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Technology

Are The Benefits Of Technology Waning? 278

FallLine writes: "U.S.News and World Report has an interesting and well writen article called the The Slowing Pace of Innovation. It argues that innovation between, approximately, 1900 and 1950 had a far greater impact on the average person (and society as a whole) than innovation between 1950 and 2000. It comments particularly on innovations of the past 20 or 30 years (i.e., cell phones, PCs, the internet, etc.) and compares them with earlier inventions that most of us take for granted (i.e., the lightbulb, sanitation, plumbing, etc). This article is long overdue, in my opinion, as it puts the innovations of today into proper historical context, even when we look back just 100 years."
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Are The Benefits Of Technology Waning?

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    0wnage!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    i am the greatest!!!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Of course, take whats in the subject, reword it, add another sentence, post it, and instant karma! congrats, youve just become a karma whore.
  • Many people seem to confuse innovation vs. invention. Invention is creating a new thing/technology. Innovation is sensing and successfully responding to a market need.

    This article seems to forget that perhaps the most important innovations of recent times have been SOCIAL innovations.

    Some good: FDR's GI bill of rights, which provided an entire generation of Americans with higher education, the Generally Accepted Tarriffs and Treaties (GATT, now WTO), which dramatically lowered global trade barriers in part to dissuade another world war

    Some bad: Nazism, Maoism, Stalinism.

    The age of innovation on the social level is just beginning.
  • I see you agree with me on the Concorde. Also, while military fighters can go supersonic, they can't CRUISE supersonic, like the Concorde does. The exception is the F-22 which is not even in service yet.

    True, current fighters can't cruise supersonically. That's not because it's technologically impossible, but because their mission profile doesn't require it. There have been military planes capable of supersonic cruise, though. In addition to the SR-71, there was the YF-12A [att.net] interceptor version with similar performance, intended to replace the F-106 for interception of Soviet bombers. It never went into active service, though.

    The other significant supersonic-cruise military plane was the General Dynamics B-58 Hustler [tripod.com]. In service from 1958 until 1969, it was designed for supersonic cruise. How does a New York - LA round trip in 4 hours, 41 minutes sound?

    The SR-71. I am not aware of a replacement of the SR-71 especially since it was brough back into service for the Gulf war. Why didn't they use a more capable replacement if they had any?

    Because funding of military projects is based solely on political perception of needs...there won't be a replacement until the politicians believe (correctly or not) that we need a replacement.

  • You're right, the F-22 can cruise supersonic without using the afterburners. But I believe the Concorde can also do this, and only uses the afterburners for takeoff and transitioning into supersonic.

    You're right about the SR-71 being in a league of its own -- at cruise, with the compressor bypassed, the afterburner effectively becomes the combustion chamber of a ramjet. Gotta love elegant engineering, eh? ;)

  • It's a matter of priorities and clear thinking.

    Whose priorities? The VCs gave money to every assinine idea so they could get rich, not so they could advance society. To the VCs, it is 'clear thinking' to bank on 1 of 10 ventures paying off. Maybe you disagree, and thus the large impasse is created.

    IMHO - The biggest impediment to human progress is our free will. Things that are important to 'socially minded' folks are not important to others. Once our basic needs are met, the importance and allocation of resources becomes complicated. Such complications are fodder for wars, famine, and any other Bad Things (tm) that have occurred since humans became 'civilized'.

    OTH - I do not want to give up my free will so we can become like the 'humans' in THX 1138 [geocities.com] .

    Later.

    "Fat, drunk, and stupid is no way to go through life."

  • In a time and age where we're finding promising leads to cancer cures, alzheimer cures, cloning, tissue regeneration, genome mapping, full-time space stations, rovers to mars, active probes still reporting data millions and millions of miles away from our planet, computers with enough processing power to blow away every cpu before current times combined, bringing some site back to the blind, some hearing ability back to the deaf, highly complex limbs back to those who have lost them, giving those with severely limited motor skills means to communicate with the world through computers, transplanting hands of cadavres to living patients, genetically engineering perfect foods -- how can anyone possibly suggest with any seriousness that the benefits of technology are waning?

    Granted, the mapping of the human genome or landing a probe on Mars probably doesn't bring us the same awe that radio, moving pictures and the telephone brought to generations before our time, but they are none-the-less fantastic and amazing and certainly beneficial. We're a species with the ability to ultimately craft our entire future in almost every aspect. Barring our propensity to blow ourselves up and poison our world into oblivion, the benefits of our discoveries and creations are limitless and the benefits are, to this point, at their zenith.
    ---
    seumas.com

  • by Ashen ( 6917 )
    Exactly. Computers may not have improved our quality of living at home much, but lets look at what the computer has done for the economy, workplace, and efficiency in the workplace.

    Workplace conditions are about as important as living conditions.
  • You ask:
    Second, life without the IC and lasers would be far less jarring (hey, I lived it, briefly, and I even remember bits of it) than life without lightbulbs. Go ahead. Try to live two days without electricity. Or the internal combustion engine.
    OK... Now ask that same question of a man from 1920. He'd probably shrug and ask where to get more lamp oil.

    The point is, we've had more time to weave electricty into every part of our society, to the point where we have become totally dependent on electricity. In another 50 years, people will have become so dependent on "smart" devices (i.e., embedded computers), that they won't know how to function without them. How many people do you know now who know how to operate a manual SLR camera (i.e., with an external hand held light meter)? How many garages can fix automobiles with mechanical points and spark coils?

    Then spend a day without using a CD or a microchip.
    I think you would be VERY surprised how difficult this would be!! For starters, forget driving a car (electronic ignition), or having the bus arrive on time, or watching TV (solid state), or even listening to the RADIO (unless you still have an old vaccum tube model left around from the days of your youth). Don't even think about using the phone (all the switches are computerized), and you'd better hope it was a warm day, because you wouldn't be able to get any electricty or natural gas.

    It's all a matter of perspective...

    --

  • Longevity is the next big technological horizon. When human lifespans, including their working lifespans, are significantly increased - and the manner and distribution of that increase - are really IMO the only technological issues that will at its core transform society the way that the telephone, telegraph, plumbing, electricity, the automobile, antibiotics, aviation and film did.
  • The reason for this slowdown of progress (for lack of a better term) is that, so far, we're only improving on already invented technology, not inventing new. The jet engine of today would be perfectly understandable to one of the engineers of the WWII vintage ones. The Wright Brothers would be able to understand the workings of modern aircraft. Alexander Graham Bell would be able to understand the workings of modern telephones - and with a bit of a leap - also cell phones. Why? Because our daily technology is merely an extrapolation of tech invented decades ago.

    The television is a simple (in hindsight) extrapolation of radio which is an extrapolation of telegraph. The computer, the jet plane, the Space Shuttle and just about every other example of our vaunted technology can trace it's lineage the same way - step-wise progress on what has come before.

    The only thing that will bring about a new, household technological revolution is NEW TECHNOLOGY. Not improvements of old, existing stuff, but technology based on something entirely new. I'm not saying that we should throw out what we already have, I'm just saying that, until we get a new platform to build upon all we'll get is an improved model of what we already have.

    For my money, I'm betting on Nanotechnology - not microtech but true nanotech - to be that platform. When you consider the possible uses of that technology, you start to realize the profound changes it could make in our daily lives. For instance - actual, final cures for cancer, aids, aging - even the common cold. Want a new house? Go buy the basic nanotech bundle to build it. And it won't be necessary to cut down a forest to put up the frame, either. Nanotech has the potential to assemble your new house out of pretty much anything that's lying around - trash, rock, dirt, etc. - by reassembling the molecules from something useless into something useful.

    Yes, I read SF. No, I don't expect this level of maturity in that technology any time soon. But...I do expect to see the beginnings of it in my lifetime. And, I expect it to bring about a societal change even more profound than the internal combustion engine, the telegraph and the airplane. The question will be whether I can keep up with it or whether I'll be resigned to the trash heap of time with Ozzie and Harriet.

    ---
    Be alert!!! America needs more lerts!
  • by Anonymous Coward
    you talk of 1900 to 1950 era, hello? can we say, war speeded up technology? duh? we haven't had any world wars recently to my knowledge...
  • HELL, the first world wide satellite television broadcast included the Beatles singing "All you need is Love". Now we bounce signals around the globe without even considering the magic involved.
    I think this is the single biggest flaw among the many in that article. We may have the same classes of things, but they're so far advanced that they end up being used differently. In most cases, the fact that something exists doesn't make too much of a change; the real impact waits until something becomes pervasive.

    Many people living today grew up when a 50-100 mile car trip was something you packed lunch for and spent a day on, not an hour's jaunt costing only a few dollars in fuel. Some of this is due to the fact that we have much better cars these days; a lot of it is that the automobile became pervasive and heavily affected the way society functions.

    Telegraphs and telephones are nice, but the form they were in in the 1950s is completely unlike the way modern communications allowed me to leave on a week's notice to spend a month literally on the other side of the planet and not just be in touch with everyone (friends, family, coworkers, random forum participants) so seamlessly that they never had to realize that I wasn't at home. Within 3 hours of getting off the plane, I was sitting in Taipei listening to a radio station at home, answering email and chatting with my roommates, just as we normally did when I was working late and, thanks to IBM.net's generous roaming policy, this cost me a grand total of $0.00.

    Similarly - a random individual from the 1950s would be familar with the word "nuclear" but I think perspective has dulled that authors view of how strange that was to all but a few physicists. There's a difference between making a [primitive] bomb and the sort of applications which have become available - nuclear medicine anyone?

    And then you get to medicine. Again, while there may be some similar terms, the effect is completely different. Consider the commonplace things - restoring vision, cosmetic/reconstructive surgery, reattaching limbs or organ transplants - all of which are completely unremarkable. There's a major shift in society between the time something becomes possible and heralded as an amazing event and the time much better versions are available everywhere and at a fraction of the cost.

    (Note that I'm excluding genetic engineering from that list, as I don't consider it to have reached anywhere near full potential yet. 10 years from now, one the other hand. . .)

    Lastly, consider the shift in computers. Yes, the word existed but it's only been in the last decade that they've become pervasive. It's not a case of being used in a few high-end fields like engineering; increasingly it's a fact of life for anything beyond menial labor. There's also a considerable difference between a large company using an early mainframe to store billing records and my being able to carry around many orders of magnitude more power and capacity in my shirt pocket, where it's used to store notes and pull things off of the web. Initially, computers just replaced manual filing systems - there was no equivalent of what can be done today - searching a global network, controlling just about any device, video/audio editing even at the level of even 405 the movie [405themovie.com] ($10K to do what simply wasn't possible 20 years ago?), all of the different data visualization / manipulation aids, etc. The word "computer" is involved but it doesn't mean what it did then.

  • No...all that is left is to make major changes like before.

    As the article said, the light bulb lengthened the day for many people.

    Right now I spend 1.5+ hours on the road a day coming and going to work. Why can't someone innovate a way to cut out that time and make my life better - teleport me, beam me up. Or at least let a central system drive all the cars so you don't have idiots cutting in and out slowing traffic.

    Sure, it may seem like far-fetched stuff. But at one point, so was sending power through a small wire for light, sending your voice down the phone, and flying.

    And given the troubles with landfills filling up, I don't think we've mastered sanitation yet!
  • They have. It's called public transportation. Only, everybody wants to drive their own car.

    Somewhat - it's great if you live in the heart of a metro area. However, where I live there is no public transportation, so I really have no choice. And the only person I could carpool with works a different schedule than I do.

    Hopefully the commuter rail they are talking about putting in will work. I can drive 5 miles instead of 27 and one of the stops will be right on the campus where I work!
  • Interesting observation, but I think you're cause and effect are a bit off. I don't remember the exact dates, but there was a period rougly around 68-76 where the death penalty wasn't available in the US due to supreme court rulings. That changed in the late 70's.

    Try again. ;-)
  • Sometimes innovation seems to slow when it's not actually slowing. I.e. if many people are deep in the midst of major research whose results are coming out TOMORROW, it may look like nothing is happening.

    Be careful not to fall into the rut that this poor guy did:

    "Everything that can be invented has been invented."
    -- Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. Office of Patents, 1899.

    What a tool. :)

  • I have a friend who works in in a part-IT, part statistics job in a major metropolitan hospital. Her view is that hospitals could be made *much* more efficient if doctors stuck to being doctors and let managers (who are competant to use IT to organise things) manage. However, in hospitals, doctors are gods, and outside their field of specialisation quite ignorant ones.

    The situation may be different in the US, but considering that the US spends about twice the proportion of its GDP on health for about the same life expectancy I doubt it.

  • More and more people now have broadband net access, which is more than fast enough to support decent (though not studio-quality) videoconferencing. The computer power to do real-time compression and decompression is also available. Webcams are cheap as dirt and acceptable quality.

    Essentially all the components of videophones have been assembled, all that we need is to agree on some standards and wrap it up in an easy-to-use package and we'd be there.

    One question that hasn't been answered is whether people actually *want* videophones. Given that the components described above have been around for at least 2 years now, and there hasn't been an explosion in their use, perhaps not.

  • As far as real effects on everyday life are concerned, the development of the contraceptive pill must go close to the most sigificant development of the post 1950's era. In one stroke, it made women's control of their own fertility easy, safe, and cheap and forever divorced sex from procreation. The social effects of this are still being felt around the world.
  • When my grandfather was a child, transportation was horse, train, or boat.
    ...
    Nobody in his town had indoor plumbing. Nobody in mine didn't.
    My grandfather was the first in his village to have an indoor toilet, because HE installed it. But his sons kept pestering him about the neighbour who always had the latest car in his farmyard.

    Everytime, my grandfather would counter them by " yes, but they shit on the snowbank! ".

    --

  • I can't think of an apropriate respone to the plumbing. You got me on that one...
    I can: the bidet.

    --

  • The fundamental question that should be asked, and the question that the journalist addresses, is the ACTUAL affect these innovations have on real people, not the amount of effort, resources, complexity, intelligence, coolness, etc. in the innovation at hand. Likewise, if some technology is merely an academics vision, but cannot be successfully manufactured at an affordable cost, it simply has no effect on people. It may be revolutionary to scientists at the front, but it is not to the average person. If can really deny that the amount of change from 1900 to 1950 in the average persons life is less than from 1950 to today, then you might say this article is a "crock." You, however, are simply not doing that.

    Your entire entire argument consists of the fact that you think today's technology is cooler, more complex, or whatever. You say farm work is more productive today than it was 50 years ago? Certainly. But does this automatically mean it's more important than the lightbulm? Not if you look at it objectively. Look at the harder economic measures of productivity. If you were to look, you would indeed discover that the gains at the first 50 years of the century make the gains of the last 50 look downright childish! Similarly, the average life expectancy has not improved nearly as dramatically in the past 50 years as it did 50 years before that. Put simply, if you are a middle class American, your life is not all that different from your parents or grandparents on the aggregate, insofar as technology goes.

    The fact that you and so many other slashdot readers are so myopic as to think that your precious technology is more revolutionary than what your parents or grandparents had is precisely what makes this article so worthwhile. The biggest "crock", in my opinion, is the fact that so many pundits proclaim the internet to be the single most (or one of) revolutionary innovation of the century.

    If you want to say that the internet, or whatever technology, is too new to be evaluated and is GOING to have a revolutionary impact, fine, but be clear that it has not happened yet. Furthermore, be aware that you may well be wrong that it will even dramatically change most peoples' lives. History is littered with many incorrect predictions.
  • Whose priorities? The VCs gave money to every assinine idea so they could get rich, not so they could advance society. To the VCs, it is 'clear thinking' to bank on 1 of 10 ventures paying off. Maybe you disagree, and thus the large impasse is created.
    I'm a little unclear as to your general direction, however, i'll answer what I can. First, I am not suggesting in any way, shape, or form that we somehow restrain investors, or even VCs. I am merely making an argument and providing them with additional/alternative information; the only way it can impede anyone's initial free will is if they will it. Second, many of these investments were poor ones in many different senses. Many in absolute dollar terms were utter failures (i.e., all but the earliest internet investments--when they were able to get liquidity through IPO...). Others were stupid investments even though they "won", in the same sense that you'd be angry at your broker if he went to the horse track and "won." They took a stupid risk. Third, the money does NOT belong to the VCs or their companies; they are merely agents that are supposed to be investing wisely (not on herd mentality). Fourth, the only reason the "asinine" investments paid off at all for any of these VCs is because many other people were lulled into this "internet revolution" theory. Which brings me back to my point, if people had a bit more of a clue as relatively trivial impact of the internet, the market would not have been there for the VCs to spend foolishly (in many different senses). Fifth, I do believe in the fundamental mechanics of the market. It may not be perfect, but it does generally do a pretty good job of allocating resources. Sometimes, however, the market gets a little crazy. The markets depend on information. To the extent that it recieves and believes garbage, I, and others, will scrutinize it.

    I suggest to you that this process of challenging ludicrous claims is far better than the alternatives, such as:

    Not challenging any myths--letting everything go.

    Forcing the market to act in some way that I, or anyone else, chooses.

    Providing capital to "socially minded" causes through some government agency or charity/non-profit. (I've seen how most grant money is spent, and it's downright shamefull). If people want to spend their money that way, I'm not going to stop them...but that doesn't mean it's not a mistake.

    Central planning of most any sort.

    Excessive restrictions...

  • Most of the important political and organizational
    came into importance in the 19th century:
    the nation-state based on linguistic groups,
    democratic-republics,
    socialism/communism,
    the limited-liability stock-holder company.
    The 20th century has been elaborations of these.

  • Another way to look at this are what is being
    predicted about the future, in the media, at
    world fairs and the such. Up to 1970 or so
    people prediction mechanical wonders like new
    vehicles, space travel, appliances, etc.
    Then as new age technical pesstimism set in,
    the view switched to touchy-feely stuff like
    ecology, psychology, and biology. The Disney Epcot
    dome ride epitimizes this view. Since the
    personal computer in the 1980s the future now looks at networks, virtual environements,
    supercomputing, etc.

    The future is "more of the recent past".

  • Nothing is created in a vacuum. There are no unique ideas or inventions---everything is dependent upon what preceded it.
  • 1) There is a bit of evidence of a pre-historic epidemic of something rather like AIDS. I'm not sure of the details, but it has to do with some DNA (possibly inactive) that's a part of the human genome.

    2) A major cause of the spread of AIDS is the improvement of the transportation system. It has made effective quarantines essentially impossible. It was once relatively common for folk to be isolated from everone else (e.g., on a ship) for several months before reaching a new country. Several smallpox epidemics were nipped that way (well, AIDS takes longer to become symptomatic, but diagnosis is possible after only about a month or two [sorry for ignorance of details]). Of course, the same strategy didn't work so well with yellow fever or malaria, but biology isn't the same as transportation.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
  • Sure, "Ozzie and Harriet" had a car, and traffic wasn't as bad -- of course not everyone could afford a car, and if as many cars were on the road then as there are now, the environmental impact would be devastating. Same with safety -- we take seatbelts and airbags for granted, not to mention safety glass etc.

    Computers have fundamentally altered nearly every aspect of our working lives. Sure, most people don't have computerized homes, but what about the office? Would 'Ozzie and Harriet' have been able to figure out how to start a robotic production line? Run an MRI? Operate a call center? Analyze financial data in Excel? Do any of a thousand things we take for granted now. If not they'd have a hard time getting a job.

    Digital storage has fundamentally changed the ability of businesses and consumers to disseminate information. For example, in 1950 you could buy an encyclopedia set -- typically this was very expensive. Now you get an entire set of encyclopedias on a CD-ROM costing almost nothing. The Internet has accelerated this; company and governement websites offer information that used to require phone calls, or snail mail requests.

    Materials have dramatically improved since the 50s. Sure, some of these were invented by 1950, but few if any were in widespread use: Saran wrap, teflon/gore-tex, carbon fiber/composites, a multitude of alloys, polyester.

    Radio phones existed in the 50s, but it's hard to compare that to the ubiquitous cell phones and pagers of today. Lasers have allowed such medical refinements as laproscopy and vision correction.

    This article seems to point out the painfully obvious -- the 'low hanging fruit' of technology has already been picked. It's difficult to conceive of a fundamental improvement to the automobile that is workable -- personal aircraft? computer control? teleportation?, likewise with home appliances. Future improvements will usually be marginal, but who knows -- maybe transmutation is just around the corner.
  • In agreement with you, I would go one step further. I think that innovation is still present, and is as strong as ever, but people just don't see it anymore. We have the foundation laid down for impressive things, but how those things are handled, that is where the innovation is occuring.

    Look at how long it takes to get a CAT scan back compared to just a few years ago. Also, the resolution of CAT scans. You have been able to get information off of the Internet for a while now, but machines now have an uptime of months, if not years, thanks to innovations in server uptime. Things are moving along just as fast, and affect people's lives, but it is all behind the scenes.

    I also agree about the timing and format of the article. Reminds me of some of the doomsday Y2K articles that hit just before the new year last year.

    Bryan R.
  • India is both free and civilized. That doesn't give them a large GNP though.

  • Technology of the past fifty years is just as innovative as it ever was, if not more. And that happens any way that you look at it.

    If we analyze the impact in terms of the quantity of innovation, hands down, no comparison, 1950-2000 wins. The great number of fields which were not only innovated but invented during that time period is dramatic. Entire fields of study were created and largely mastered during the period - jet engines, communications theory, solid-state electronics.

    If we look at quality, we need to consider the sum of these innovations. One area that we must consider is that of medicine. Sure, the introduction of penicillin in the 1920's was dramatic, but more dramatic than the polio vaccine? Or the eradication of smallpox? Or the introduction of cardiac defibrillators? I'm not so sure.

    And we must surely consider the technology innovations which allow the technologies developed in the first half of this century to proliferate around the world. Technology innovation isn't merely about inventing things, it's about inventing new ways to make and integrate them into our lives. The Phoenecians discovered purple dyes, but it took a German chemical engineer in the 1800's to find a way to allow us to mass manufacture it.

    This article is just more of the boring, short-sighted, nay-saying stuff that US News always cranks out. It's pretty boring, because if you consider the reality - that innovation comes in many forms, none better than any other - then you realize that innovation continues at the same pace as it always has

    The ability to create is a fixed part of human nature. At most, the increased world population means that innovations are increasing, not decreasing. Silly article.
  • Yes, 1900-1950 happens to contain an extraordinary assortment of major changes. In your medical example sanitation, antibiotics, and anesthesia were definitely major factors in all medical care.

    X-Rays also -- back then, they saved a huge number of lives by allowing better care of all fractures. In the past few decades, more precision and CAT scan technology have allowed better treatments of teeth and less life-threatening injuries. But the overall benefits from the early X-Rays were more massive than the current gains -- even though now we sleet the body with much less radiation and get the images faster and with more detail, the basic benefit of knowing exactly where the bone is broken is not much greater than with the first X-Rays.

  • Once upon a time man lived a harsh life dictated by harsh conditions. Along the way some particularly bright people found ways to create artificial light, refrigerate food, prevent polio, etc etc. The phenomenally high standard of living which we enjoy today is the result.

    I think it is unfair to say that the pace of innovation is slowing down. It is more accurate to say that the areas where innovation is occuring are not ones which have the kind of impact upon everyday life that the light bulb did.

    Then of course there is the factor of diminishing marginal returns. The invention of the light bulb was groundbreaking, refinements in its design are much less so.

    Also there is the of how many people really understand the innovation which is currently happening. If the discovery of the structure of DNA can be compared to the discovery of fire, the mapping of the human genome is equivalent to the splitting of the atom. Within a few generations genetic diseases will be a thing of the past. Imagine if the average person had an IQ of 150 instead of 100. Imagine if there were no stupid people. There is no technical reason why this cannot be achieved through genetic engineering. The elimination of stupidity would do more to make the world a better place than just about any other single thing I can imagine.

    But I'm getting off track here. If anything the pace of innovation and its breadth have increased, not declined.

    Lee Reynolds
  • Dumb article. They completely missed the fact that society has momentum...and thus, what affects people in everyday life always lags the current edge of technology. And as technology increases that lag gets worse. In 1900 there was almost no infrastructure in America. No highways, few if any phone lines. In the last 100 years we've paved a million miles of road, laid phone lines everywhere and put satellites up for an orbital information infrastructure. And they're *good enough*. Although today's technological innovations could do marvelous things, what we have now is good enough for the average man, and there's no pressing need to spend the money to upgrade them. The fiber optic lines in laboratories could give full video to everyone in america...but the existing twisted pair is good enough for most people. (Still, in some locales even that is being upgraded.) We could have supersonic low orbit transports to go from New York to LA in 30 minutes. But the upgrades to airports would be expensive, and the current system is good enough. LEDs are advanced enough now to replace all of our lights at 1/10th the power, but what we have now is good enough. Society isn't ready to upgrade the old for the new. Only when something drastically new comes along, with it's own killer app, does society wake up and progress. The internet is the killer app that will upgrade our telecommunication infrastructure. More will come. But technological innovation (which is increasing exponentially) does not correllate with cultural progress...which so far appears almost glacially slow. :/
  • In the same way that steam was once the principle area of technological innovation, that iron was, it's possible that silicon has peaked. Fine. Everything has it's day. Maybe optical computing will the the next nexus of technological innovation. Or biology. Or something that we cannot imagine.

    At one point just after the turn of the last century, there was a call to shut down the patent office because "everything that can be invented already has" (now we have different reasons to want to shut it down!)

    That's why it's called "innovation"...because it's stuff that we don't know about yet. This article, if the writer is unlucky, may one day have the same sort of notority that Vannervar Bush had with his vision of a few huge computers, with acres of vacumn tubes, cooled by Niagras of water.

    What we have now is nothing compared to what we will have soon.

  • Yes cheap teleportation would spell the end of civilization as we know it. National borders would vanish, artificial scarcities created by tariffs and embargos would go away. Opressive regimes could no longer terrorize and repress their populations, every human on the planet would have near complete freedom of travel. Smuggeling simply wouldn't exist, not as we know it. When teleportation makes it just as easy/cheap to move the consumers to the goods instead of vice-versa it doesn't matter if my favorite vice happens to be illegal where I live, I'll just teleport to Cuba for a cigar or over to Amsterdamn to smoke a bowl etc... Soceity and law would adapt to fit the new conditions created by this new technology. Teleportation would also solve the problems of cheap spaceflight, space stations, satelites etc... could be beamed directly into their proper orbit no need for expsenive rocket launches

    And a side benefit of discovering teleportation technology would almost certainly mean the ability to create goods Star Trek style out of thin air (well out of bulk matter.) Recycling becomes perfectly effient, as we can transform any type of matter into any other type of matter. Cheap teleportation and related technologies would truely be revolutionary, and would probably be the single most important technology ever developed in human history.

    What's scary is the idea of expensive, hard to use teleportation technology that can only be operated by governments or very large corporations. Thats what would lead to the end of privacy, and huge increases in crime and smuggeling (as organized crime would likely have the resources to operate teleportation devices for drug running, breaking and entering etc...) police would become all powerful and private citizens freedoms would be restricted even further in order to protect us all from the dangers of illegal teleportation.

  • This guy must have never talked to any of his older relatives and compared notes with his younger ones.
    For one thing, the author throws away the importance of computers and the internet. I find this unbelievable. I am a computer scientist, as are many of /.'s readers. My whole science was just forming. Computer science means as much to me as physics to a rocket scientist. The author talks about marginal gains in communications. Marginal? It once would have cost me hundres of dollors to interact with someone a half a world away and hours of research to find people there that are interested in what I am interested. Computers and the Internet allow me to communicate to anyone, anywhere, for viturally no cost. I am easily able to find people like and unlike me and exchange ideas. The Internet is at least as revolutionary as the telegraph. It breaks down barriers in unbelievable ways and allows ordinary people to band together in extraordinary ways. Take Linux. This phenomenon would never have occured without the power of the Internet to spread ideas across near infinite distances.
    Computer science has created whole new sub-cultures. I find it amazing to look at /. and think of its humble beginings. I also find it beautifull that this technology has given us nerds, geeks, and other outcasts a place to find peace with like minded people. How many lives have been totally changed by this technology? I have wanted to be a programmer since my first TRS-80 Model III. This shaped my entire life in truly deep ways and still does today.
    He marginalizes the amazing gains in medicine. I am sure the author would not feel this way if he saw these "marginal" gains save his loved one's lives, as I have. How many of us know someone who would have been dead if they had their heart attack 50 years ago? This is marginal?
    He talks about a slight gain in productivity. Strange, the Greenspan's biggest reason for the rise of the stock market is increases in productivity, especially due gains in technology. I guess Allan doesn't know what he is talking about. Today I pay my bills online in seconds. I manage my budget in minutes. I can plan my week in minutes. I am many times more productive than I would have been without those technologies. The gains in computing speed made the impossible a reality with the Human Genome Project. Productivity is not measure in word processors. My mother is an accountant. Ask her how much time she saves with spreadsheets and databases over pen and paper. She once told me, "Thank God that when I have to do the books, they are not really books anymore!"
    He completly ignores changes in society. While still not totally free, information is far less censered than in the 50s. We find Nick at Nite quaint, not because of it's acurate portrayal of 50s life but it's portrayal of silly 50s TV standards. Today, we can find information about many things that were hidden in the past. Sexuality is much more open today than it was 50 years ago. While it still has a way to go, the treatment of minorities is much better than 50 years ago. They are protected by laws that give the same chances a white male as in the workplace, at the bank, at school, and in the media. Women no longer are stuck at home in the "Mrs. Cleaver" role and now the Beave has friends that are Blacks, Latinos, and Asians of various orignal nationalities. These changes have huge ramifications on the world we live in.

    Progess shouldn't be measured in blenders and cars. We may be unhappy that we don't have HAL, personal rocket packs, flying cars, and PanAm flights to space but there has been a lot of progress in the last 50 years.
  • Let me hit each bullet:
    • Travel: Cars are safer for people and environment. The cars of today may look like the cars of yesterday but I the insides are different in many ways. Most planes may be 20 years old but we are now entering a time when massive upgrades must occur. As the old planes are replaced with new ones, technology will jump. Often change occurs in spurts. This is an example.
    • About 50% of the adults in this country are using the Internet. Most internet usage is long range. My favorites sites physically exist in other states and often other countries. Many people now use e-mail and IM to communicate with friends far away. Often these services are less expensive than traditional communication services.
    • In my lifetime of 24 years, I have seen AIDS and cancer go from death sentences to treatable illnesses. Without the advances in blood pressure medication and medical imaging my mother might not still be alive today.
    • Smallpox is now considered one of the most dangerous biological weapons that could be used. Vaccine production is increasing and innoculations may come back in full force.
    • I can't think of an apropriate respone to the plumbing. You got me on that one...
    • Your kids are watching reruns of a movie what would not have been possible just a few decades ago. Now you will be looking up in the sky at a space station that is visable from earth and built by nations working together. I can drive a vehicle whose only waste product is water.

    While many great things happened in the past, great things are happening today and will happen tomorrow. The best is always yet to come.
  • It is actual production. I go to work and can create more of my final product (in this case software) because I spend less time managing my time. At home I able to accomplish more because the things I need to do take less time.
    Spreadsheets have reduced the number of people required per equal unit of work. There are still a lot of accountants, money managers and such because there is more work to do. These "more elaborate models" enable people to properaly and quickly plan their finances and move on to other productive activities. I used to write stock option and bond software. Did this eliminate the need for a trader? No, but it allowed him to make better, faster decisions. This let him produce more in the same amount of time and effort.
    Coms are dropping because they were not using the data produced by these models. Data that indicated that you have to make a profit to stay in business.
  • I guess that my feeling is that this argument can be applied to anything. All things are built on top of other things. It is easy to argue that the things at the bottom are the most important because they made all else possible. I guess when it comes down to it, the most influential thing to ever happen occured many years ago: The formation of the universe and life itself.
    Of course, I am in the dark too...monitors make great candles!
  • Now what does the author use to measure past innovations? Mainly two things, there's a long rant about how life expectancy doesn't double every fifty years (to calculate the population of earth in 200 years time is left as an exercise to the reader, hey 200 years would b your life expectancy anyways). But mainly "productivity" is employed to measure innovation. Ok then the assembly-line was the most important invention of the millennium and thats it.

    I think we'll need the next fifty years or so to evaluate the inventions of the previous fifty years, their effect on our personal life and our society. It's like saying after the invention of the car "Ok, another way to move someone from point A to point B, so what's new? Trains do this already, and riding is only a bit slower ..." yet the automobile brought some fundamental changes to our society. Note that this is not the combustion engine, but one of it's applications that made the change here. And it's effects on society were not predictable (or at least not foreseen) before.

    Another example is telecommunicartions: it was used already for telegrams, and for sure there were some changes already, at least the news was faster, but what really affected most people was the advent of the telephone, the possibility to call aunt mary just to tell her what a horrible day it was.

    In the same way we can't even begin to evaluate what effect the technology developped in the last fifty years will have on our society. What will be the paramount application of the internet making it's way into history books fifty years from now? The free exchange of opinions in forums such as this? The incredible new ways of marketing products via the internet? The "global village"? The total loss of privacy?

    The real effects of semiconductor technology on society just begin to become obvious, about fifty years after its invention. And only a fool can expect to see the impact of the internet on our society a few years after it's available to a significant number of people worldwide. The possibilities inherent in genetics are barely recognizable right now. Even something less newsworthy right now, like solar energy, might bring fundamental changes fifty years from now by allowing "third world countries" to become "global players".
  • "They will still drive cars about [...]",

    walk, horse, car -- transportation

    "eat normal meals made in cookers and kept in fridges [...]"

    prepared food - fridge is this generation of advancement, the next is genetically engineered food

    "work doing much the same sort of jobs (although on a macroscopic scale there may be some new industries) [...]",

    true, but it ignores the shift to service jobs where education is needed. In the 40's and 50's you could get a job with little skill out of high school and be almost guaranteed employment. In the future people will almost certainly need some kind of post secondary education to fill any job that isn't simple assembly line or simple service.

    "go and watch films, sporting events, etc etc"

    Well yeah. Sports have existed for thousands of years, various dice, card whatever games etc. If you categorize all entertainment as the same thing and say it won't change for sure. Are interactive video games different from other types of entertainment? I'd say yes. Yeah, we've pretty much explored all different types of passive and interactive entertainment, but I doubt they will stay in a static state. But based on your argument something like dice and tekken tag tournament arent much different. Entertainment is entertainment. It doesn't matter if it's more life like or engrossing or is better at telling stories.

    "What will a history book in 100 years say about the 1990's"

    What do history books say about countless decades in the past millenia? Evolution can be punctuated. Science is punctuated (i.e., one discovery can trigger a string of discoveries that results in it being called a period of enlightenment etc). One thing's for sure though - scientific discoveries in the past century grew exponentially because we have a lot of scientists in academia and corporations who are there because they have resources because of capitalism which is because of the industrial revolution. Is 1990 - 2000 really that bad? It only brought biotechnology and bio engineering companies, Microsoft, a refined personal computer, internet to the masses, tons of new consumer electronics, the end of communism, the birth of the wto, probably tons of medical advances I can't think of at this moment etc.

    "but nothing as radical as the telephone - diminishing returns again"

    I think you're mistaken. The telephone allowed for the large chain and then the multinational company - but email has really changed corporations. No more stupid memos whatever and you can reply at your leisure and both communicators dont have to be communicating to each other at the same time. Even if it was a diminishing return, it's not like it is insignificant.

    Um, people becoming culturally and socially homogenous does not equal the end of history. I do not know how one logically follows from the other. Furthermore you could make a similar argument that within the british and roman empires it was the end of history because people were becoming socially and culturally homogenous - like it is a bad thing. Becoming socially and culturally homogenous does not mean the end of intelligent though and it does not mean the end of history.

    "not just in the physical sense, but also the conflict of ideas and ideaologies"

    I disagree. In the united states specifically people are divided politically. Its culture also breeds a type of individualism that causes one to question idealogy and authority. Compare it to (not sure if this is changing) japan for example where the social payoff comes from avoiding 'no' answers and shoving things under the rug and just shrugging off government corruption. The 80's and 90's by the way brought a shift in employment where people have much more mobility - which of course also brings insecurity and easy termination. It arguably created a population with more anxiety than the two previous generations.

    "Scots were very different to what they are now"

    Yeah, but compare canadians 100 years ago to scotts. I'd guess not that much difference. I dont know scottish history but Im guessing they were just getting into the industrial revolution like everyone else. If not, maybe they stayed in pre-industiral revolution a little longer than their english counter-parts or whatever. But so what? I still dont see how people becoming more homogenous, specialized, etc as equated as "the end of history". I think the opposite is the truth: higher quality of life, more mobility - as in you get to choose what you do given an education, etc

    "Scotland is rapidly, in the cultural sense, becoming a place just like any other."

    So is everywhere else. First the english took over half the world, then america became a world superpower. The language of business is english. If they are being replaced it is because said cultures are inferior - at least in a business sense. Instead of war and the spread of religion we have business and mass media and entertainment. As an aside, I also dont buy the argument that it dumbs down the population. Access to material that will result in intellectual enlightenment is more readily available than it was in the past. There are some compelling anti-consumerism / anti-advertising propaganda arguments, but either way I don't think there is any doubt that this is superior to previous methods.

    In conclusion, "the end of history", in my opinion, is doublespeak which means you do not like the *change* that is happening which results in homogenous culture. Globalization is a force of change which has many negative and positive side effects. The next decades will see us ironing them out. Potholes in the road are IMO, definite.
  • Hello, in 1900 some people believed there was nothing left to discover in physics.

    Anyone who thinks something similar about any technology obviously is so disconnected from said fields that they have no idea what they are talking about. Take cognitive science for example. 20,000 neuroscientists are busy today unlocking the secrets of the brain. In 20 years the domain specific knowledge in cognitive science today will seem pathetic. Coupled with other advances we will have exponential growth in knowledge and capability.

    500mhz is utterly pathetic for many of the problems we wish to solve.
  • "The thing is, we have now solved all the major problems that we face as a species - food, shelter, warmth, health"

    Yeah, tell that to all the people in third world countries.

    Secondly, just because the average person has inched up on maslows hierarchy doesn't mean "the end of science" or the "end of technology". Civilizations fall and time doesn't stand still. New problems, and reincarnations of old problems will come to be.

    "But how will it affect me? Not at all, I'll wager"

    Um, the cure to cancers, aids, technologies to lengthen life? Hey, they might not affect you because you'll be either dead before said technology comes to exist, or the opposite, already born so you would not be eligible for DNA re-engineering. Future generations however, will not witness the end of science or the end of technology.
  • Actually, your point is well taken with respect to the space program, but a few trips to the Epcott center in Florida shows we also thought we'd be being served by robots by now. Telephones should be video-telephones. Meals prepared by a single machine. Yaddayadda.

    And I don't disagree that today, we are capable of supporting our own invensions, but I dont think we're too far off from the scale of complexity I was trying to describe (50-100 or so years off).
    If something has never been said/seen/heard before, best stop to think about why that is.
  • With respect to our dwindling rate of innovation (which I will attempt to confirm), you can read all about it in a facinating book called "The End of Science".

    But just to take a historical approach, all innovation has come in 'spurts'. Use of tools, and then the transition from using various sorts of metals for those tools were all intersperced with fairly significant gaps of time betwixt those innovations.

    ICs, while developed 'after' the 50 years in questions, depended on scientific innovations made before 1950. See: History of the Transistor [att.com]. Lasers were conceptualized before that. As for the gent who asked 'where would we be without the IC or the laser', I can answer only with: still in cars, still with telephones, still with television. NOT with the internet, NOT with an extra 10 or so years of life expentancy (under which the assumption that medical advances do indeed represent benificial innovation is arguable, as a beating heart seems to be more important that healthy and happy emotions in today's value system), and not with video games, chat boards, an online world community (which really only includes those with access to computers). While the technology world has improved, tweaked, and unarguably changed our social existance over the past 50 years, our quality of life, and almost anything you do that doesn't involve a computer relys on scientific principals that were theorized long before 1950 rolled around. Note that it took Einstein, centuries later, to come up with something better than Newtonian psysics.

    Also note the 60s/70s views that we'd all be living on the moon by now. Clearly, optimism was high regarding the continuation of technological innovation, but what people forgot to take into account was that the research currently on the bleeding edge is so complex to maintain and manage that we may in fact come to a point where we are simply incapable of comprehending the scope of a given application or technology, and whereby a group of people large enough to work on it will die before they are able to complete their work; ie, innovations that are so complex that we simply are unable to attain them.
    If something has never been said/seen/heard before, best stop to think about why that is.
  • Yes, but far more important than mere nutrition or sanitation, our modern computers will enable our capitalist ruling class to finally achieve their centuries-old dream of enslaving and monitoring everyone on the globe!

    OK, so the Panopticon prison [rochester.edu] is really an old idea, dating from the end of the eighteenth century. For that matter, Lucian, in ancient Rome, invented, but could not implement, the manned Lunar expedition... But Bentham's panopticon originally was applied against the inmates of a single penetentiary, not the population of the whole planet; and with the limited technology of his time even that was practically impossible to implement. No longer! The millenium is in sight!

    One might argue (if one were unafraid to be labeled as a Kommie subversive) that such a scheme is deeply immoral. Arguments such as that, however, have never restrained any ruling class ever. Besides, we know that the one and only moral imperative [mises.org] that counts in this world today is that one which demands, "greater, and greater, and ever greater returns for stockholders".

    Yours WDK - WKiernan@concentric.net

  • I think an important aspect the article also missed was that the impact of these technologies that so vasty improved the basic needs of people was not fully realized until they became readily available to the 'common folk' and could be used to their full potential.

    As it said, cars were around in 1900, but only available to the very rich. Things like electricity had to be physically brought to people's homes, as did running water, which takes time and a lot of money. Not much point having an indoor toilet if to flush it you had to bring in a bucket of water from the river.

    We have our basic needs fufilled pretty well now. Food, clothing, shelter, medical care. These are not our primary focus anymore. I think gene mapping is remarkable, but we won't know the real benefits of it for decades. Same for the net, or computer technology in general. In the developed nations, we are focusing on being more efficient, not on reinventing the icebox. Aside from the advances in sanitation and refrigeration, we have been intent on giving ourselves more free time.
    --

  • I think the effects of technology definately don't have as much of an impact on our lives today as they once did. Primarily because the biggest technological changes from 100 years ago were things like clean water, electric power, telephones and the like.

    Things that have changed have been refinements of those, mostly for the sake of entertainment. No matter how glorious the Internet becomes, it won't impact my life as much as not having to to bring in water from a river.

    One finds parallels in medicine as well. Things have slowed down since the discovery basic sanitation, anesthesia and understanding of human anatomy. While medical knowledge continues to expand, it won't have the broad, far-reaching implications for everyone that thoroughly cleaning surgical equipment did.

  • What happened when the folks at IBM started playing with digital logic? They "learned" that the world would need 10 "computers" TOTAL

    What happened when main frames came about? People said that they should close the patent office, becuase there was nothing left to invent!

    WHat happened after Newton died in the Physics world, almost nothing for 400 years.

    What happened in the late 1600s when the black plauge began spreading? People were sure the world was ending.

    The point is, The human race as a whole seems to have this painfully fatalistic attitude, which does nothing but impeade progress. In this century alone, the major advancements, (Quantum Physics, The information age, etc.) all occured when people DOUBTED what their "elders" taught them.

    It seems society as a whole has this bullshit idea that older people are just plain superior to younger people. Not to say that they aren't wiser, but if they are it is NOT because they are older. When we look at what is "taken forgranted," we find that there are often faults with it.

    The idea of science is that it is OK to disagree. In fact, it is your duty as a scientist. You should DOUBT everything, until you have seen data that suggests otherwise.

    --Alex the GNome Fishman
  • The simple fact is, the benefits of Cell phones, PDAs and 900 mhz CPUs are limited so far as the average consumer is concerned.

    Running water, sanitation and medical aid have tangible benefits, like longer life span, increased health and reduced BO.

    Most of the major "We need this to survive" itches have been scratched already. Until we develop telepathy or Star Trek style travel technology, there will not be any major, life altering changes, just incremental upgrades to what we already have.

    What do computers give you? Frustration every time it crashes (Unless you're running BSD or BE, then you're frustrated by file format incompatibilities with the other OSes, but I digress) Most users don't care about computers beyond word processing. More advanced users care about spreadsheets e-mail and web surfing. In the end, only Ubergeeks like my fellow SlashDot readers care about computers beyond the basics.

    Most of the technology that's been developed in the last 50 years involved the creation, manipulation and transfer of information, that's just not as vital as being able to see well after the sun goes down.

    There's also the infrastructure issue. With a few government subsidies, even rural areas could get connected to the phone system by building a few buildings and digging some trenches, but running clean line for DSL and installing the hardware at the various offices disturbs existing infrastructure. Someone's phone access might be disrupted, and the technology just doesn't offer the massive benefits that the early land lines did.

    Adding a GPS system, cellular emergency call button and map database to cars will do more for the mass consumers (Once the technology is wide spread and inexpensive) than the latest and greatest VooDoo chip or Load Balancing innovations in MS-Windows 20xx.

    We'll never have the flying cars that have been promised since the 1930's because the infrastructure to support them would disrupt commercial airlines. Until we run out of oil, we'll never have Ethanol, Natural Gas or other alternative-fuel cars in nationwide use, because the infrastructure to support them (Refuelling stations, repair centers, dealerships) is too expensive to justify the trouble and cost for most consumers, and even then, they'll just be a tweak to existing technology.

    www.matthewmiller.net [matthewmiller.net]
  • I beg to differ from the article submitter.

    Hundreds of millions of people have been saved by technology. Look in any hospital: would it be there without computers? Probably. Would it be even 5% as efficient? Absolutely not.

    While I agree computers have made hospitals more efficient, I think that 5% is way off. I don't think hospitals are taking care of 20 times as many patients or processing them 20 times as quickly as they used to. Actually, while office automation has improved efficiency in the workplace, I don't think it's by quite as much as a lot of people seem to think. People are working longer hours than they used to, and the efforts of millions of IT workers are needed to develop and maintain this automation. I'd think the typewriter and telephones were more important innovations in term of the workplace when they came out.
    --
  • I beg to differ from the article submitter.

    Hundreds of millions of people have been saved by technology. Look in any hospital: would it be there without computers? Probably. Would it be even 5% as efficient? Absolutely not.

    Let's look at the computers which analyze patient data. They do it in three dimensions, point out warning signs, etc. All of this is stuff that humans cannot do! Computers can investigate images at much higher resolution and spit out every single warning for doctors to look into further.

    Some people may say refrigeration was more important than computers. It was a prerequisite, but not as important. It saved the lived of about a million people (rough estimate) and before true electronic refrigeration, we've had iceboxen for the past 40,000 years. Refrigeration might've helped keep meat fresher, but computers save hundreds of lives every day and also are *fun* to play on. Refrigerators are not fun to play on, no matter how hard you try (don't, please :) ).

    Any magazine who runs an article like this is obviously just going for the shock factor. "Hey, news is slow today! Let's run some fuzzy article on why technology sucks!"
    ------------
  • Blockquoth the poster:
    Consider that the reason we develop technology is to support our preferred lifestyle. We have been inching ever closer to that lifestyle for seven thousand years, and the rate (in terms of ground covered) that we get closer is decreasing.
    As if every person everywhere at all times shares the same monolithic ideal of a "preferred lifestyle"?? That is, sad to say, hogwash. What I want in life is different from what my grandparents want, in large part because so much more is open to me ... due to technological innovation. My own "preferred lifestyle" continues to evolve. How can we be inching up to a moving target?

    This post, like the article itself, seemed to me to have a curious myopia: The assumption that things we see now are all there is, that desires, motivations, and valuations somehow are static.

  • Blockquoth the poster:
    The preferred lifestyle for everyone is to have heat, clean and edible food and water, some sort of a cure if sick, and maybe some other things that I can't think of right off the top of my head
    Hmmm. I'm glad to see you know my preferred lifestyle better than I do, since my list is quite a bit longer than yours. Thanks for the education. I guess the things I thought I prefered -- time and tools to create, the ability to connect to other thinking people, a chance to do more than subsist, access to great works of the past and new modes of thinking, etc. -- aren't really part of a lifestyle.

    Sarcasm aside, I think that the original poster, and the current one, are missing a crucial fact: "Incremental" changes can precipitate revolutionary shifts. For example, as an educated, middle-class American, I have the reasonable expectation that I will never face starvation. So in one sense, no technology ever could "more solve" this problem.

    Why do I have that expectation, though? In part because the advance of technology has created a demand for scientifically trained people and I happen to be a science teacher. Advances in productivity have given us enough leisure to make my job feasible. And beyond that, the IC and the computer have revolutionized my job, making it more meaningful and fulfilling for me and my students (I hope), who now have access to modes of knowing and thinking not available before.

    If all you care about is the ability to satisfy the fundamentals (food, shelter, etc.) and you won't accept that making these more widespread counts as "major", then yes, I suppose you'll have to conclude that modern tech won't satisfy those needs any more than previous tech. Of course, the "previous tech" is not steam engine and fertilizer. It's wheel and agriculture... there's been no "progress" for 20,000 years.

  • The greatest, single most important invention in all the history of mankind was the invention of railroads, some 150 years ago.

    I'm sorry, you're wrong.

    The single greatest invention in the history of mankind was agriculture.

    Without that, we'd all still be spending our lives grubbing for today's food, playing hunter/gatherer and being not much more than really bright chimps.

    Agriculture changed everything about being human. It made the development of civilization possible, by allowing people to live in larger groups. It enabled everything which has come since.

    Not that it has necessarily been a good experience for everyone involved...

    ---

  • None of these have met their match in the last 30 years.

    Ah, but I have to differ with you. Not to take anything away from those grand engineering projects, but:

    Concorde has been surpassed by a number of aircraft (although admittedly none of which are passenger aircraft).

    SR-71 is a grand old piece of equipment; I've been in the Dryden hanger with two of them, and it was an unforgettable experience. However, do you really think they'd have been retired without a more-capable replacement? ;)

    Apollo 11; while a very functional design, the Apollo spacecraft is far from "matchless". We haven't gone back to the Moon (which deeply saddens me), but present-day manned spacecraft (X-38, for one) are being designed with much greater understanding than Apollo -- even if they don't have the same mission.

    Hydrogen Bomb -- those were re-engineered continually, with better tools as time went on. The last ones designed were far more sophisticated and capable than the first ones -- and now we can simulate the bomb pretty effectively in a computer, without even building it.

    Your statement is misleading, I think; the Eiffel Tower is grand, as is the Statue of Liberty. They haven't been duplicated since, but does that mean their engineering is unsurpassed? Hardly... Back then, we just lived with less-optimized hardware.

    Your computer couldn't be even designed and built with that level of computer support, you know.

    ---

  • The problem is we can claim we are better all we want, but actions speak louder than words and in the large scale engineers in the 60s make us look like wussies as far as actions are concerned.

    So do the designers and builders of the Egyptian pyramids, for an equivalently-majestic example.

    Your point would be?

    ---

  • Plumbing didn't take care of basic needs, it refined them. We've had means of waste displosal before the 20th century, outhouses and such, modern plumbing just made it more convenient.

    I think if you're going to start arguing about basic needs, at the extremes you can say once we had women to fuck and meat to eat, our needs ended there something thousand years ago (male perspective obviously). Everything since then has just been a refinement of those two goals.

    Plus innovation might have unseen consequences, like the printing press, which started with bringing the bible to the masses, it eventually also brought them cheap education and information. It has permanently changed the way governments act. At the time, it probably just seemed like a refinement of hand lettering, much like the internet seems just like a refinement of commercials, newspapers, and people on streetside soap boxes. With any luck, it'll become something greater than that.
  • Well first off all you need to take into account the adoption time of technology...phones and power were not instantly adopted nationwide.

    But even given this I think you, and the article are correct.

    The answer to this, I think, is that their are certain natural limitation to the human body/experience. We can fight off disease but we still age. A unheated house is very uncomfortable but their is little differnce in experience if we keep the temprature at 72 or exactly 70 degrees. There is a limit to the extent of our natural senses.

    We, of course, don't have to obey this limitation and did not most of the world feel morally (or enviously) restrained to keep ourselves basically natural we would not face this problem. For instance for thousands of years man has known various chemicals can directly influence our perceptions...and emotions. Of course such chemicals have negative effects (tolerance and physical dependence) but nothing we know says this is a necessery effect of chemical use (yes tolerance is a natural effect but why not more research into possibly getting around this).

    Alternatively we have possesed the ability to do genetic changes in humans for years now but we refuse to take it (in my opinion because of an unvoiced fear that we will be obsolete in the face of our descendents).
  • I'm not disagreeing with you essentially, but I think there's more going on than simply perception.

    When the needs are great, small technological improvements generate great benefit. Like, switching from nomadic hunter-gatherer to agriculture and animal husbandry is a small technological change, but a huge change in standard of living, and a huge decrease in risk.

    Then, switching from a preindustrial to a postindustrial society was a huge technological leap, but not as incredibly noticeable in society: civilized before, civilized after.

    Then, industrialization not only wiped out the need for 95% of our population of farmers, it eventually wiped out the need for 95% of our population of factory workers, creating the service economy of today where most people are working on jobs that were inconceivable to hunter-gatherer (you answer phone calls to support people who answer phone calls from people who need insurance to protect their vacation homes?)

    so, the benefits of innovation today only seem to be small, while the innovations themselves (reading the whole fucking human genome, for christ's sake) are far bigger than they've ever been.

  • This is just silly. I don't think anyone would argue that the pace of innovation has increased the last 50 years. But how do you compare relative importance? Answer: you can't, and this is why.

    Which is more important: the invention of fire or iron tools? Clearly the answer is fire, not only because it is clearly more important, but that you can't have iron tools without fire. This is a simple example, but take any innovation today and you can trace back to an innovation before it. This means (by definition) the innovation before it is more important because you need it to bootstrap the later innovation.

    Therefore, by definition, all earlier innovations are more important than later innovations, and thus comparing eras is meaningless.

    Now, that doesn't mean you can't compare individual innovations, just not eras.


    --

  • The greatest, single most important invention in all the history of mankind was the invention of railroads, some 150 years ago.

    I have to disagree with you on that. While the railroads are unquestionably a watershed event in human history, I have to say that the invention of the printing press has to take the award for "most important".

    Nothing really significant was invented after 1950...

    Velcro. :) Think about it -- what was velcro a refinement of? There were absolutely no temporary fasteners like it, short of tying two strings together.


    --

  • Well, I think you should retract that "Vomit"...

    One cannot deny that the rate of change is increasing, or that this increase will produce faster or "acellerated" innovation.

    What this article fails to realize is that any technologies impact on society is subjective, and will change over time. While computers, or the internet are not as significant as running water, indoor plumbing, or penicillen, digital technology most certainly is.

    Furthermore, we have no way of accurately predicting the impact of any given technology, untill it has been properly observed... Remember, Ebay/Amazon/Slashdot are NOT the Internet, they are simply uses of the (currently) most popular protocol.

    um.. I done, you can stop reading...
  • Anyone who doesn't think things haven't changed lately should ask someone born in the 1940's to a) see their teeth and b) ask what going to the dentist was like as a kid. Fluoride and air-powered drills are two of the things I'm thankful for.

    My father told horror stories of the foot-pedal powered drill his dentist used. And he had horrible, horrible teeth, all of his molars were either filled or capped, and he was religious about brushing. My mother's not much better. I've had one cavity in my life, and I have friends who have had none.

  • In fact, the innovations of the second half of the 19th century, had significantly more impact than the innovations of the first half of the 20th century. Let's see, there's the railroads, the self contained cartridge, the revolver, the repeating rifle, the machine gun, electricity, the light bulb, radio, photography, the automobile, the department store, the vacuum tube, the automatic pistol, armor clad warships, the submarine, and robotics just to mention a few. And let's not even talk about the first half of the 19th century, the move from an agricultural society to and industrial society.
  • Penicillin (1929) was, in my opinion, more important than today's ability to display patient data "in three dimensions"
  • PC innovation never truely took off until IBM was opened up and anyone could make clones.

    PC innovation virtually ground to a halt because of the PC clones. The Mac, the Amiga, even the Atari ST were innovative; the Compaq was not. I had a Tandy 2000 which ran rings around the XTs which were its contemporaries, but it wasn't "compatible" so it fell by the wayside. Hey, if it weren't for PC cloning, the Shack might have come out with a 68020 based Color Computer running OS/9 68K and cheap home *nix boxes would have swept the nation 12 years ago.

  • Is 1900-1949 really better than past 50 years? The jury is still out, so to speak, as evidenced by the number of US executions since 1930 [usdoj.gov].

    Looks like between 1930 and 1949 we were going hog-wild on executions. Average nearly 150 a year. Lots of people whacking each other. Nothing better to do.

    But then TV came along. By 1968 people found watching Star Trek and Green Acres and Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom much more amusing than whacking each other. No executions for capital crimes between 1968 and 1976.

    Then Disco came in 1977 but only a few people whacked each other over it. It wasn't until the advent of 100+ channel cable in 1984 and the crappy shows that came with it that people started losing interest in the tube.

    The Internet has really fouled things up. In the last five years more people have been executed than in the entire period from 1962 to 1994. Probably from people whacking each other while waiting for their files to download. Have you ever heard "You've Got Mail!" played backwards?

    I'm hoping that ubiquitous broadband will bring television to the Internet and reverse this trend.
  • From reading the article, I tend to agree with the author's contention that the pace of innovation has been slower since 1950. However, I think this has much more to do with the relative difficulty of the problems we face than any "dissipation" of the spirit or intellect of modern culture.

    Let us take a few of the examples in the article, starting with the Concorde. Sustained supersonic flight is a very difficult problem requiring exotic and expensive materials, fuels and aerodynamics. The Concorde is a 25 year old hotrod, and was never an economic success. Designed in the early '60s, the all titanium SR-71 Black Bird costs a million plus dollars per mission to fly, and remains the fastest thing on Earth to this day. Speeds above mach 3 require the development of even more amazing materials. CHEAP hypersonic flight (as in non-military, commercial flight) is much more difficult still. These problems are more difficult in principle than those faced by the Wright brothers.

    The development of antibiotics was a huge breakthrough in medicine, as was the invention of modern anesthetics. The microbe has largely been defeated for the moment. Major medical problems that face us now are viruses like HIV, prions (e.g.. Mad Cow disease), fungi, and things like asthma, Alzheimer's etc. These diseases operate on a much smaller, subtler and more fundamental level, and require a qualitatively different knowledge of biology than did Smallpox.

    Living and working on the Moon permanently is a different proposition than sending three men there for a few days. One can compare this to the difference between a polar expedition and an oil rig in the Arctic ocean. There is nothing on the Moon right now that justifies the effort.

    Modern technology and modern convenieces are unavailable to the majority of humanity not primarily due to politics,but because they are expensive. "Power too cheap to meter" is the concept we are presently in search of. Maybe hydrogen fusion and room temperature superconductors can make this a reality.

    These problems are fundamentally more difficult than the major inventions and discoveries of which the author speaks, and can only be accomplished using the technology we now have as a starting point.

    So there you go. The problems facing us today are of a fundamentally different quality than the ones already solved in this century, particularly up to 1950. Just as the explosion of technology in the first half of the Twentieth Century depended on advances made during the last half of the Nineteenth, I think we have been building the tools for the explosion of the next 50 to 100 years. Computers and the Internet may not change the human condition as much as the electric light, but I bet they make possible the research that creates the next major breakthrough.

    The Phantom
  • but as of right now most of the innovation of the past 50 years has been largely redundant in any measurable sense

    Which is absolutely bullshit; because of the population growth allowed by the the Green Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s, the number of people who have died in all of human history is a smaller number than the number of humans alive today.

    Stop and think about that. An innovation of the past 50 years is responsible for the existence of roughly one third of all humans who have ever lived in all of human history. Compared to that, things like the automobile and indoor plumbing have had only minimal impact.

  • I think the "Connections" series attacked this issue the best. Innovation is an itterative proccess and it builds on itself. Different things change at different times and it takes society time to obsorb these changes. The defining factor for the integration of the technology that we see today was World War II. How long would it have taken for the aircraft industry to catch on without the industrial build up of the war?

    Now wait a few years and you will see some interesting things. We already see the reactions of businesss to the increased communication abilities given by the internet. Non-Compete and Non-Disclosure agreement are in part a result of workers abilities to shop the world for employment opportunities. "Copyright protection" is the result of content providers inability to accept the fact the instant content access dilutes the value of a single work. How much is one work worth when thousands can be accessed in seconds. Increased competitition lowers prices.

    Add DNA research, advance transportation techniques, advances in particle physics ...etc into the equation and we haven't seen anything yet!!!

  • I would disagree with that. Once basic needs are fufilled, u can move on to grander things. But beyond that, the author of the article is wrong in other ways. Cars, lightbulbs, and telephones were all invented in the 19th century and made cheap enough to use in the early twentieth century. I don't know how this is any worse than what the author complains we're doing in the late twentieth century. Indoor plumbing actually goes to Ancient Rome, and was only implemented in the early 20C. Also, he neglects that with certain things once invented they become moving targets. For instance, the first penicillin resistant germs appeared in the 1950s. Incredible innovation is required to stay ahead of these critters. Also, the average person in the 1950s would not have recognized references to computers. I also fail to understand how more bang for the buck (with computers) translates into less value. He also underestimates modern medicine. For instance, anti-psychotic and anti-depressant medications. They allow millions to live happier, fuller lives. There's a pretty big innovation. Also,with regard to spaceflight, that's a cheap shot. The '50s propaganda was overblown.
  • We are all familiar with the essay by the respected futurist Vernor Vinge called "The Singularity". In it he predicts that technology will increase in complexity at an everincreasing rate, and will reach a point in the next hundred years where that rate becomes infinite thanks to intelligent computers designing their replacements.

    Well, that is the most utter hogwash. Instead the opposite is happening. The law of diminishing returns is gripping us - the jump from 500MHz computers to 1GHz computers will affect me much less than the jump from .5MHz computers to 1Mhz computers ever did. We see this effect in every area of our lives.

    Technology is approaching its end game. The End of History Socially, Culturally and technologically is upon us gentlemen.

  • Hello. What you are saying is true for high end applications and the like. But how will it affect me? Not at all, I'll wager. The thing is, we have now solved all the major problems that we face as a species - food, shelter, warmth, health, we are supplied them all, and most of them really can't improve that much anymore. What I mean is, things may continue to improve technically, but these improvements won't impact our lives to nearly the same degree as advances in the past have.

    If you read "The End of History" by Francis Fukuyama, you will see that he posits that the history of the world is coming to an end, in the sense that modern capitalist democracies are so comfortable that, well, nothing really happens. One of the fields in which this is occurring is technology.

    Consider that the reason we develop technology is to support our preferred lifestyle. We have been inching ever closer to that lifestyle for seven thousand years, and the rate (in terms of ground covered) that we get closer is decreasing. So it seems to me (and good lord, I know very little) that things just aren't going to change all *that* much over the next few hundred years. In the *long* term, my opinion is quite different.

    I'm very sorry if I appear a little short with my words, but I'm in a very bad mood just now and have a headache :-(

  • An excellent point. Many people in this world have a completely different perspective on life than than average slashdot, internet savy person. Once you can pretty easily aquire all of you basic needs like food, water, and shelter, everything else is just icing on the cake

    The really interesting thing to speculate about is this; What advance in technology would be equivalent to the advances that were made in the early part of the 20th century?

    IMHO, a few likely candidates for this would be an improved method of travel (instead of a 6 hour flight to europe, a 30 min. trip instead) and advances in genetic medicine (artificially express genes in our bodies to heighten intelligence or protect ourselves from disease).
  • by skelly ( 38870 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @06:19PM (#1426237)
    The author may be correct in his observations about the direct visual impact of most major improvements in technology, but I differ. He has failed to take a more fair account about the increase in population and the blatant fact that many of the other innovations from the turn of the century were accomplished by non-scientists. Most of the great promises of the early to mid 20th century have not come to pass. We do live longer, healthier lives and live amidst most of the fruits of technological innovation. No great change in our fundamental sciences has occurred in a long time. Now snmall changes do a nd continue to happen, but to expect such widescale, fundamental changes in our lives is grossly unfair. We make do with smaller gradual improvements in our gadgets becuase, that is what we expect. The sciences improve our live in such a pace as to be appreciable and soft. New drugs, new therapies don't have as much of an affect on us as the most basic innovations of medecine (sanitation, penecillin)would have on an isolated tribe in New Guinea. Today we live in virtual ignorance of the what we have accomplished because we have the benefits and the stress of these technologies. Pollution(smog), Carpa-tunnel syndrome(work injury), population increase(baby boom) are the same as it was 50 years ago. Any benefits of new tecnologies gets immediatly absorbed into the background noise of our everyday lives. Yet with out all of it, we would be more polluted, sick, shorter lived, and stupid. It is not fair to compare the lives of people who went from basically nothing to the basics of technology and then expect the improvements of our time to have the same impact on us. That is bad historical observation(but then I am not surprised as Americans know diddly-squat about history). The phone and fax were invented when the telegraph was developed because they are just innovations of the same basic principles. Television is just the logical result of photography and sound and radio inventions. Fridges were invented as a way to cool food, yet we have had canning for 200 years, ice houses for centuries, salt and smoke houses for centuries as well. Computers are the logical result of mechanical adding machines(Descartes made one)and digital-counting, as well as electronics. The difference engine was almost accomplished during the victorian era and were used to program on punch cards that created CHADS and were fed into electronic readers. The 1890 census was accomplished in this way. The problem is that people excpect progress. Our kids are expected to do better than our parents. Wes uffer from this silly notion that progress has to happen or we just stagnate. So our popualtion increases, our ecosystems disappear, our heritage of resources gets wiped out, all in the name of progress. We are so stupid.
  • by fable2112 ( 46114 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @06:22PM (#1426238) Homepage
    Typical artical, typical responses. So here's my typical response, colored by my participation in the SCA and having read way too much Darkover recently... *grin*

    The apparent speed of "technological innovation", its impact on our lives, and whether or not this new technology is a positive thing...this is all purely in the eye of the beholder.

    Society's still got the same basic problems it's always had. People still need food, shelter, some degree of climate control, and currency to pay for these things. Parents still want their children to be educated (one way or another), and kids still want to rebel. People for the most part still want to look attractive by the standards of the society at the time, to find an appropriate partner or partners and reproduce, to defend themselves against actual or perceived attacks (by other people or by "natural" forces), to have someone cure them when they're sick, to feel like a part of something larger than themselves, all that good stuff.

    There are always society-threatening problems out there -- the crazy king/dictator/rebel leader in power over there who might be coming over *here* if we're not careful, the religious extremists telling us to "convert or die" (yes, this still exists pretty overtly in some places, and it exists in the US in a *slightly* more subtle form), the scary celebrity who is a "bad influence" on the young (Beethoven, anyone?), the "modern woman" who just won't behave, the "deplorable" state of education, the scientific discoveries that create ethical dilemmas for society...none of these complaints are new. The specifics change, the general pattern does not.

    The WAY in which we do our work might change, and the specific hazards that are likely to kill us might be different, but most of us still spend a great deal of time working inside or outside the home, spending time with our (biological or chosen) families when we can if we aren't fighting with them, figuring out how to feed and clothe ourselves and maintain the roof over our head, traveling from one place to another, and fighting off death as long as we can.

    I've read articles from the 1500s complaining that the "true meaning of Christmas" has been lost. I've read about Plato's attempts to censor certain types of music. In the grand scheme of things, people will always be people. Today's technology, whatever it is, will always be a solution only to yesterday's challenges -- today's challenges will always demand tomorrow's technology, which in some cases might be a return to something "forgotten" (herbal medicines anyone?) and in other cases might well be something we couldn't even conceive of today. We may have eliminated smallpox, but now there's AIDS to worry about. Food might seem to be "safer" now, but what of the constant scares regarding salmonella and exposure to pesticides? Wrist damage from carpal-tunnel syndrome might not be as life-threatening as injuries sustained by farmers or miners, but it is still threatening to the livelihood of someone who types or works on an assembly line for a living. And of course, there still ARE farmers and miners, who still face hazards that most of us with our desk jobs don't think about much. :)
  • This kind of argument can be taken further and further.
    Isn't a car just a horseless carriage? Your logic can be followed to indicate that the real inovation was pulling a box on wheels with an animal and putting people in it. Cars were just an improvment. The no car to car is bigger than a better car thing can get silly. It all depends on how you describe a car. Is it a box on wheels that carries people? Then the car itself was just an upgrade from the horse drawn wagon. When you look at the effect that having all the vehicles in the country using clean, renewable fuel would have on our environment, you understand why this is a major innovation indeed. The technology will not just change cars. It has the potential to change our society. If cars are no longer reliant on fossil fuels than what about power plants? Many still burn dirty coal. What about home heating? Oil and gas rule there. The automotive industry can drive society to better ways of doing things. That is a major shift.
    You make it sound like AIDS spread because of bad medicine. It really spread from a lack of safe sex practices (even though there already were other STDs) and problems with blood screenings. I think that AIDS treatment is a major inovation even though it is a younger disease. Africa is being ravaged by this disease. If they can get the price of current treatments down and get them distributed, millions of lives and the fate of an entire continent could be changed. I think that ranks.
    Granted, the battle with lung cancer in paticular is not going well. But doesn't that make the treatments forming that much more important? Here [applesforhealth.com] is an example of a new treatment. One of the major reasons why this cancer in paticular has become such a killer is wide spread smoking. Around a quarter of college kids smoke. I watched my grandmother die of emphysema from smoking so I am pretty sensitive to smoking related diseases. I only wish this type of cancer got the same focus as others. I know women that will never miss a mamogram but will continue smoking. The battles against some cancers as gone better, though. What makes a Lance Armstrong so special is that his case shows how one can beat types of cancer once known as death sentences. It's an insult to the thousands of doctors and scientists that have worked hard to beat these killers to ignore their work and accomplishments.
  • by SirSlud ( 67381 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @07:25PM (#1426240) Homepage
    > The thing is, they would be able to adapt because technology today continutes to make life easier

    Context is everything. Its a moot point to say that you couldn't 'live' in 1950 for lack of all of today's technologies' convenience. Of course you couln't, you're too used to what you have now.

    But to assume 'easier' is interesting, for I would argue that it was far easier to walk over to my neighbour's house and ask him for high lawnmower rather than buy a computer, know how to set it up, get an ISP, learn how to email, and email him. I'd rather say that technology today continues to make us lazier, when it comes to going out of our houses, or moving in a physical fasion. Name a technology today that actually makes the task it purpotes to do easier, from a comprehension of the steps to accomplish that task.

    Think of an accountant from the 1950s that not only has to understand the principals of accounting, as he did before, but now has to know how to use Office 2000 and Excel. It saves him time in the long run, maybe, he has to invest alot more learning and application of knowledge in order to achieve his goal. And at any rate, there is a fairly widely supported theory that the time the use of a computer saves is recouped by the very same computer in learning and maintainance tasks.)

    Chances are, all modern day technology does is let you do it all from one place, or faster, or cheaper ... but rarely easier. If you are the farmer who now has milking machines, you're probably thinking thats a heck of a lot easier, but not for those who are in charge of maintainting, inventing, supporting, selling, or purchasing the milking machines. And what can you do with your extra time now? Why, consume more! Buy more! Shop! Watch TV! All of which were invented pre-1950. :)
    If something has never been said/seen/heard before, best stop to think about why that is.
  • Twenty years ago, my University used 2 CDC supercomputers to support most all of the research needs of Thirty Thousand students and Thousands of academics.

    This included doing literally tens of thousands of pages a day markup-style word processing for which the supercomputers weren't particularly well suited.

    Today, I carry at least 30 x the CPU processing power of those supercomputers. Along with more disk space and a network interface (100 Mhz Ethernet) that was probably more than the aggregate networking performed at that University.

    Am I even doing 1/1000th of the useful work with all this power? Sure, that computing power was so precious that the staff at the University worked hard to keep it at full utilization at all times while my laptop sits idle most of the day, but that's kind of the point.

    Sure, distributed.net and the like try to use all this unused potential, but we're still nowhere near as effective with our resources as we once were.

    I realize that there are excuses. When resources are so plentiful, we tend to get wasteful, but shouldn't we be more mindful of using our resources more effectively? It's not just my laptop. But even the servers of 10 years ago to shame, especially in price/performance, but are we really doing that much more with them? Or have we built up layer upon layer of abstraction, middleware, DB Servers, etc. to more than exhaust the advantages. I know that the users (remember them anybody?) are not really much more effective with today's applications than with the character mode applications of ten years ago. In most cases, those character-based applications were more responsive than the applications we're rolling out today.

    Sometimes, I think we've long since passed the point of diminishing returns with computing technology. We're applying more and more power to get far fewer incremental improvements.



    ---

  • by Fjord ( 99230 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:59PM (#1426242) Homepage Journal
    Much like Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs [wynja.com].
  • by tesserae ( 156984 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @07:12PM (#1426243)
    Twenty years ago, my University used 2 CDC supercomputers to support most all of the research needs of Thirty Thousand students and Thousands of academics.

    Yep, so did mine, thirty years ago. And the closest I could get to 'em was the window through which I passes the card deck... Today, I have three computers sitting on my desk, and I use them all in different ways -- but I use them directly.

    Twenty years ago, engineers wrote proposals and reports longhand, and made rough sketches and graphs; secretaries typed them; draftsmen and illustrators did pen-and-ink renderings of the graphics. The engineers proofed these and redlined them, and the corrections were often done directly on the originals. Design work was mostly hand-work, with lots of extrapolation and interpolation of graphical data; the few computer runs were expensive in both time and dollars, when they were done at all.

    Today, the engineers write their proposals and reports on their desktop computers; edit them there; produce the graphics there and refine it themselves; assemble the graphics and text into a final document; and generally print it out themselves, unless they distribute it electronically -- which they also do themselves. And the bar has been raised for the final product: corrections-by-hand aren't acceptable, and the graphics really need color. The engineering itself involves multiple iterations, with much (even most) of the detailed design actually being done on computer models instead of physical prototypes. And the engineer does most of this work directly, too, unless they truly need a supercomputer run.

    It's gotten to where I can work as a single individual and replace an office full of support staff -- which is exactly what I do. Is that wasteful of computers? I don't think so, even though one of my computers basically acts as a file, fax and printer server for one person. It's worth what it costs me to use it for nothing else... it keeps the load of my workstation, and saves me the few minutes a day that it cost me over a few months to buy.

    The other point I want to make is this: the analysts who say productivity isn't going up with computer use, are are missing the points I've made above -- particularly the one about the bar being raised.

    ---

  • by mrbinary ( 175585 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @07:13PM (#1426244)
    It's really too early to tell what the impact of some of the recent innovations will be, IMHO. To me, the last line of the article is one of the most telling. Researchers are very close to building nanotech that supposedly will be able to perform any range of duties, including the ability to be injected into a living being to perform various functions. Others in the biotech field feel they are close to making a breakthrough with regards to the aging process, and let's not forget the amazing progress that has been made in fighting cancer etc.

    Let's suppose that 10 years from now we look back at this article, when we have definitely discovered a method to extend life to 150+ years, have wiped out almost all known diseases, and have built the first fusion reactors. These advances wouldn't have been possible without the assistance of computers for process modelling and analysis. Then this article will look like a bunch of horseshit. For another example, we are on the verge of widespread use of fuel cell technology (if the megacorps allow it). This is a tech that has been around since at least the 1970's (from the space program and probably much earlier than that), but we've just recently made advances that make it efficient enough for mass use. Plus, the large corporations made precious little if any progress in furthering the energy efficiency of appliances (especially automobiles) until the governments of the world, especially the US, started to enact laws requiring it.

    Let's also consider the advances such as splitting the atom that the article neglects to mention. Sure atomics research allowed us to make horrific bombs that can kill millions of people in a single enormous explosion (which ironically can also be considered progress), but it also brought an unprecedented era of world peace with only minor localized skirmishes - the large powers were held in check by the frighteningly horrible capabilities of these bombs. It also brought nuclear power, a somewhat dubious benefit in many respects, but it also has brought power to areas of the world where there were very few if any real alternatives to power generation, and it is relatively clean technology.

    Another thing the author likes to overlook are the problems that existed in the first half of the century. Early in the 20th century the air in many major urban centers was so bad that trees wouldn't even grow! People died of exposure to the smoke and toxins belching from factories. I'm not trying to say that it hasn't gotten worse in some areas, but those areas are more densely populated than they were at the turn of the century. Furthermore, a great deal of that pollution can be attributed to automobiles which are continuously becoming less polluting. In general, environmental pollution is declining and the trend seems to be towards further improvements in this area.

    One of the funniest lines had to be this one -- Notes economist Alan Blinder: "No modern IT innovation has, or I dare say will, come close to such a gain!" What an ass. First of all, the Internet has effectively accomplished something on the same scale. The telegraph was a simple point-to-point device that allowed communication between two people simultaneously. This was the situation until about the 1970's, when telephone tech advanced to party lines allowing several parties (say up to 10) to converse simultaneously. The Internet allows fscking spammers to send a message to millions of people simultaneously, also instantly, or thousands of people to chat in real-time, in text or voice. I hope this knob lives long enough to see the day when we break the speed of light and messages (dare I hope for matter also?) can be transported instantly across infinite distances. Am I dreaming? Maybe, but there are very bright minds working on this very problem (some believe they already have solved it), and yet what benefit does it confer to the average person? At the moment, none really. I can already send a message in seconds to the other side of the world, and that's the furthest that I could conceivably need to send it at the moment. But if we ever get off this big stinkin rock and start to colonize other planets, it would be an important advance indeed.

    Finally, sometimes advances come in clumps rather than at a regular pace. Einstein's theories were all developed over a short period of time, and we haven't seen any similar advances in scientific theories since that time that could have such a direct and immediate impact on day-to-day existence. Quite the opposite of the author, I see new innovations and invention as very likely being just around the corner that could change my life and the lives of people around the globe just as dramatically as some of the inventions in the first half of the century.

    ----
  • by Packratt ( 257218 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @05:14PM (#1426245) Journal
    When compared to other studies, technological advances rocket ahead of our gains in philosophy, ethics, sociology, political sciences, and other areas of human endevour. Why is this? Well, probably because technology brings money and power while the other studies are useless to businessmen. After all, when is the last time you heard of a rich philosopher?

    Don't get me wrong, I work with technology and I love those little gadgets more than most people. But since I work with technology I get to see how these wonderfull devices are used.

    We have all this potential now to communicate ideas, to share knowledge, to educate. We have devices that are supposed to free ourselves, to make the most of our time, to improve our lives. What does that technology really do? It improves bottom lines, it ties us to the desk, forces us to work longer hours even when at home, it takes us away from our friends and families, forces us to constantly focus on learning about technology instead of about each other and how to better society.

    We humans are so good at creating things, at innovating. Yet we are so horrible at dealing with ourselves and learning about how to control the things we create. It is not technology that I fear, it is the human capacity to do harm with technology due to a lack of control. So we race ahead to invent new things but refuse to reinvent ourselves and our society. Is this the best course for us?
  • by Wyatt Earp ( 1029 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:53PM (#1426246)
    I thought the article was pretty stupid, typical end of the year...no news...gotta blather about something negative.

    Now the argument that not much happened between 100 CE and 1700 CE is just flat wrong. Off the top of my hungover head. Printing Press, Compass, Rockets, Gunpowder and Microscope are pretty important.

    I'd say without the lightblub...advanced communications networks or gene therapy wouldn't happen. After all there is a LED blinking in that fibre switch that's sending the light down the fibre that gets these packets around.

    I think that invention is moving along quite quicky, it's just that when you are so far advanced it's hard to make things really jump out. It's also hard to sit there as the advance happens and say...wow...that's gonna change the world.

    When they sent the first email 30 years ago...did anyone there say...Wow...This is gonna change the world! Nope. When Chuck Yeager flew through faster than sound did anyone say...Wow this is going to change military aviation? Nope. It was just another day.

    IMHO you can't sit there and say invention is slowing...or speading up...because invention isn't a finite thing that can be measured that way.
  • by nathanh ( 1214 ) on Sunday December 31, 2000 @03:47AM (#1426247) Homepage
    And if the just about impossible task of developing practical teleportation were accomplished, you figure its impact on society would be to get you to work faster?

    It's amazing how the first thought that pops into the minds of people when faced with the possibility of instantaneous teleportation is "wow, I can avoid the traffic going to work". It is incredibly shortsighted.

    David Brin wrote a wonderful short story where he theorizes about a world where cheap, reliable teleportation was commonplace. Customs control is impossible, smuggling is rife, crime increases exponentially, police are powerless, war supplies cannot be stopped, privacy is destroyed, people visit the few last pieces of untouched wilderness in droves thus destroying it.

    Teleportation would be the end of civilisation as we know it. For the previous person to equate it with something as trivial as the light bulb! I think you were incredibly restrained to not call him a freaking idiot.

  • by Pig Hogger ( 10379 ) <(moc.liamg) (ta) (reggoh.gip)> on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:36PM (#1426248) Journal

    The greatest, single most important invention in all the history of mankind was the invention of railroads, some 150 years ago.

    150 years ago, for the first time in history, it was possible to transport quickly large quantities of merchandise, food, and people over long distances on earth.

    The average speed of land transportation jumped more than 15fold, as trains were able to crisscross countries at speeds 15 to 20 times of the usual stagecoaches, trucks or canal boats which were then the norm.

    Food could be readily transported from one place to the other to avert famines; the famines that occured thereafter were political in nature, not because food could not have been brought.

    For the first time in history, people did not face the prospect of automatic starvation if their crops failed; they could resort on the supplies from elsewhere.

    Railroads could supply the needs of ever-growing cities, such as New-York, London, Berlin, Paris or Chicago. Hitero, the size of cities was limited by the same factor any living organism was limited in size: by it's food supply.

    It's not for nothing that, around that time, people embarked into railroad building with a quasi-religious fervor.

    No, the greatest inventions occured between 1850 and 1950. After that, you only had refinements of existing stuff. Nothing really significant was invented after 1950, except perhaps, DNA genetic engineering.

    --

  • by FallLine ( 12211 ) on Sunday December 31, 2000 @11:42AM (#1426249)
    No, not exactly. This isn't quite as much a measure of innovation, as it is a measure of revolution. Though the CAT and MRI scans may prove life saving to individuals, on the aggregate the sum of all these recent inventions simply has not had as great on an effect on society as have some earlier innovations. Life expectancies have not, contrary to popular opinion, improved that much in the developed world. Quality of health has not improved that much either.

    The question is the net effect and the author answers quite well. It's not disparaging the science of today at all. The article does not say that today's scientists are stupid, lazy, incompetent, underfunded, etc. The article merely puts the benefits of today's science into historical context, and addresses the thousands of internet and technology pundits in one fell swoop.

    The media and a great many pundits have been waxing ecstatic about how revolutionary computers and the internet have BEEN (or will be in the very near future). The problem with this kind of talk is that it distorts our thinking and our priorities.

    For instance, I never hear the end of the so-called "digital divide." A day never seems to go by when Al Gore, or some other politician, is talking about how we need the internet in every classroom and village (in Africa or what have you). Well as a matter of priorities, basic sustenance, health, and literacy are far more important innovations that have yet to reach these same people. Yet our American domestic policy, insists on spending countless resources today on a "revolution" that is certainly not yet revolutionary. Whether it's going to be revoltionary at all is debatable, but to spend hundreds of millions of dollars networking and providing soon to be obselete computers at great cost is foolish at best.

    Similarly, we saw, and still are seeing to some extent, billions of dollars being ponied up for the "internet revolution" though the infamous Dot Coms. Meanwhile other technologies have suffered from lack of funding. For instance, I personally know a few biotech and medical devices companies that had a very difficult time getting capital from venture capitalists and the like, because they were too crazed over Dot Coms. More real dollars have been spent on these Dot Coms than so many other proven revolutions... So yes, not only is this an interesting question, it's a relevant one too. It's a matter of priorities and clear thinking.

    Nor does this mean that, since all "basic" needs have been meet, nothing more dramatic can be done. Life expectancy can be increased substantially--medicine is still quite primitive. Issues like traffic jams can theoretically be resolved. AI can be invented (theoretically). Etc. etc. etc. All these things can be HUGE benefits for society that can be _felt_ by the common man--even if he is ignorant as to the reasons. It simply has not happened to as great as an extent in the past 50 years as it was in the 50 years before that.

  • by johnathan ( 44958 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @03:06PM (#1426250) Homepage
    Well, of course. Innovations like plumbing and sanitation take care of basic needs. Now that these needs are taken care of, all that is left is to improve our lives in more trivial ways.

    --

  • To fully understand the impact of today's society, we must wit another 50 years. Light bulbs were amazing when they were produced, but how many people had one in there house and used it to its full potential? The same goes for computers. They're "amazing" for the commonfolk, but when will it integrate and become second nature in their lives?

    Some of the biggest technologies will most likely include e-mail and the web. Yes, the web is far too over-hyped, but it does offer a very large net of knowledge. 50 years ago, you could walk into a library and find a small assortment of knowledge, but if they didn't have what you were looking for, you were up a creek unless you had a lot of time on your hands. The web changes that (or more correctly, will). Simple things like forums or mailing list archives of accumulated knowledge will be the most useful, but thats only my prediction. (Those things are new inventions. A central repsoitory of conversation has never before been attempted. If any conversations were ever recorded in any way (meeting minutes, etc), they were usualy stuffed in a big filing cabinet and never were shared).
  • by q000921 ( 235076 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @03:12PM (#1426252)
    Most of the inventions that had transformed life between 1900 and 1950 were made around 1900 or sometimes even long before. Likewise, the impact of today's inventions isn't going to be really felt for a long time; we have barely scratched the surface of what is possible once biotechnology and computing become ubiquitous.

    That isn't to say that there aren't problems. The article points out correctly that preventive healthcare and public health is much more important to increasing life span than other medical advances. And economic opportunism and vested interests may well keep inventions from reaching their true potential for decades to come.

    How superficial the article is, you can see from its concluding remarks. While Thomas Edison was cleary important in popularizing and marketing inventions, much of what he was successful with had been invented many years prior to him--including the light bulb.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 30, 2000 @03:11PM (#1426253)
    You can't say, "1 Ghz Pentium 4's" aren't as important to society as the lightbulb, and expect to sound profound.

    The reason the 'historical' inventions were so much bigger is because we are only talking about the big ones.

    Right now. Computers vs Radio. Which is more important in day to day life? Fast Forward 100 years and lets see how bit of an impact the Internet (or rather instantaneous and persistant global communication) had on society.

    This article is fine in that it cuts away some of the hype, but the 'big' inventions of today are just as big as the 'big' inventions of yesterday, (even if the small inventions aren't.)
  • by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @03:51PM (#1426254)
    It is apparent that some authors consider only those things that they have day to day direct contact with. Any depth of knowledge as to the technological underpinnings of a society seems to have escaped the purview of a modern liberal arts education.

    The fact of the matter is that the discoveries of the past 50 well surpass those of the previous 50. Where would modern society be without the laser and the IC? Not to mention the incredible impact the previously unknown field of molecular biology is having on medicine as well as politics. The advances in the field of chemistry have been equally rapid. NMR, GC-MS, polymer science etc. have had a huge impact on modern life.

    Not only that, but many of the inventions the cited (automobile, sanitation, lightbulb, etc. were made BEFORE 1900. In some cases CENTURIES before! The ROMANS had indoor pumbing fer crissakes).

    Not only that, but it refers to failures in urban planning in the US as evidence of lack of innovation. We, I think if he were to travel on the high speed rail systems of Europe or Japan, he might realize these problems are POLITICAL, not technological.

    His argument regarding productivity is nonsense too. Look at the percentage of farm workers in 1950 vs. today. Or the average standard of living. Bullocks I say!

    The fact is that this article misses the point completely. Modern technology has surpassed the obvious day of the stinking, belching machine, and moved on to the much more rewarding realm of the molecule. Scientific advances come in the form of fabrics with undreamed of mechanical properties (Aramid etc), drugs that work at an extrodinary level of sophistication, instruments that can image the processes occurring in the body in 3D with molecular discrimination level without using damaging radiation, etc.

    HELL, the first world wide satellite television broadcast included the Beatles singing "All you need is Love". Now we bounce signals around the globe without even considering the magic involved.

    Of all the articles I have seen posted on /. this has to be the biggest, stinkingest crock of all.

  • by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:19PM (#1426255)
    This article is about the average person.

    If you want to talk about the average person, you have to be very careful. The average person is a sustenance farmer in China who has no access to electricity, and does not own a telephone. The biggest things that have affected his life are programs of mass immunization, education in basic health care and sanitation, and better flood and land management practices.

    And yes, these have occurred in the past 50 years, not in the time prior to 1950.

  • by overshoot ( 39700 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:06PM (#1426256)
    For those of you who think that our advances are as important to peoples' lives as our grandparents' advances, I offer the following:
    • When my grandfather was a child, transportation was horse, train, or boat. When he turned fifty and I was born, it was trains, cars, and airplanes. It's still cars and airplanes.
    • When he was a child, long-range communications meant paper, at most by telegraph. When he turned fifty and I was born, it meant telephone, radio, and television. It's still mostly telephone, radio, and television.
    • When he was a child, middle-class families in the USA routinely lost several children to whooping cough, diphtheria, scarlet fever, etc. None of the families I knew as a child did. Logarithms don't count.
    • My grandfather had smallpox scars. I have a smallpox vaccination scar. My children don't -- because smallpox is gone.
    • Nobody in his town had indoor plumbing. Nobody in mine didn't.
    • As a boy, he read about automobiles. Before he died, he watched Armstrong and Aldrin walk on the Moon live on TV. My kids watch reruns of Apollo 13.

    I'm busy making some of our wonderful techie toys, and certainly am not complaining about the graphite knee brace that lets me ski. But let's not kid ourselves: my parents and grandparents changed the way we live in utterly profound ways, and it's going to take something on the order of matter transmission to come close.
  • by soldack ( 48581 ) <soldacker@yaho o . c om> on Saturday December 30, 2000 @04:08PM (#1426257) Homepage
    "The law of diminishing returns is gripping us?" You compare to sets of clock speeds and claim this means the end of history? Even if you were right about a slowdown (which I think you are not), it would not mean the end. Evolution seems to occur in spurts. If you are right, we are just not in one right now.
    Actually, Vinge has been right on. Take a read at the inventions of the year in Discover. Amazing discoveries in food, computers, physics, and about everything else will change the world around us in incredible ways. Technology is increasing at ever increasing rates. There are bumps in the road but it keeps moving. Continuous speech recognition is becoming a reality. I can call a 800 number and ask about movies, get the information I need, and never talk to a human being. Computers are interacting with us in more human way. Most tutorial programs now talk the user through the learning. As computer power grows, the little annoying paper clip will become your virtual personal assistant. It is happening already. Operating Systems and the software around them have become so customizable that each person's system is unique. They gain personality. I am not talking about wallpaper and screensaves, I mean the ways in which we interact. Web sites have moved from static digital representations of print to customized, unique, living, breathing swirls of personal information. When I visit /., yahoo, cnn and netscape, it is my site I find. No one else sees that exact same site. Site are learning our habits. I am finally starting to get spam about things I care about. Amazon usually makes pretty good suggestions to me. Computers are already building computers. Engineers use software to help design the latest hardware. Some parts of software are written by software itself with humans only guiding it to the solution. Society is also changing at a dramatic pace. Cultures shift and change in months instead of years, years instead of decades. Technology has lead this increase in the rate of change. Ideas now move great distances at swift rates. The readers of our posts live in many different places, with varying societies and cultures. As a young girl in Canada and an old man in China interact, they change a little bit. As they change they change the society and culture around them. As those cultures change, the world changes. End game? No, I think the game is just beginning...
  • by Throw Away Account ( 240185 ) on Saturday December 30, 2000 @08:03PM (#1426258)
    He takes inventions made in the 19th century (light bulb, AC power, automobiles, indoor plumbing) and counts them as 1900-1950 inventions because they were made generally available then, but counts inventions not made generally available until 1950-2000 (television, antibiotics) as 1900-1950 inventions if they were first created then.

    Then, inventions from 1950-1980 (the Green Revolution, the word processor, the jet passenger plane, spacecraft, satellites) are not counted as "modern" innovations, despite the fact that the article starts by comparing 1900-1950 to 1950-2000.

    Finally, older inventions like the telegraph are compared to modern ones like the Internet.

    So, this guy gives us an argument that actually reads, "the inventions of 1830-1980 are more important as a group than the inventions of 1980-2000, so we've stopped innovating".

    Wow, how profound. I can probably give a good argument that the inventions of 775-1830 AD (a time period similarly 7.5 times longer than the later period being compared to), including the transoceanic ship, the gun, classical physics, calculus, and the moveable-type printing press, were more important than the innovations from 1830-1980.

    And, of course, the 7.5-times-longer time period from 7100 BC to 775 AD saw even more important innovation, seeing the invention of animal domestication, agriculture, the wheel, standing armies, writing, etc.

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