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Scott kirkpatrick's avatar

Lovely set of thoughts and questions. Every task and every individual carrying out a recognized function operates along a distribution, with the simple, boring tasks stretching out to the left and the challenging, innovative original tasks stretching out far to the right. Most of the productivity enhancers scoop up the stuff on the left and (as long as the fellow sitting in the center has the wit and the tools to make sure it is correct and in the style desired -- there are tools already under development for this) productivity goes up many-fold. But the real gains are made on the right, where something new happens, which must be recognized, evaluated, shared and built on. These are two very different problems. I hope the monetizable gains on the left will pay for some of the right hand stuff.

In the stone age, we explore and extend a new idea by explaining it to others until we understand it well enough to take it further and build something new. We can't all do this at once in a global market square -- the cacophony even if all ideas are brilliant is overwhelming. What seems to be missing from the blogosphere and the world of startup accelerators is some economic structure that pulls good ideas together until they reach a survivable size.

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Alex Tolley's avatar

Back in 2000, Bruce Sterling wrote an article for one of the big business magazines about life in 2050. One thing stuck in my mind. He said that the production of new technology would be so rapid that if any particular technology failed to deliver, there were a number of others that could do the same thing. For the public this meant ennuie would set in. To some extent we see that in the plethora of computer languages. In the 1980s, there was little disagreement about which computer language beginners would use on their PCs (BASIC) and then advance to (C/Pascal), and then which object orientated language to progress to (C++ was the default for C users). Can we agree on what language beginners should start with today? OTOH, for established coders, there are so many viable languages, all freely available, each with their pros and cons. You can even get free Fortran compilers today, and Linux, FreeBSD, has pretty much destroyed the value of proprietary Unix OSs such as System V. In other domains, we see the same thing happening - overlapping science and technology "advances" mean that there are very few really breakthrough advances that are unique and have no comparable competitors.

This has an impact on the value of the knowledge worker output. The "unique value" AI will generate for the individual will be eroded by the sheer volume of near identical output. Produce an analysis that gains attention and almost immediately there will be other analyses doing the same or better. That ease of competition has scientists maintaining tight control over their expensive, hard won data, as the "crowd" could probably do useful analyses even faster, and more comprehensively, than the originator, and potentially publish faster.

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