Quote of the week:
“The stock market is a device to transfer money from the ‘impatient’ to the ‘patient’.” (Source)
Tony Seba on the five ‘phase change’ disruptions of the 2020s
Tony Seba recently published a multi-part video series exploring his research on how a convergence of new technologies are leading to a radical “rethinking of the future.” Seba provides both analysis and a compelling framework to understand how several sprawling economic sectors—e.g. transportation, food and agriculture—are shifting at a quickening pace. “S-curves are accelerating,” Seba says. “Disruptions that may have taken decades in the past, now they’re taking place in years.”
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“Get a horse!” Skepticism during early technology paradigm shifts
Throughout history, technology disruptions—from medicine to phones to rockets—follow predictable cycles from skepticism to hype to eventual mainstream adoption. This week, I happened to revisit a favorite article of mine from the early days of the combustion engine car, written by Alexander Winton, an early pioneer of the auto industry.
Reflecting on the earliest days of car manufacturing, Winton observed: “To advocate replacing the horse, which had served man through centuries, marked one as an imbecile…” While it seems obvious now in hindsight that cars would replace horses, Winton writes about the deep incredulity the industry faced in its early days, the hundreds of car startups that never made it, the importance of vertical integration, and much more. In the piece, Winton quotes Thomas Edison:
A few more links I enjoyed:
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