Welcome Guest   |  Login   |   Signup
JG Logo
Fri, February 10, 2012
Archive Search

Gates’ Prophetic ‘Digital Decade’ Transforms World
Chris Lefkow | December 27, 2009

Share This Page
0
0
0
0
Share with google+ :


Post a comment
Please login to post comment

Comments

Be the first to write your opinion!

Washington. While it got off to a rocky start with the overhyped Y2K bug and dotcom bubble, the era dubbed the “Digital Decade” by Microsoft’s Bill Gates has turned out to be a dizzying period of innovation.

“It’s been an amazingly vibrant decade for the Internet and for digital things in general,” said John Abell of Wired magazine, which has chronicled the technological leaps and bounds of the past 10 years.

“People simply don’t exist in a non-digital world at all,” Abell said. “Even grandmothers and Luddites all have tools and devices — even if they don’t realize they’re using them — which connect them to a digital world.”

David Pogue, technology columnist for The New York Times, points to Apple’s iPod, introduced in 2001, as among the most influential devices of the decade.

“It really revolutionized the way music is distributed and marketed,” said Pogue, who also casts a vote for the Flip pocket camcorder from Pure Digital Technologies. “In two years it has taken over one-third of the camcorder market and has killed the sales of tape camcorders,” Pogue said.

He gives another nod to the GPS navigational unit “which changes the way we drive and has environmental considerations because millions of people spend less time driving around lost.”

Touchscreen smartphones such as Apple’s iPhone featuring thousands of applications are high on Pogue’s list. “It’s become a tiny pocket computer in a size and shape that no computer’s ever been before — and mobile and connected to the Internet all the time,” Pogue said. “That’s a revolutionary set of circumstances.”

What’s more, he added, “It’s only two years old. The iPhone came out two years ago. Imagine what the iPhone and the Android phones and the Palm phones are going to look like in five years? They’re going to be smaller, thinner, much better battery life, many more features, faster.”

Another groundbreaking device on analysts’ lists is Amazon’s Kindle electronic reader, which debuted in 2007 and has spawned a host of rivals jostling for a share of the digital book market.

The past decade has, of course, seen seismic shifts in the Web with the explosive growth of social networking sites and wireless connectivity.

Web search and advertising giant Google has become “central to our lives,” said Wired’s Abell, branching out into “everything you can think of, from mail to documents to the telephone.”

In the late 1990s, Pogue said, “creating a Web page took skill, talent, special software — it was still only for the geeks.”

The Internet has become accessible to all in the years since, giving birth to sites such as Wikipedia in 2001, MySpace in 2003, Facebook in 2004, YouTube in 2005 and Twitter in 2006.

“The beauty of Web 2.0 Web sites is that it makes it very easy,” said Pogue. “Anybody can immediately just type, just type to present their point of view without having any special talent except having an opinion.

“What it does that’s really amazing is it connects people who have similar interests, even very narrow interests, who would never meet each other,” he said. “They would never be able to connect any other way.”

Much of what has come to pass over the past 10 years was presaged by Gates when he gazed into a crystal ball in an October 2001 essay titled “Moving Into the Digital Decade.” “Wherever you are, you’ll have the power to control who can contact you or access your information to live your life as openly or as privately as you wish,” Gates wrote.

As for what the next decade holds, Pogue is not going there. “Anyone who tries to predict the future of technology usually looks like an idiot,” he said.

Unless you’re Bill Gates.



Agence France-Presse




  • 10:42pm | 12 Detainees Pull Off Brazen J...
    Jailbreak happens all over the World Governments should give education and hope to the poor or else the Higly organised Mega Rich Crime will destro
  • 10:15pm | Notorious Gang Boss Could Be B...
    Every Big city in the World has a huge crime problem So Jakarta no different. Honesty is the best policy. My father said to me when I was a young ...
  • 10:07pm | Israel’s Stance on Iran Could ...
    Strike is a made up war from the free mason and illuminati, they need to justify a war to reduce the worlds population by 90%. A nwo will be create
  • 9:52pm | Sumitomo Bets on Indonesia’s G...
    u have less chance of seeing a big fish convicted than I have of buying JPB a few beers
  • 9:42pm | Israel’s Stance on Iran Could ...
    Moscow's stance on Syria IS catastrophic...
  • 9:42pm | What US Stop Online Piracy Act...
    Am I the only one who believes that Indonesian govt doesn't care about sopa, so does everyone else in the country? It tickled us only when Wikiped
  • 9:41pm | What US Stop Online Piracy Act...
    Am I the only one who believes that Indonesian govt doesn't care about sopa, so does everyone else in the country? It tickled us only when Wikiped
  • 9:29pm | Sumitomo Bets on Indonesia’s G...
    @Valkyrie: don't get our high hopes, the bigger fishes are only AU, and maybe AM as "bonus".. but it stops there. Indonesian people will forget