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Former Intel CEO Andy Grove Wants Struggling Industries To Stop Slacking

lousyd writes "Andy Grove, former CEO of Intel and current instructor at Stanford Business School, has a message for industry. He believes that health care and energy, especially, could learn a lesson from computing's innovative and relatively government-free history. He asks students to imagine if mainframe vendors had asked government to prop them up in the same way that General Motors recently was. On the issue of computer patents, he insists that firms must use their patents or lose them: 'You can't just sit on your a** and give everyone the finger.'"

3 of 235 comments (clear)

  1. You can't just sit on your a** and give the finger by Smidge207 · · Score: -1, Troll

    WOW! Talk about the cookware referring to the boiling vessel as chocolate coloured. ;-)

    --
    Is it just my observation, or is eldavojohn an idiot?
  2. Re:But ... without HMOs how will people get well? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Troll

    I wish there were a law that makes it illegal for hospitals to treat uninsured people like you who show up in the emergency lacking the cash to pay for major medical emergencies.

    You should be dumped in the gutter out in front of the hospital to die in the street. That way they wouldn't stiff the rest of us with your unpaid bills.

    And I bet you think that people in favor of healthcare reform want to be "freeloaders". Pot, meet kettle.

  3. Re:"Relatively government free" by smoker2 · · Score: 0, Troll

    No, it's not the same thing. When the govt. gives a financial lifeline to a failing company, it's doing so to prevent hundreds of thousands of "consumers" being unable to consume because they have no jobs to earn enough to buy anything. This has an effect on other areas of the economy further down the line who had nothing to do with the actions of the failing business. It is only right that the govt. specifies some positive changes in behaviour from the companies in return. If they had changed before they failed, they probably wouldn't have failed.