The content of this case study is SinoSecurities, a joint venture between Odyssey System Integrators Limited (OSIL) and the Chinese government and Taiwanese PC manufacturer TIL. TIL owns a majority of the shares of the joint venture. "TIL wishes to use SinoSecurities as a starting point for sales hardware and IT service providers" (McFarlen, 2001). Paul Yang is a project manager of OSIL. The objective of this project is to "develop an electronic trading gateway in cooperation with the Shenzhen Securities Exchange and enable domestic account holders to engage in securities trading through online accounts with local banks" (McFarlan, 2001 ).
Odyssey protocol is a block chain protocol designed to build "next generation distributed shared economy and peer-to-peer ecosystem". Odyssey initially partnered with OBike and had partnered with OBike, one of Asia's leading bicycle sharing companies with a market share of $ 2 billion (2 BN) in more than 20 countries, but to fully diversify the shared economy Their dream has brought even more collaboration. The partnership is developed as a product. Odyssey ($ OCN) is the largest block chain use case in the history of merger with OBike, but it is related to the anticipated development of the OCN chain; the scope of the original project is purely distributed share We doubled the initial vision of the ring economy. Currently in the Obike mobile app, users can use $ OCN to pay Obike's rental fee. And you can earn $ OCN with the royalty reward program.
Latest information on shared economies and P2P transactions: Odyssey ($ OCN) roadmap for reconfiguring the OCN chain
Magnavox Odyssey has never been published to the public because of its limited technology capabilities. However, by the mid-1970's, the pandemic of balls and balls at the game hall increased interest in video games, the continued progress of integrated circuits made cheap large scale integrated (LSI) microchips, consumers I could incorporate it into the product. In 1975, Magnavox launched Odyssey 100 and Odyssey 200, two new systems that reduce the number of parts of Odyssey using 3 chip parts developed by Texas Instruments and play only ball and paddle games. This market is the same market as Harold Lee's single chip Home Pong system. In the second year, General Instrument released "Pong-on-a-chip" LSI and offered it to companies of interest at low price. Overall, the sales of the ball propeller system unique to the US increased from 350 thousand in 1975 to the peak of 5 million to 6 million in 1977.
In the 1990s, healthcare was characterized by the best architecture (nonintegrated systems are superior in specialized fields, but limited to this field). This architecture connects various systems such as EMR, laboratory systems, radiology, pharmacy systems, registration, scheduling, billing, using HL 7 engine and messaging. The best-in-class architecture is flexible, but expensive to keep it fragile. Since healthcare IT leaders believe maintaining these HL7 interfaces is not worthwhile, we will move to a single, single vendor model. Due to the tight coupling between all these systems (loose coupling to HL 7), single vendor models are difficult to upgrade and therefore difficult to upgrade. Figure 3 shows the evolution of medical IT from the best solution to a single vendor solution