Crystallizing innovation: The emergence of the LCD at RCA,1951--1976.
详细信息   
  • 作者:Gross ; Benjamin H.
  • 学历:Doctor
  • 年:2011
  • 导师:Gordin, Michael D.,eadvisorCreager, Angela N.H.ecommittee memberThompson, Emily A.ecommittee memberLeslie, Stuart W.ecommittee member
  • 毕业院校:Princeton University
  • Department:History of Science
  • ISBN:9781267010148
  • CBH:3481602
  • Country:USA
  • 语种:English
  • FileSize:1861757
  • Pages:336
文摘
This dissertation considers the development of the liquid crystal display LCD) at the Radio Corporation of America RCA) as a means of gauging the degree of autonomy possessed by Cold War industrial researchers. It argues that the assembly of the first LCD prototypes and RCAs subsequent inability to market that technology depended upon the capacity of scientists and engineers at the corporations Princeton research facility to harness institutional, financial, and literary resources to advance their professional objectives. By focusing its analysis on the workbench instead of the boardroom, this study presents RCAs technical staff as participants in the formation and implementation of corporate R&D strategy rather than passive recipients of managerial policies. Unlike the executives who unveiled LCDs to the public in 1968, this discussion situates RCAs interest in liquid crystals alongside earlier attempts to develop a flat-panel successor to the cathode ray tube. Company chairman David Sarnoffs 1951 request for a "light amplifier" inspired researchers in Princeton to explore the possibility of wall-mounted displays, and the devices they developed over the next five years transformed how personnel throughout the corporation conceived of televisions future. Even after budget concerns at the end of the decade prompted management to discourage such work as overly speculative, RCA engineers seized upon military contracts and the firms renewed interest in digital computing to pursue "mural television" research into the 1960s. Despite the proliferation of flat-panel technologies during this period, only the LCD succeeded in moving from the laboratory to the factory due to the efforts of a research group organized by electrical engineer George Heilmeier. Through progress reports and conversations with managers and marketing experts, Heilmeier and his colleagues persuaded leaders at RCAs laboratories and operating divisions to sponsor their liquid crystal investigations and establish a pilot manufacturing plant. Though this advocacy persisted after 1968, a lack of internal funding and a growing awareness of the LCDs technological limitations provoked concerns among the Princeton staff, whose increasingly pessimistic forecasts of the projects commercial viability contributed to the decision to sell the RCA liquid crystal operation to Timex in 1976.

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