avatarBrian Feutz

Summary

The web content reflects on the transformative power of technology over three human generations, envisioning a future where advancements in technology lead to a better world for all.

Abstract

The article "How a Generation of Technology Will Save the World" is a reflective piece that spans the author's life, divided into three generations, each marked by significant technological advancements. The first generation begins with the author's birth in 1958, a time of space exploration and literary imagination, and progresses to the era of slide rules and the dawn of the computer age. The second generation covers the author's marriage in the 1980s-1990s, highlighting the transition from analog to digital, the rise of personal computing, and the dot-com boom. The third generation, looking forward to retirement, anticipates the potential of technology to address global challenges such as mobility, healthcare, job automation, income inequality, food production, social connectivity, energy, and more. The author emphasizes that with human ingenuity and technological progress, we can meet basic human needs, foster equality and connection, and protect our environment.

Opinions

  • The author views technological advancements as akin to magic, transforming the world in ways that previous generations could only imagine.
  • The author believes that the current pace of change is unprecedented and will continue to accelerate, never again to be as slow as it is now.
  • There is an optimistic outlook on the potential of technology to improve the quality of life, particularly for those currently limited by poverty, lack of opportunity, and other uncontrollable factors.
  • The author expresses that technology can lead to significant societal shifts, such as the provision of basic income, the correction of genetic defects, and the enhancement of food production to feed the hungry.
  • The article suggests that meeting basic human needs through technology will allow humanity to focus on higher-level aspirations like self-esteem, respect, and community.
  • The author hopes for a future where technology helps to eliminate differences and distances, leading to a more equitable and connected world.

How a Generation of Technology Will Save the World

A story of slide rules, heroes, and robots — and a future we need today

Image credit: Metamorworks, Shutterstock

Thirty years is a tiny sliver of rings for a two-thousand-year-old Bristlecone Pine, one hundred and twenty lifetimes for Monarch butterflies, and a single solitary generation of humans.

The length of a generation is disputable, but 30 years is a common measure. In my life, generations coincide with miraculous transformations, or metamorphoses: birth, marriage, and retirement (and death perhaps, although I won’t be updating this article with that date).

I stand in awe of the changes I’ve seen in the first two generations of my life and emboldened by the potential of the next.

Generation 1: Birth (age 0):

I emerged from my cocoon long ago, in 1958, a time when monkeys and dogs were flying in spaceships. Beatniks altered their consciousness while they jazzed up the place.

Kerouac was my hero, and Bradbury and Vonnegut were my best friends. They taught me to love to imagine, and now that I’m living in the future, I can touch the reality they only dreamt of. Wouldn’t it be something if I could tell them what it’s like today, with honest-to-God shiny silver rocket ships and robots? That we actually walked on the moon? Would they understand any of it?

“Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.”

— Arthur C. Clarke’s Third Law

A slide rule was the computer of choice before electronic calculators were born. We wore them proudly on our belt, snug in their leather holster, poised for a quick draw. We were the kings of nerds before nerds were kings.

Childhood is an awkward memory I happily watch through the rear-view mirror. School playgrounds and girls are best left to the psychologically and physiologically strong. I was neither of those until college when I figured it out and found eternal love a dozen times or more. I also built a computer.

The siren call of silicon urged me toward the rocky shoals of the nascent computer industry, but the need for reliable income altered my course into the safe harbor of business. Kerouac I wasn’t.

Generation 2: Marriage (age 33)

Anyone can run a business, but finding the right girl is an art. It takes time and patience, and more than a little practice. Back in the ’80s and ’90s it was an analog endeavor, usually involving cocktails, so it malfunctioned often.

Our wedding was recorded on a VHS tape and immortalized in stills on dozens of tiny rectangles of Kodak film which the local drugstore happily and profitably sent off to be developed in duplicate. We waved goodbye from the window of an elegant limousine that we had reserved with a phone, tethered by a curly wire to the wall.

The world was our oyster, and it was filled with shimmering pearls. We were in love, riding the waves of social and technological magic like deft surfers on soft water. I sold the business, hopped on the dot-com train and clipped a new mobile phone into its snug holster on my belt. Change was our wine, our future was infinite.

“I’m a peeping-tom techie with x-ray eyes … The future’s so bright, I gotta wear shades”

— Timbuk 3 (lyrics)

Our rocket ship of bliss launched us like a bullet through multiple jobs, states, and homes, two daughters, and fistfuls of gray hair caused by said daughters. IBM PCs begat Apple Macs, Microsoft Surface Pros, personal assistants, phones, tablets, doorbells, refrigerators, and cat toys. Cars drive themselves without the help of backseat nagging, and sensual electronic voices remind us to reorder our pills.

Now we zoom with our friends and buy bagels and bowling balls online, and marvel as they magically materialize on our doorstep the next day. It’s truly an exciting time for billionaires.

Generation 3: Retirement (age 63)

Pity the Monarch butterflies who live almost their entire lives as terrestrial-bound worms and dangling pupae. They undergo just one metamorphosis and the exhilarating freedom of flight lasts mere weeks.

My first two generations took me to heights I could never have expected, and I hope to continue soaring like the Monarch through my final one. I’ve been lucky though — and honestly, most of it is luck. While I soar, there are billions of others grounded from poverty, lack of opportunity, health, genetics, handicaps, oppression, politics, religion, and a multitude of factors they can’t control.

I plan to watch the next 30 years unfold in a cascade of unprecedented change. Today, I hold in my liver-spotted hand far more computing power than the UNIVAC supercomputer built at the time of my birth, just two human generations ago. Imagine what we’ll hold in our hands thirty years hence.

We have the power to change the world. Let’s use it to make the world a better place for everyone.

“The pace of change has never been this fast, yet it will never be this slow again.”

— Justin Trudeau

Automated transportation can offer mobility to the physically challenged, deliver goods for less, and carry life-saving nourishment into hard-to-reach villages.

Genetic corrections using the Crisper CAS-9 gene-editing tool (and its descendants) will correct and prevent debilitating birth defects and diseases, and help us live longer and more active lives.

Robotics and Artificial Intelligence will liberate us from dangerous jobs and automate the mundane, shifting focus to more meaningful pastimes.

Basic income, a logical outcome of automation, will ensure all humans, regardless of circumstances can rise above poverty and live in dignity.

Food production will feed the hungry from transgenic crop modifications, lab-grown proteins, and land reclamation.

Social connectivity will blossom in ways we can’t yet imagine, fostering meaningful relationships, social and physical activities, and companionship for the aged and homebound.

Broadband access from every community on earth will offer boundless educational and informational access to everyone, eliminating differences and distances, and leveling the playing field for our children.

Fusion and alternative energies will deliver clean, low-cost, and carbon-free electricity to every corner of the globe, keeping us warm in the winter, cool in the summer, and the next generation of students studying late into the night.

So much more can be accomplished: Safety, affordable shelter, clean water, reduction in CO2 gasses, racial and gender equality — the list goes on. With human ingenuity and technological advancements, there’s no limit to what we can do to help ourselves and protect what we love, like bristlecone pines and Monarch butterflies.

My hope

Maslow’s hierarchy of needs tells us that when we satisfy basic physiological and safety needs, we can focus on self-esteem, respect, and community. When every citizen of the world’s basic needs are met, tribalism will give way to equality, community, and connection. We’ll be healthier, happier, and more compassionate.

We owe this to ourselves, our children, and those who told us we could. My friends Bradbury and Vonnegut would be proud to know their great-grandchildren made magic.

This is what I hope to see in the next generation, before my final metamorphosis.

Life
Technology
Economy
Equality
Science
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