165 research outputs found
Open source software development: some historical perspectives
software development, historical
Collective invention during the British Industrial Revolution: the case of the Cornish pumping engine
pump enigine, industrial revolution, collective invention
'Unravelling the Duty': Leanïżœs Engine Reporter and Cornish Steam Engineering
steam, Cornish, engineering
Technological Revolutions and Economic Growth:The ïżœAge of Steamïżœ Reconsidered
revolution, economic growth, steam, technological
The Early Development of the Steam Engine: An Evolutionary Interpretation using Complexity Theory
complexity theory, development, steam engine
The "machine-breakers" and the industrial revolution
The early phase of the industrialization process in Britain was characterized by a considerable number of machine-breaking riots. All the great innovations in textile technology seemed to have been, at some point of time, smashed. John Kay's flying shuttle met a strong resistance and workers rioted against its introduction in 1758, 1785-7,1810-13 and 1822. Hargreaves'spinning jenny was attacked in several mobs (1767, 1769 and 1779). In 1779 there were also assaults against Arkwright-type of factories. The power loom was the target of the Lancashire Luddites in 1812. Although this form of labour disturbances has been the subject of extensive historical investigation, there is still little consensus among historians about the exact nature and significance of this form ofresistance to innovation
Collective invention during the British Industrial revoluton : the case of the Cornish pumping engine
In this paper, we argue that together with individual inventors and firms, what Robert C. Allen (1983) has termed as collective invention settings (that is settings in which rival firms freely release each other pertinent technical information), were also a crucial source of innovation in the industrial revolution period. Until now, this has been very little considered in the literature. This paper focuses on one of these cases: the Cornish mining district. In Cornwall, during the early nineteenth century, a notable collective invention setting, gradually emerged. This case is particularly remarkable because it was capable of generating a continuous and sustained flow of improvements in steam pumping technology which in the end greatly contributed to improve the thermodynamic efficiency of the steam engine. In this paper we study in detail the specific economic circumstances that led to the formation of this collective invention setting and we analyses its consequences for the rate of technological innovation
The Diffusion of the Steam Engine in Eighteenth-Century Britain
revolution, economic growth, steam, technological
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