switching costs), low performance improvement
(small benefit). - Revolution no downward compatibility (high
switching cost), high performance improvement
(high benefit).
13Another strategic choice
144 strategies in netwerk markten
15Performance play
- Introduce a new incompatible technology, en
protect all rights. - Example Nintendo
16Controlled Migration
- Introduce a new backward compatible technology,
whose rights are protected. - ExampleWindows 98,
17Open migration
- Introduceer a backward compatible technology
whose rights are not protected - Example Acrobat reader
18Discontiuiteit
- Introduce a non backward compatible technologie,
whose rights are not protected. - Example CD.
19Which standards/network wars are currently being
fought?
- Operating systems for mobile devices
- UMTS platforms
- Web(service) development platforms
- .NET versus Java
20Examples of positive feedback
- 1860 In the US there are several widths of
railway track. - In the south, mostly 5. In the north ,mostly
4.8 1/2. - The big north east lines were being extende to
the west - The southern states left the parliament
- The southern states los the civil war
- In the end everything was 4.8 1/2.
21AC DC
- 1882 the first electricity networks were build
- DC by Thomas Edison
- A (alternating) C by Westinghouse.
- AC was easier to transport on long distance
initially much AC in the country side, DC in the
cities
22AC DC
- Edison used his patents in the standards war, for
example patterns on lighting. (and even on the
electric chair) - polyphase AC appeared to be a superior technology
- A converter from DC to AC was developped
- Edison himself got out of business
- AC became the standard
23Color TV
- 1941 introduction of the color TV
- NBC was owned by RCA, a television producing
company - CBS launched a mechanical color TV
- RCA tried to slow CBS down, for example by
explaining that the system was not backward
compatible
24TVs
- 1950 CBS versus RCA color TV test. CBS wins. the
monkeys were green, the bananas were blue, and
everyone had a good laugh. (says director of
RCA) - RCA attempts to enlarge its installed base,
continues to critize CBS, en doubles RD. - CBS couldnt produce many TVs.
25TVs
- Government stops color TVproduction because of
Korean War - 1952 RCA finally got a working color TV, patents
it, and has 23 million customers on balck white
television. - RCA wins lobby,
- 1953. CBS withdraws.
- Until 1963, only 3 color TVs.
- 60s RCA starts to develop content to make it
more attractive