- In engineering and information technology, stove-piped development is an approach in which improvements are considered only within the existing and technologically familiar context. The need for a change is perceived, an obvious solution is found, and improvements are made without much thought of future and larger contexts. An example is the telephone as originally developed. It operated by sending baseband audio-frequency signals over electrical wires. This system, without further refinement, had limited geographic operating range because of resistance loss in the wires. To some extent it was possible to overcome this loss by using excellent electrical conductors for the wires and by using the largest-diameter wire possible, but this was a stove-piped approach and was impractical beyond a certain point.
The telephone would never have given rise to today's communications
infrastructure if an integrated approach had not been taken by
theoreticians, inventors, and engineers in response to public pressure. But
the telephone evolved along with other technologies such as electronic
amplification, radio, and data conversion. The telephone was eventually
modified to accommodate fax machines, remote-control devices, and computers.
Ironically, long-distance telephone communications is now re-emerging within
the Internet, which originally arose within the telephone infrastructure!
The expression was originally coined by the U.S. Army to describe any system or method developed in isolation, without considering how it might function with other existing or future technologies.
| CONTRIBUTORS: |
Tim Stilwell |
| LAST UPDATED: |
28 Jan 2006
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