I remember reading several months ago about the amount of waste that can pile up in a hospital's inventory. I don't recall a specific root cause - perhaps a combination of expirations & demand mistakes.
Real estate is a very inefficient market. I say that because the transaction costs are high compared to the value of the transaction.
Medical in general is very inefficient, for several reasons. Many of us don't get to choose our insurance company - our employer chooses them, and we don't have any option. (I'd like to see companies offer at least two competing insurance plans from different companies.) Second, we talk to doctors on the basis of "do I need it", not on the basis of "what's the cost, what's the benefit". Third, the doctors' office has people whose job is to try to get insurance companies to pay, and the insurance companies have people whose job is to try to find reasons not to pay. That's rather inefficient. There's probably some other big inefficiencies there, too.
Lots of projects high on buzz-words but low on competence and value creation potential are highly valued, while lots of projects low on buzz-words and high on competence and value creation potential are lowly valued.
When the pendelum swings, a few clever wolves will get filthy rich while the masses lose their shirts.
Is there money in crypto? I thought the industry heavily favored open source crypto software like ssh, openssl, gpg, etc. Or are you talking about stuff like Protonmail that incorporate crypto into their services, like how they advertise that their client encrypts mail before sending it to their server?
It's interesting how the word-root crypto (meaning "hidden" or "secret") is used as a prefix to mean "cryptographic", but when used alone it's supposed to somehow mean currencies, as if there were some part of the word-root "crypto" that is related to currencies.
If "cryptocurrency" is too long, can't one say "currency"? It seems more correct.
Medical in general is very inefficient, for several reasons. Many of us don't get to choose our insurance company - our employer chooses them, and we don't have any option. (I'd like to see companies offer at least two competing insurance plans from different companies.) Second, we talk to doctors on the basis of "do I need it", not on the basis of "what's the cost, what's the benefit". Third, the doctors' office has people whose job is to try to get insurance companies to pay, and the insurance companies have people whose job is to try to find reasons not to pay. That's rather inefficient. There's probably some other big inefficiencies there, too.