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PC, internet, smartphone: what’s the next big technological epoch? | John Naughton

PC, internet, smartphone: what’s the next big technological epoch? | John Naughton

3 years ago
Anonymous $WHrWmjSJBZ

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/sep/11/pc-internet-smartphone-whats-the-next-big-technological-epoch

The long view suggests we’re due a new era, whether it is that of metaverses, blockchain or quantum computing

One of the challenges of writing about technology is how to escape from what the sociologist Michael Mann memorably called “the sociology of the last five minutes”. This is especially difficult when covering the digital tech industry because one is continually deluged with ‘new’ stuff – viral memes, shiny new products or services, Facebook scandals (a weekly staple), security breaches etc. Recent weeks, for example, have brought the industry’s enthusiasm for the idea of a “metaverse” (neatly dissected here by Alex Hern), El Salvador’s flirtation with bitcoin, endless stories about central banks and governments beginning to worry about regulating cryptocurrencies, Apple’s possible rethink of its plans to scan phones and iCloud accounts for child abuse images, umpteen ransomware attacks, antitrust suits against app stores, the Theranos trial and so on, apparently ad infinitum.

PC, internet, smartphone: what’s the next big technological epoch? | John Naughton

Sep 11, 2021, 3:23pm UTC
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/sep/11/pc-internet-smartphone-whats-the-next-big-technological-epoch > The long view suggests we’re due a new era, whether it is that of metaverses, blockchain or quantum computing > One of the challenges of writing about technology is how to escape from what the sociologist Michael Mann memorably called “the sociology of the last five minutes”. This is especially difficult when covering the digital tech industry because one is continually deluged with ‘new’ stuff – viral memes, shiny new products or services, Facebook scandals (a weekly staple), security breaches etc. Recent weeks, for example, have brought the industry’s enthusiasm for the idea of a “metaverse” (neatly dissected here by Alex Hern), El Salvador’s flirtation with bitcoin, endless stories about central banks and governments beginning to worry about regulating cryptocurrencies, Apple’s possible rethink of its plans to scan phones and iCloud accounts for child abuse images, umpteen ransomware attacks, antitrust suits against app stores, the Theranos trial and so on, apparently ad infinitum.