New technologies fascinate me ... As we approach the Singularity, I guess that is becoming human nature.
Second Thought has put together a video that looks at various predictions from the early 1900s. It is a fun watch – Check it out.
via Second Thought
It's interesting to look at what they strategically got right compared to what was tactically different.
In a 1966 interview, Marshall McLuhan discussed the future of information with ideas that now resonate with AI technologies. He envisioned personalized information, where people request specific knowledge and receive tailored content. This concept has become a reality through AI-powered chatbots like ChatGPT, which can provide customized information based on user inputs.
Although McLuhan was against innovation, he recognized the need to understand emerging trends to maintain control and know when to "turn off the button."
In 1966, media futurist Marshall McLuhan envisioned a form of digital research eerily similar to the customized queries now answered by AI. Then he makes a surprising admission about why he studies technological change—with a lesson I think many need to hear. pic.twitter.com/yEBJv95GvP
— Benjamin Carlson (@bfcarlson) March 22, 2023
While not all predictions are made equal, we seem to have a better idea of what we want than how to accomplish it.
The farther the horizon, the more guesswork is involved. Compared to the prior video on predictions from the mid-1900s, this video on the internet from 1995 seems downright prophetic.
via YouTube
There's a lesson there. It's hard to predict the future, but that doesn't mean you can't skate to where the puck is moving. Even if the path ahead is unsure, it's relatively easy to pick your next step, and then the step in front of that. As long as you are moving in the right direction and keep taking steps without stopping, the result is inevitable.
Tech Over The Long Run
Humans are wired to think locally and linearly ... because that's what it took to survive in a pre-industrial age. However, that leaves most of us very bad at predicting technology and its impact on our future.
To put the future of technology in perspective, it's helpful to look at the history of technology to help understand what an amazing era we live in.
Our World In Data put together a great chart that shows the entire history of humanity in relation to innovation.
Max Roser via ourworldindata
3.4 million years ago, our ancestors supposedly started using tools. 2.4 million years later they harnessed fire. 43,000 years ago (almost a million years later) we developed the first instrument, a flute.
That's an insane amount of time. Compare that to this:
In 1903, the Wright Brothers first took flight ... 66 years later, we were on the moon.
That's less than a blink in the history of humankind, and yet we're still increasing speed.
Technology is a snowball rolling down a mountain, picking up steam, and now it's an avalanche being driven by AI.
But innovation isn't only driven by scientists. It's driven by people like you or me having a vision and making it into a reality.
Even though I'm the CEO of an AI company, I don't build artificial intelligence myself ... but I can envision a bigger future and communicate that to people who can. I also can use tools that help me automate and innovate things that help free me to focus on more important ways to create value.
The point is that you can't let the perfect get in the way of the good. AI's impact is inevitable. You don't have to wait to see where the train's going ... you should be boarding.
Onwards!
Posted at 08:32 PM in Business, Current Affairs, Gadgets, Healthy Lifestyle, Ideas, Just for Fun, Market Commentary, Personal Development, Science, Trading Tools, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0)
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