Getting back to the topic, again, CTI is proving, frankly, unproductive. At ground level, its a constant industry-academia tug-of-war. There is nothing flawed in the concept. It is simply that on our side, we no longer possess the scientific ability to advance anything useful. Ten years of mergers and ATSing have served only to eliminate those with useful experience and replace them with cheaper headcounts of questionable ability. And when technical mediocrity answers to an impotent, self-preserving layer of Tim Rolph clones, the outcome is going to be one of exponential decline. CTI has about 18 months left in it. By then, two more patent expirations. Hope you've all got a plan B.
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