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Look to History, See the Future of Telecommunications Aspects of the future are already visible as we prepare for a new year.
From our modern vantage point, it is hard to even imagine a time when telecommunications didn't exist. It is so ingrained in our lives that we now take it for granted. Between telephone, cell phone, internet, and many of the more passive ways we gather and exchange information, our ability to communicate has become one of the most important aspects of our lives. The products of telecommunications innovation are as central to modern life as three ancient inventions were to ancient cities: the wheel, domestication of animals, and pottery. Telecommunications did not exist in ancient times, but communications did exist in ancient times. It was word of mouth or word on tablet. Today, a tablet is a species of personal computer. It's no cylinder seal. Modern telecommunications draw on inventions throughout the history of humanity, from cave paintings, cuneiform, papyrus, the Gutenberg press, to the astounding array of devices we have come to accept today. During the American Revolutionary War, the time required to get a message from England to America was measured in weeks. A century later, the telegraph enabled near instantaneous transmission of information wherever infrastructure was in place. In 1901, Marconi sent his first experimental wireless communication across the Atlantic Ocean and the world was changed forever. Demand is human Francis McInerney, venture capitalist at New York-based North River Ventures, talks about a company's internal communications and measures its Velocity of Information in order to help investors decide whether or not to buy the company's stock. He points out that information even replaces physical goods. McInerney notes: "Every time the cost of information falls, it can more easily be substituted for something elsebe it labor, capital, or natural resourcesthan before." (p.24) For example, a digital camera replaces film with data stored on a disk, and the PC becomes the darkroom, replacing vats of chemicals with data processing. One of the books he co-authored, FutureWealth (see Book Review: FutureWealth), which explains how to make money in an intnernet world, is based on this idea: "Our premise is based on the falling cost of information, which we believe has been a driving force in history." (p.1) It is one reason why the USSR collapsed: "Any system designed to maintain the high cost of information by force, supporting producers to the exclusion of consumers, will come under immense stress, and will collapse. That is what happened to the Soviet Union." The Internet is often likened to the railways in its role in wealth creation. McInerney says the railways had a precursor: the Roman Empire:
After the Roman Empire, McInerney cites the Gutenberg bible and the Reformation as a key change in the price of information:
Take note: we are not talking about a slow, evolutionary process. We are talking about equilibrium punctuated by revolutionary disruptions. Dinosaurs rule, and then they die.
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