Prayer and
Contemplative-Mystical Life
“The Ten-Year Century”
WSJ Tuesday August 11, 2009 A 17.
By TOM HAYES AND MICHAEL S. MALONE
In computer jargon, when your hard drive becomes overwhelmed with too much
information it is said to be fragmented—or “fragged.” Today, the rapid and
unsettling pace of change has left us all more than a little, well, fragged.
We watch 60-second television commercials that have been sped up to fit
into 30-second spots, even as we multitask our way through emails, text
messages and tweets. We assume that these small time compressions are part of
the price of modern living. But it is more profound than that.
Changes that used to take generations—economic cycles, cultural shifts,
mass migrations, changes in the structures of families and institutions—now
unfurl in a span of years. Since 2000, we have experienced three economic
bubbles (dot-com, real estate, and credit), three market crashes, a devastating
terrorist attack, two wars and a global influenza pandemic.
Game-changing consumer products and services (iPod, smart phones, YouTube,
Twitter, blogs) that historically might have appeared once every five or more
years roll out within months. In what seems like the blink of an eye one giant
industry (recorded music) has been utterly transformed, another (the
250-year-old newspaper business) is facing oblivion, and a half-dozen more
(magazines, network television, book publishing) are apparently headed to meet
one of those two fates.
Call it the advent of “the 10-year century”: a fast shuffle that stacks
events which once took place in the course of a lifetime compressed into the
duration of a childhood. To understand how this his happening—and what it will
take to cope—take a look at the underlying forces:
• Faster computation. “Moore ’s Law”—the doubling of semiconductor
chip performance every 18-24 months first observed by Intel co-founder Gordon
E. Moore—has become the metronome of modern times. Yet the extraordinary
changes we have seen since the invention of the transistor in 1947—all of the
way to broadband Internet, smart phones, iPods and supercomputers—are only a
prelude to the emerging world of single-molecule silicon gates, nanotechnology
and advanced bioinformatics (which uses information processing in molecular
biology).
• Quicker access. “Metcalfe’s Law,” named for
electrical engineer Robert Metcalfe, says that networks grow in value
exponentially with each new user. The biggest network in the world is the
Internet; and thanks to the advent of cheap, Web-enabled cellphones, the
Internet is about to see its “jump point”: the arrival of two billion new users
from the developing world, nearly tripling its size.
Now consider what may happen with faster computation speeds and global
broadband wireless coverage, which means full access from anywhere on the
planet, anytime. What counts here is not the sheer size of the Internet, or the
richness of the experience, but the life-altering access to any information we
need, delivered with unprecedented sophistication, almost instantly.
• Shorter decision cycles. Think about what quicker
access to vast caches of information, available instantly almost anywhere, to
be crunched and analyzed using ubiquitous and powerful processors—all with the
knowledge that competitors are doing the same thing—means for business
enterprise. The emerging environment is not one for reflection, or “letting
things play out for a while.” It means bold, impetuous moves, all while betting
that the information is not just complete, but accurate.
True, when a computer chip goes through as many computations in a single
second as there are human heartbeats in 10 lifetimes, a 10-year year century
seems positively pokey. But we humans have a slower metabolism, which will make
this rapid fire of events ever more difficult to comprehend, much less manage.
More disturbing, we have few safeguards—software shut-off switches, virus
protections, firewalls, etc.—in place to check or repair our new global
über-system when it misfires or goes completely off the rails. When felons with
lousy credit histories can sign up for inflated mortgages in a matter of
seconds over a computer; when nervous shareholders can panic over a fake blog
and dump millions of shares online in a matter of minutes; and when an Internet
rumor can provoke a virtual “run” on a bank, then bubbles and cascades and
crashes become inevitable.
So how do we control this increasingly out-of-control, interlinked world?
Venture capitalist Bill Davidow has proposed the equivalent of online “surge
protectors” to stop run-ups and panics on the Internet, the same way stock
markets stop runaway trading. At the least we need better analytics to predict
where change is taking us next.
Most importantly, trust will become the critical factor. Without the luxury
of time, trust will be the new currency of our times, whether in news sources,
economic systems, political figures, even spiritual leaders. As change
accelerates, it will remain one true constant.
Mr. Hayes is author of “Jump Point: How Network Culture
is Revolutionizing Business” (McGraw-Hill, 2008). Mr. Malone’s most recent book
is “The Future Arrived Yesterday” (Crown, 2009).
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