Showing posts with label Scalability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scalability. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

MacBook Pros for a Nickel by 2028

Scale is probably one of the most important skills necessary to become an exponential thinker. Recently Sal Kahn, the founder of KahnAcademy, came out with a video explaining exponential growth. It's worth watching. He shows how for many periods in the past, growth from a very small number seems imperceptible but at some point explodes with huge increments of change ... even though the rate of change remains constant.

Exponential Growth


In the real world you may have seen some of the terms in the chart below. It shows both expansion and decay based on exponential change. You will hear a lot about nano technology in months and years ahead. It is effectively 1 billionth of a meter. This is very small.
The promise is it will lead to fundamental changes in everything from energy to manufacturing. Since computing power is on a course to double every 20 months or so, in 15 years we will see it grow from a relative 1 to 2^15 which equals 32,768. By the way, that would make a $1000 MacBook Pro worth less than a Nickel. 

That amount of computing power for the same price we pay for a single unit will lead to  a level of progress in Nanotechnology that is hard to comprehend.

SI multiples for metre (m)
SubmultiplesMultiples
ValueSymbolNameValueSymbolName
10−1 mdmdecimetre101 mdamdecametre
10−2 mcmcentimetre102 mhmhectometre
10−3 mmmmillimetre103 mkmkilometre
10−6 mµmmicrometre106 mMmmegametre
10−9 mnmnanometre109 mGmgigametre
10−12 mpmpicometre1012 mTmterametre
10−15 mfmfemtometre1015 mPmpetametre
10−18 mamattometre1018 mEmexametre
10−21 mzmzeptometre1021 mZmzettametre
10−24 mymyoctometre1024 mYmyottametre
Common prefixed units are in bold face.

So, this is why an understanding of scale and exponential growth and decay is so critical. Every individual and enterprise will be faced with an amount of change that will challenge the status quo. It's not in 100 years, it's around the corner.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

I love Starbucks and the Universe

I love going into Starbucks and ordering my favorite drink. If you have one of there cards, you get free songs, apps and other bonus items. The other day, there was a card with info about the free app of the week ... It was Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe. So, I tried it. I was completely blown away. This is perhaps the best app I have every used on the iPad and iPhone. It is an interactive tour of reality ... namely ones ability to navigate from sub atomic particles (quarks) to the full universe. What I really like is that is gives you perspective and allows you to appreciate scale.

Monday, March 18, 2013

Startup Weekend

This past Saturday, I was asked to coach and mentor a number of entrepreneur teams that were competing in a "Startup Weekend" event at Fairleigh Dickinson University. It was a great event with over 50 competitors and more than 20 teams.

See the recent article in the Star Ledger about the event.

It was a real glimpse into how hard it is to chart out a space that has not been taken. Many teams came up with interesting ideas but quickly found out that others had already monetized them. Even if they thought their variant was unique and had significant value ...  getting the word out ... organizing around it ... and competing in a deflationary SAAS environment characterized by lots of 'free' services became a show stopper.

What's an Exponologist?

Quite simply, an Exponologist is someone who studies exponential growth and its impact on society.

What exactly does that mean?

With processing power doubling every 20 months or so, each 5 year period will experience an 8 fold increase. So, in 5 years one unit of processing power will grow to 8, in 10 years to 64 and in 15 years to 512. It is this exponential change which will drive changes in automation, robotics and nano technology ... all of which in turn impact work, prices and costs of virtually all products and services.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

The Future Ain't What it Used to Be!

I have been meaning to start a blog about a subject that I find facsinating and can't stop following. I have coined this the Technology Tsunami. Most people feel it coming but just can't seem to fully articulate its source or full implications. We see it everywhere we look. In the toys we buy, the education our kids consume, the media around us, and most importantly the work that we do.

At the base of all of this is the exponential changes that are being ushered in by the advances in technology that allow us to pack twice as much power into a processor every 18 months or so ... known as Moore's Law. This doubling effect takes a while to build up. While the rate of change is fairly constant, the absolute change from period to period is pretty dramatic.