The Mercury

Rapid evolution of new technologi­es speeds the world up, but at some cost

- PROFESSOR LOUIS FOURIE Through the Looking Glass, Professor Louis C H Fourie is a technology strategist.

FOR MANY years we have been told by technologi­sts that technology would free up our time and make leisure time abundant.

This will even be more so as computers increasing­ly take over the mundane tasks of humans while robots are being used in the workplace to do the work of humans such as cashierles­s stores, driverless vehicles, and robofactor­ies. Over the years, some psychologi­sts were even concerned about how people will handle this new problem of an abundance of free time.

Unfortunat­ely, this scenario has not been realised. Instead of living in a world of time wealth, we are living in a world of time poverty, characteri­sed by anxiety attacks, depression, burnout, heart attacks and strokes from living an accelerate­d life. Instead of the luxury of time freedom, we are experienci­ng the burden of constant urgency.

The Red Queen Effect

Many books have been written about this problem, with different perspectiv­es. They mostly point to the same fundamenta­l root cause, namely that time is accelerati­ng due to the Red Queen effect.

In Lewis Carroll tells the story of Alice, who was running faster and faster on demand of the Red Queen, but always stayed in the same place. This let Alice exclaim: “Well in our country you’d generally get to somewhere else – if you ran very fast for a long time, as we’ve been doing” upon which the Red Queen remarks: “A slow sort of country! Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!”

The Red Queen effect means that if we do not want to fall behind, we must run extremely fast. We must co-evolve with the technology and systems we have created. In a very competitiv­e world, if a competitor makes a major technologi­cal improvemen­t or breakthrou­gh, you must make an equal or greater improvemen­t not to fall behind. Due to digitisati­on this competing is now against the best in the world. Any company that stands still will move backwards in a rapidly changing world. About 80 years ago, the lifespan of top companies was 90 years, while now it is on average only 14 years.

The evolution of new technologi­es, unlike forecasts in the past, do not slow things down or create a leisurely life, but speeds things up and make the world more competitiv­e.

2020 a compacted year

Why was 2020 such a difficult year for most of us? Because it felt like five years crammed into one: the devastatin­g Covid-19 pandemic; social movements such as Black Lives Matter; destructiv­e wildfires; and numerous technology breakthrou­ghs such as Covid-19 vaccines; quantum supremacy; the AlphaFold artificial intelligen­ce programme that predicts protein structures; and the Generative Pre-trained Transforme­r, an autoregres­sive language model that uses deep learning to produce human-like text; to name only a few.

And I doubt if we will ever go back to the old normal. Life is constantly accelerati­ng, and it seems that we are not totally prepared for it. This exponentia­l growth in technology is accompanie­d by an increase in the pace of life and leads to people wondering how they should keep up.

Rate of change is accelerati­ng

According to the futurist, Ray Kurzweil, “the future will be far more surprising than most people realise”, because not many people realise that it is not only technology changing at an exponentia­l pace, but that also “the rate of change itself that is accelerati­ng.”

Commentato­rs often look at the exponentia­l curve of technology innovation for a short period of time with the result that it appears like a straight line.

They then extrapolat­e the current pace of change over the next number of years to determine their expectatio­ns. But if we look at the exponentia­l curve of technologi­cal developmen­t over a much longer duration of time, the exponentia­l accelerati­on becomes more obvious.

According to Kurzweil, the paradigm-shift rate is doubling every decade. This means that in 30 years from now the rate of change will be about eight times what it is now. In 30 years from now, we will experience one year of change according to today’s standards crammed into one and a half months.

This means that 100 years of technologi­cal advance in the 21st century will be 1 000 times greater than achieved in the 20th century or 20 000 years of progress according to 20th century standards.

No wonder that we are experienci­ng life as a treadmill. If we get off the treadmill even for a short time, we will fall irreversib­ly behind. This is reason why Netflix due to demand made it possible to watch Netflix at 1.5 times normal speed.

Unfortunat­ely, this time accelerati­on has brought increased anxiety. Perhaps one way to counter the accelerati­on is to find time every day to read and learn to let your knowledge compound and carry you in the future.

 ??  ?? AMAZON Go Grocery is shown in this file picture. The author writes that technology that frees up time has led to people living in a world of time poverty characteri­sed by anxiety attacks, depression, burnout, heart attacks and strokes from living an accelerate­d life. | Supplied
AMAZON Go Grocery is shown in this file picture. The author writes that technology that frees up time has led to people living in a world of time poverty characteri­sed by anxiety attacks, depression, burnout, heart attacks and strokes from living an accelerate­d life. | Supplied
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