• About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact
Saturday, July 12, 2025
  • Login
Best Technologies
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight

    Beyond Short-Term Fixes: How Themis Ecosystem Brings Long-Term Green Solutions

    A look inside both the Legion Go and Steam Deck OLED

    Construction robot builds massive stone walls on its own

    Receive an alert when one of your contacts is about to have a special day

    Here are the best iPad deals right now

    Here are the best smart locks you can buy right now

    Biomass Ultima Micro: A Smart Innovation That Solves a Big Problem

    What is an ‘AI prompt engineer’ and does every company need one?

    Recycled coffee grounds can be used to make stronger concrete

  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
Best Technologies
No Result
View All Result
Home News

How Moore's law led us to a flawed vision of the future

by News Room
June 13, 2025
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

“If the 20th century was the age of atomics, then the 21st is the age of the internet”

DKosig/Getty Images

If you cast your mind back over the past two and a half decades, a bizarre fact emerges: everyone from business investors to teachers has been planning for a future ruled by communications technology. If the 20th century was the age of atomics, then the 21st is the age of the internet.

Combining the power of radio, video and telephones, the internet is like a super-communication machine that completely upended our notion of what tomorrow would bring. Now, it seems that all our futures depend on how much we can say to each other, in zillions of different formats.

You might argue that artificial intelligence is the next new thing. But what do AI firms suggest we will do with their neoteric products? Write emails, make graphics for slide-show presentations and generate podcasts and movies. All of these uses – even shady deepfakes – are about communication. At this point, only spaceships can compete when it comes to signifying an advanced new world.

In my previous two columns about futurism, I talked about 19th– and 20th-century ideas of the future. Now, we are coming up to the present day, and it’s time to talk about… well, talking. What happens to the present when we assume the future will be shaped by conversation machines?

View of two men using AT&T's 'Picturephone,' which added video to telephone calls, New York, New York, 1964. The device debuted at the AT&T Bell System pavilion during the 1964 New York World's Fair. (Photo by AT&T Photo Service/United States Information Agency/PhotoQuest/Getty Images)

AT&T’s “Picturephone”, which added video to telephone calls, in 1964

AT&T Photo Service/United States Information Agency/PhotoQuest/Getty Images

To get to the answer, we need to travel briefly back to the year 1965, when Intel co-founder Gordon Moore formulated his now-famous “Moore’s law”, which held that the number of components on a microchip would double every year. He revised this calculation many times, as technology changed. In 2025, the law is mostly considered dead. Even so, the idea of exponential growth behind Moore’s law was infectious, influencing predictions about the rate of innovation in fields as diverse as biology and space exploration.

Most futurism contains two ingredients: a plausible, evidence-based observation and a mythical narrative. Moore’s law has both. Moore’s original observation was factual: in 1965, microchip efficiency was absolutely accelerating at an exponential rate. But his accurate prediction morphed into a kind of industrial fairy tale. The rapid growth of the computer industry – and, by extension, the internet – became an aspirational story about civilisation itself. Thanks to computers, humans would become more productive, our cultures would transform and amazing new inventions would arrive faster than ever.

Gordon Moore’s accurate prediction about microchip efficiency morphed into an industrial fairy tale

It was a very seductive way to imagine the future – as long as Moore’s law held true. By the 21st century, forecasters were predicting a world where everyone lived and worked via the internet, which would bring together international teams of geniuses to solve all our problems (aided by AI, of course).

Meanwhile, Twitter-fuelled protests during the Arab Spring in 2011 and Donald Trump’s Facebook-enhanced 2016 election campaign made it seem like social media could accelerate political change, too. Chatting with each other was going to change everything! Investors responded by dumping billions into internet companies, especially ones with social or AI components.

You can see the results in nearly every product. I own a coffee table that has an associated social network. Apple offers iPhone owners the exciting prospect of getting AI summaries of their text messages. Communications technology is being smeared everywhere, even when that causes things to break.

The myth of Moore’s law suggested that one nifty form of technology would set the pace for everything else in our civilisations. When you anticipate the future using that narrative, it leads to overinvestments in very niche tech. This isn’t to say there is no place for social media and AI in our future – of course there is. But we also need to invest in better sewage systems, malaria treatments, aeroplane safety and science education itself. AI won’t solve the looming climate crisis. We need to cultivate a diverse ecosystem of technologies and political institutions to do that.

Back in the 1960s, when Star Trek wowed audiences with the crew’s communicators and sci-fi legend Ursula K. Le Guin dreamed up the ansible (instant messages across thousands of light years), it seemed better communication would be the answer to all our problems. Especially because the microchip would put electronic communication in the hands of ordinary people. But now that dream has become a nightmare, with AI chatbots generating lies and authoritarian leaders using social media to control nations.

This isn’t the fault of our technology. It’s ours, for believing a single form of rapidly improving tech could make humanity improve rapidly, too. Sometimes, futurism prevents us from seeing what is actually coming next.

Annalee’s week

What I’m reading

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad, a gorgeous manifesto.

What I’m watching

I recently saw heavy metal cello band Apocalyptica play live, and my ears are still ringing happily.

What I’m working on

Making a website from raw HTML.

Annalee Newitz is a science journalist and author. Their latest book is Stories Are Weapons: Psychological warfare and the American mind. They are the co-host of the Hugo-winning podcast Our Opinions Are Correct. You can follow them @annaleen and their website is techsploitation.com

 

Topics:

  • artificial intelligence/
  • technology

Source: New Scientist

Tags: artificial intelligencetechnology

Related Posts

News

Caltech’s New Smart Pill Can Read Your Gut Like Never Before

July 12, 2025
News

The arid air of Death Valley may actually be a valuable water source

July 12, 2025
News

Can we stop big tech from controlling the internet with AI agents?

July 12, 2025
News

Disney and Universal lawsuit may be killing blow in AI copyright wars

July 12, 2025
News

Slay the new slang: check out a guide to social media’s baffling lingo

July 12, 2025
News

How government use of AI could hurt democracy

July 11, 2025

Trending Now

Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Latest News

News

Caltech’s New Smart Pill Can Read Your Gut Like Never Before

July 12, 2025
News

The arid air of Death Valley may actually be a valuable water source

July 12, 2025
Mobile

Samsung confirms what parts of Galaxy AI will stay free — but there's a catch

July 12, 2025
News

Can we stop big tech from controlling the internet with AI agents?

July 12, 2025
Mobile

Prime Day slashes 45% off the Sony WH-1000XM4 and I’d definitely grab a pair

July 12, 2025
Tech

The Hisense U7 is a great, very bright midrange 4K TV under $600 for Prime Day

July 12, 2025
Best Technologies

Best Technologies™ is an online tech news portal. It started as an honest effort to provide unbiased and well-suited information on the latest and trending tech news.

Sections

  • Business
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Mobile
  • News
  • Security
  • Space
  • Spotlight
  • Tech
  • Windows

Browse by Topic

AI amazon amazon prime day android Apple apps artificial intelligence buying guides cars deals Donald Trump elon musk Entertainment gadgets gaming google health household how to laptops Meta microsoft mobile news Nintendo OpenAI phones policy politics Prime Day privacy Report review reviews Roundup science security shopping smart home social media space streaming Tech Wearable Xbox

Recent Posts

  • Caltech’s New Smart Pill Can Read Your Gut Like Never Before
  • The arid air of Death Valley may actually be a valuable water source
  • Samsung confirms what parts of Galaxy AI will stay free — but there's a catch
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Spotlight
  • Business
  • Space
  • Videos
  • More
    • Mobile
    • Windows
    • Energy
    • Security
    • Health
    • Entertainment

© 2022 All Right Reserved - Blue Planet Global Media Network

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.