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The Post-Idea World

An anonymous reader sends this quote from an opinion piece in the NY Times: "If our ideas seem smaller nowadays, it's not because we are dumber than our forebears but because we just don't care as much about ideas as they did. In effect, we are living in an increasingly post-idea world — a world in which big, thought-provoking ideas that can't instantly be monetized are of so little intrinsic value that fewer people are generating them and fewer outlets are disseminating them, the Internet notwithstanding. Bold ideas are almost passé. ... There is the eclipse of the public intellectual in the general media by the pundit who substitutes outrageousness for thoughtfulness, and the concomitant decline of the essay in general-interest magazines. And there is the rise of an increasingly visual culture, especially among the young — a form in which ideas are more difficult to express. But these factors, which began decades ago, were more likely harbingers of an approaching post-idea world than the chief causes of it."

368 comments

  1. Ah yes by rodrigoandrade · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Because Graham Bell, Thomas Edison and others were interested in "thought-provoking ideas" and NEVER wanted to instantly monetize on them...

    1. Re:Ah yes by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      ...and absolutely nobody is working on completely pie-in-the-shy ideas like, eg., space elevators, SETI, etc.

      --
      No sig today...
    2. Re:Ah yes by zoom-ping · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's because they were more into patenting others ideas rather than coming up with their own.

    3. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Edison mostly monetized the ideas of his employees. (I see you got the same discount scratch-and-dent education I did.)

    4. Re:Ah yes by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      ...and absolutely nobody is working on completely pie-in-the-shy ideas like, eg., space elevators, SETI, etc.

      That's not really true. There are people working on those things, but nobody cares because most people don't have any money.

      I can't even imagine what it's like for a 22 year old graduate hoping for a future.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    5. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's because, even if you have a genuine idea, and especially if it is a profitable idea, you will be sued by all the big apples, and at the end you will be happy if you are not under the water, or not in jail....

    6. Re:Ah yes by INT_QRK · · Score: 1

      I have no idea what the author is talking about. Here he is posting to an ideas forum on how we're running out of ideas. Bad form. BTW, not all big ideas are good ideas, especially in implementation and outcome: eugenics for one; racism; National Socialism; Marxism; shall we go on? Favorite Huxley quote: "The great tragedy of science -- a beautiful hypothesis slain by an ugly fact!"

    7. Re:Ah yes by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      When the context is greed, then the author is unwittingly lamenting the fact that he/she can make no cash from their own ideas.

      Others are doing very well, even when the ideas are not their own. The fact that the author hasn't the zeal, tenacity, luck, mettle, or whatever else it takes to put his/her brain into zenith mode seems a problem. Ideas, you see, are cheap currency; everyone has them. The actual beneficiaries are the ones that can take a big idea and put it into practice or process. Monetizing is a goal for those that need to get rich; not all of us need to get rich at all. "Rich" has its own problems.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    8. Re:Ah yes by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Most people have not cared about new big ideas throughout history.

    9. Re:Ah yes by Canazza · · Score: 1

      Edison was a dick. A completely foul man.

      Must. Teach. World. About. Tesla.

      --
      It pays to be obvious, especially if you have a reputation for being subtle.
    10. Re:Ah yes by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      Probably if you become too big a fanboy of anyone other than yourself, you are going to be disappointed.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    11. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I have no idea what the author is talking about. "

      He's talking about you not having any ideas.

    12. Re:Ah yes by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Monetizing is a goal for those that need to get rich; not all of us need to get rich at all. "Rich" has its own problems.

      I've got a few ideas on how to take care of those problems, but I'm going to need a few million dollars to test them...

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    13. Re:Ah yes by geekoid · · Score: 2

      It's not nearly as bad as it was in the early 80's.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:Ah yes by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Damn right. Edison was a greed-headed businessman and a giant asshole. Tesla was the brains behind the operation. Sad that most of us grew up being taught the whitewashed fictional history of Edison.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    15. Re:Ah yes by GameboyRMH · · Score: 0

      Side note: I just realized that I moderated in this discussion and was able to post without getting a warning. So either the mod-deletion warning is broken or the mod-abuse-prevention system itself is broken. I hope it's the former.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    16. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am nobody.

      There's this space elevator idea of mine, using an optical waveguide to make a focused particle stream. It could be used as a directed energy weapon, or if it's aimed at space garbage it could be used to construct a satellite (the least complex would be a beacon or communications relay). It's like throwing Legos at a moving car, trying to build something with a particle beam miles away... But, it'd be the cheapest way imaginable to put any mass into orbit.

    17. Re:Ah yes by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      And every generation after mine are dumb. Human intellectual achievement peeked with *MY* generation. All subsequent ones need to GET OFF MY LAWN!!

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    18. Re:Ah yes by nomadic · · Score: 2

      "Damn right. Edison was a greed-headed businessman and a giant asshole. Tesla was the brains behind the operation. Sad that most of us grew up being taught the whitewashed fictional history of Edison."

      Edison was those things plus a brilliant inventor. He took credit for some of Tesla's work but Tesla wasn't around, for example, for the invention of the phonograph.

    19. Re:Ah yes by elrous0 · · Score: 0

      Tesla was overrated. There, I said it. The only reason he is so fondly remember today is because Europeans refuse to admit that an evil American could have possibly every invented ANYTHING, or done anything better than a clearly superior European. Aside from alternating current and a bunch of bullshit urban legends, Tesla basically left behind no legacy at all, while Edison's legacy still permeates almost every field of modern technology (to varying degrees).

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    20. Re:Ah yes by arbulus · · Score: 0

      I came here to say this very thing.

      Edison didn't invent anything. He just preyed upon others and stole their ideas, passing them off as his own.

    21. Re:Ah yes by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      That's not really true. There are people working on those things, but nobody cares because most people don't have any money.

      No, people don't care because even if you gave them a trillion dollars you couldn't build a space elevator or find aliens. The technology doesn't exist to build a space elevator any time soon and even if aliens near our technology level exist we'd probably need to build enormous radio telescopes in space to find them.

    22. Re:Ah yes by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Bad economic times always cause people to think the world will continue to decline.

      We are in the face of a world wide recession. Even those Elitist Europeans and those Arrogant American, are toning down their banter with each other as things are not good everywhere... And it is only time where countries that are doing well will face problems shortly.

      Because everything right now is depressed and people are in generally fearful, they assume the world will not get better.

      When Economics are tight people are thing about the short term and short term they need money. So they need Ideas that will bring them money.

      When the Economy improves we will start again thinking and planning for newer bigger things, as we are not worried about money.

      For the last 20 years our prosperity has been based on bubbles. Technology, Housing... So those outside the bubble have been hurting for years. So they were figuring out how to make it, thus big ideas for this generation have been small. Hopefully we wont have any more big bubbles and slowly rise out these problems and have a real economy world wide where global prosperity can lead to new bigger ideas.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    23. Re:Ah yes by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Damn, I really wanted to be able to point at LiftPort as someone that was working towards a space elevator. But it really doesn't look like it.

    24. Re:Ah yes by jd · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, the early 80s, when robotics fanatics were building micromice, garage enthusiasts were building home computers (still!), programmers were churning out demos and games of amazing complexity ("BBC Elite" is still the benchmark to beat in terms of software sophistication-to-machine sophistication), the market for board wargames and other tactical simulations was exploding, music was diversifying to a degree far beyond anything that had been seen before, Formula 1 was bleeding-edge and sci-fi was still good (The Tomorrow People, Blake's 7 and Sapphite & Steel).

      No, no big ideas at all.

      C'mon, yes money was bad in the 80s but nobody really gave a rat's arse, they were too busy putting ideas into practice. These days, money is also bad but there are no ideas and practice is a dirty word.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    25. Re:Ah yes by icebraining · · Score: 1

      Monetizing is a goal for those that need to get rich

      That's not true, lots of ideas simply require money to be implemented, even if the inventor doesn't make a cent from them. You can run e.g. Wikipedia for free.

    26. Re:Ah yes by postbigbang · · Score: 1

      Monetization is part of the process for some ideas, and the desire to milk the idea for revenue. Some ideas are only partially controlled-- if at all-- by the need to have money in the equation at all.

      Look at craigslist to see one idea that doesn't greedily go after every nickel dime cent etc. Wikipedia needs money to house servers and so forth. Money can be a part of a lot of ideas, but confining the scope to those ideas that are anchored on the Internet as the access methodology is also silly, just like believing that money must be an integral component of "success". Implementation of some ideas might need money. Others don't- and shouldn't. Technology as a nipple works so long as you're not weaned.

      --
      ---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
    27. Re:Ah yes by mcvos · · Score: 3, Informative

      We have people tinkering with Arduino, with 3D printers, changing the firmware on commercial products. We've got this "maker" thing (subculture?). We've got social networks fueling revolutions, we've got increasing conflict between governments and corporations stamping down on freedom, and people starting to resist it. We've got crowd-funded series and movies being made. We've got artists, musicians, TV-makers, writers and programmers making it big without requiring the blessing of record companies, big studios, or publishers.

      We've got plenty of interesting stuff going on that's going on right now. It's just that the big media always only notices this stuff when it's over, so to them it seems as if there's nothing new happening. But the '80s were no different in that regard. And I doubt Einstein made the front pages in 1905 either.

    28. Re:Ah yes by Anonymus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Most people have not cared as much about massive quantities of cash throughout history.

      Money has always been a motivating factor certainly, but without the American get-rich-quick, your-life-is-meaningless-if-you're-poor culture, there were a lot more people who did things "just because", regardless of profitability.

    29. Re:Ah yes by tburkhol · · Score: 1

      ...and absolutely nobody is working on completely pie-in-the-shy ideas like, eg., space elevators, SETI, etc.

      Those aren't examples of ideas in the sense of TFA. Those are objects, devices, processes - things that may be completely unrealistic, but still have a physical manifestation.

      Ideas, as per TFA, are "equality" or "fraternity." The various forms of Utopia that have been proposed through the ages. Whatever Idea was in the heads of all those people who rushed up to the collapsed stage in Indiana. With the media seemingly full of people seeking only personal advantage, it's small wonder that cynicism has replaced idealism. I don't think people are any more greedy and product focused than in the past, I think it's just gotten too easy to find examples of individuals blatantly exploiting every possible Idea for personal gain to get much inspiration from those Ideas.

    30. Re:Ah yes by donscarletti · · Score: 2

      Tesla was extremely famous in his day. Then he wasted all his time and money on Wardenclyffe Tower, even though that at the time had no experimental or theoretical evidence to suggest it was ever going to work and now has bundles of theoretical and experemental results that prove that it was never going to. Funny how betting everything on something that is so wrong tends to ruin your reputation. I think he has gained in stature a lot over the last 20 years relative to Edison as incandecent lights and phonographs falls into antiquity while polyphase AC motors, high voltage AC transmission and radio remain as important as ever.

      --
      When Argumentum ad Hominem falls short, try Argumentum ad Matrem
    31. Re:Ah yes by JMJimmy · · Score: 1

      People care about them but the big ideas now require 2 things:

      1) Advancements in little things. Quite literally. New materials research is what advances most big ideas now. Take stainless steel as an example - high cost, required nickle, etc. The Chinese didn't like relying on North America for their nickle so they came up with using iron ore containing nickle to create a cheaper, easier to produce form of stainless steel which is used all over now. Not as ground breaking as carbon nano-tubes but it came to market much faster.

      2) A lot of resources. People, money, expertise, etc. It's pretty easy to tinker around and come up with some of the old "big ideas"... now it's very hard. Not impossible though, UofT prof creating an infrared solar cell that theoretically can be painted on, Ren Ng creating a post capture image re-focusing technique (may not seem big but the potential is rather scary if used in video with image recognition software)

    32. Re:Ah yes by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      Yes. Back in the eighties people were more concerned about big hair!

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    33. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Money has always been a motivating factor certainly, but without the American get-rich-quick, your-life-is-meaningless-if-you're-poor culture...

      pff. Americans didn't invent that view of money, they inherited it. Insatiable greed and aspiration towards riches goes back to the dawn of known civilization. Even if you dismiss most of human history, it was a huge deal from the start of the Renaissance onwards.

    34. Re:Ah yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are people working on those things, but nobody cares because most people don't have any money.

      Except, I guess, for Apple, who has sold 15 million iPads to those people who don't have any money.

    35. Re:Ah yes by tempest69 · · Score: 1

      Now garage enthusiasts are tweaking electric cars, programmers are building full applications that will run on a web page. RTS/Wargames have exploded, Starcraft 2, Warcraft. Music didnt diversify that much in the 80's, the 60's and 70's diversified plenty, but most of it was garbage, same with the 80's. Now that youtube exists, all manner of people can publish total garbage. Music is really diverse today, but you have to wade through the drek. Caprica and BSG were pretty good IMHO.
      I'll give you the Formula 1 point.
      Elite was an amazing use of hardware, It would be amazing to see what could happen with modern hardware hand coded to squeeze every flop to maximal effectiveness. Though it would be amazingly expensive.

      I think I need better convincing of your conjecture, before I consider it feasable.

    36. Re:Ah yes by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      We've got plenty of interesting stuff going on that's going on right now. It's just that the big media always only notices this stuff when it's over

      No, the "big media" only notices this stuff when it makes a corporation tons of money, and some of these big ideas have the capacity to take the money-making power out of the hands of the big corporations and put it into the hands of actual human beings.

      The front pages that matter know what Arduino and 3D printers mean. Maybe it's better that some ideas stay beneath the level of the mass market. When the time comes for 3D printers, I think everyone's going to learn about them really quickly. Maybe it'll be like the Internet, where the big corporations were the last ones to figure it out and we'll get a little window of opportunity to get something done before they do.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    37. Re:Ah yes by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      No, people don't care because even if you gave them a trillion dollars you couldn't build a space elevator or find aliens.

      Of course, I couldn't. But given sufficient support, as a society we could build a space elevator.

      If by "aliens" you mean a character out of the movies or forty year-old sci-fi novels, I don't really expect to find any. But I don't believe it's impossible for life to exist anywhere else but here, and I don't believe it's impossible for humans to find some given sufficient resources. Now, "find some" doesn't necessarily mean the same thing as "go and get some".

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    38. Re:Ah yes by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      Except, I guess, for Apple, who has sold 15 million iPads to those people who don't have any money.

      Uh, that's a worldwide number. There are what, about 6 BILLION people in the world?

      Which leads to the obvious question: "Are you retarded?"

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    39. Re:Ah yes by thePuck77 · · Score: 1

      Tesla wasn't exactly an awesome guy to be friends with, himself, but he was absolutely brilliant and his ideas need to be explored and incorporated by modern engineers and theorists.

      --
      "We live as though the world were as it should be, to show it what it can be." - Joss Whedon via Angel
  2. Actually... by moozey · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's because we've thought of everything.

    1. Re:Actually... by EnderDom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, this article's basically of the "Everything that can be invented has been invented." ilk.

      IMO this mentality is usually due to the fact that the authors are far abstracted from the realms of innovation within science, business and general subcultures of society. All sorts of amazing things are being thought of, written about, developed and researched, but are out of sight of the main stream New York Times journalism.

    2. Re:Actually... by crawling_chaos · · Score: 0, Troll

      Nothing could be farther from his point than your misinterpretation of it. The reasons why I leave as an exercise for the reader of the article. In other words, someone other than you. One hint, you know the author's point is not going to be summed up in an easily tweetable soundbite when midway through one of the paragraphs leads with "BUT the analogy isn’t perfect."

      --
      You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
      -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
    3. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      640 thousand ideas is enough for anybody.

    4. Re:Actually... by Hijacked+Public · · Score: 1

      I don't interpret as above, but I'm not getting any deep insights about humanity out of it either. If the point is that some magazine mistakes small ideas for big ones, that isn't exactly new information. You might as well complain that Rolling Stone is taking Bono seriously and passing over other deep thinkers. Both are doing it on purpose, because they are entertainment publications selling easily digested gloss to people who want to know rather than think at that specific point in time (see, I did RTFA). But that doesn't mean they only want to know rather than think, all the time.

      The author picks a tiny handful of huge thinkers from the course of human history and pretends like that sort of thought is past us. He proceeds under the misconception that the masses were somehow reading about these people and their ideas as they happened, like Keynes was a pop culture icon.

      --
      "Sacrifice for the good of The State" - The State
    5. Re:Actually... by gutnor · · Score: 1

      this article's basically of the "Everything that can be invented has been invented."

      Not at all, actually quite the opposite ...

      All sorts of amazing things are being thought of, written about, developed and researched, but are out of sight of the main stream New York Times journalism.

      The article is not complaining about the lack of innovation, it is complaining about the lack of interest the world seems to have in progress and ideas.

    6. Re:Actually... by rgviza · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know why the author ignores brilliant people that are active right now, like Benjamin Carson, Linus Torvalds, Stephen Hawking, and the people that win Nobel prizes every year (at least in medicine, literature and the sciences, the peace prize is a bullshit popularity contest)

      Sorry I left some people out but hopefully I've made my point. The author of that article is disconnected. He's simply wrong.

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    7. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think so. I think it is more along the lines of we don't feel motivated for more. Granted the technological innovation of the last century cannot be denied, huge movements have been made, but what about the last 30, 20, 10 years? Arguements can be made for each side but i get the distinct feeling that "new" is not nearly as important than it once was, being replaced by "better", "faster", and "cheaper". Grand sweeping ideas (Cure disease, feed the world, power a nation, hoover dam, mount rushmore...) are less common, and seem to evolve under their own weight rather than by the intent of a visionary. I am not sure; it's just a gut feeling,

    8. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just what the Roman church said to Gallileo.

    9. Re:Actually... by icebraining · · Score: 2

      What did Linus invent? He made excellent implementations of existing concepts. I'm not putting him down, he has done more than most people will ever do, including myself. But he doesn't strike me as an inventor.

    10. Re:Actually... by jd · · Score: 1

      The periphery of knowledge grows to the nth power of the growth in knowledge where n is some arbitrarily large value greater than 1. In other words, what we are aware of as being borderline unknown grows exponentially.

      Certainly not everything has been invented. The key point is that ideas shouldn't just be equal in number to the ideas in the 60s, there's more room for those ideas and there's more people to have them (and, in theory, there's more people with better education, but I'd question just how accurate that is in many countries). For every futurologist, garage inventor, sci-fi writer and ground-breaking theorist from earlier decades, there should be tens - if not hundreds - today.

      That isn't happening.

      The Guardian newspaper ran an interesting op-ed on the riots in the UK, observing that in the 70s punk made an effort to communicate the problems of the average person to the landed gentry and give them a voice, but that nothing comparable exists today. I'm not sure I entirely agree with that view on either era but I would agree that there seems to be much less creative energy today and much more blah.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    11. Re:Actually... by EnderDom · · Score: 1

      Yes, this feeling was exactly the sort of idea I was trying to identify. That to 'us,' the journalist or you or I, it may appear that we are in a 'post-enlightment age' to use the author's term. I would argue that this is and illusion created by the fact the history is so condensed and the future so inclement. We squash all our history into a handful of visionaries and moments of genius, then we look around and ask where they are for the contemporary world. They don't exist, and they never have existed, at least not how we think of them. Rome was not built in a day and nor was the Hoover Dam, these grand ideas led by a visionary are less common because they never really were. The Hoover Dam was a combination of years of planning, development and eventual construction by many many talented men and women.

    12. Re:Actually... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      This is you typical self loathing dribble that has been stock and trade of the self absorbe elitists since the start of time. I am sure that Zug made a very in depth study on how cave man culture had declined since they started farming instead of going out on mammoth hunts. There is nothing wrong with studying the past the problem is when we worship it.
      You want some big ideas http://www.space.com/11200-nasa-100-year-starship-interstellar-travel.html.
      Not to mention that we have learned so much about what can work and not. We are sending space probes to Pluto. We have been sending rovers to mars. I wonder when we will send rovers to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn, We are search for and have found planets around other stars. It is easy to dismiss what happens in ones own life time. I had a friend who's grandmother was born in 1900. She went from no airplanes to men landing on the moon and to see the shuttle. When I was young I thought that I would never seen such wonders. In the year that I have been born men had even landed a probe on the moon. Now we have sent probes to most of the solar system. When I was in college people lost touch with old friends because they went to other colleges. You couldn't just call them and most of them didn't have email. Those that did often where on a fido net BBS and it could take a day or so for email to get there. Compuserve was expensive and by the hour. Today we can send messages to friends and make voice calls for next to nothing. When I was a kid cars used leaded gas and no emissions controls to speak of, rivers in the US caught on fire, lake Erie was considered dead, and everyone was sure that the Bison would be extinct in just a few years. Lake Erie isn't pristine and still has problems but it isn't dead and is better than it was. We still have Bison, our cars pollute less, and our water is cleaner. Thing have actually gotten better. Yes we live in an age of wonders and big dreams the only problem we have today is the same one we had yesterday and that seems to be that knowledge seems to come easier than wisdom. Thing is that those before tended to have less of both.
       

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    13. Re:Actually... by rhsanborn · · Score: 1

      They are also abstracted from the time-frames that it took to come up with those big ideas in the past. They read a history book and see "soandso invented suchandsuch" and think, gosh, if it was only that easy. Except it wasn't that easy. Soandso was building up the research of others that was prevalent at the time, and he spent many years coming up with excruciatingly iterative steps to get to where he ended up. Much of the public, who doesn't follow all those iterative steps gets a light bulb one day, and thinks it's amazing, but wasn't privy to the years of research and the number of people behind it.

      The PBS special "Absolute Zero" is a good look at a start to almost finished look at discovery and invention. The chart here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/milestones-in-cold-research.html shows the major milestones, note the time between those milestones are many years apart. It sounds a lot more thrilling when you can read all the discoveries in 20 minutes out of a history book.

    14. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      out of sight of the main stream New York Times journalism.

      Agreed. Only the sensational is newsworthy these days. When CNN's top stories include "Hulk Hogan, daughter show skin", how can we really hope to know what's going on in the world that is of actual importance?

    15. Re:Actually... by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      The same exact thing could be said of most of Edison's inventions. Im not disagreeing with you, i think we use the word inventor too lightly to fulfill the human need to appoint a head figure of something rather then accepting that everyone stands on the shoulders of giants, and have for a very long time.

      --
      Good-bye
    16. Re:Actually... by avandesande · · Score: 1

      I do agree that there are cool things going on, but I also believe that as long as we are limited by human evolution there is an S-curve associated with human technology and achievements.

      There are also physical limits that also put a ceiling on technology.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    17. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, what about...oh, i cant think of it. youre right. game over.

    18. Re:Actually... by noodler · · Score: 1

      I disagree.
      It's the science within various disciplines that has become too abstracted and too specialized for most people to even begin developing ideas.
      This may eventually result in a revolution of some sort as people become more and more disconnected from the development around them.
      And that is a shame because we are already presented with some social problems that noone seems to get their head around, like the implications of genetig modifications to human beings.
      Science is increasingly putting humanity in an uncomfortable place and people just avoid it since they can do nothing about the avalanche of development.
      Meanwhile there is an attack on humanity from the entertainment and other consumerism industries and so everyone has a very good reason to hide behind easy living.

    19. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Small wonder the NYT is barely afloat!

  3. Wrong by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 2

    Our forefathers dreamed of things we take for granted today. Electricity, transportation, communication, etc. Our ideas are about making things more efficient (smaller, faster, etc) or serving our corporate masters by making them cheaper or more profitable.

    We have plenty of ideas, just not all of them serve mankind - they server our technological or cultural needs. Looking back, our forefathers' ideas were about their place in time as well.

    1. Re:Wrong by Dunbal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In way way does cheaper, smaller, faster not serve mankind? Efficiency is important for all of us - in fact it's what is keeping our bloated population alive. We're not going to get more resources through magic!

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Wrong by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      I agree, however, there needs to be a more focused attempt towards moving technology forward, not just towards smaller faster and better version of their previous...

      The invention of the radio, tv, microwave, etc....seems to have pushed us forward, however, bringing about smaller and smaller iphones servers no one in the end, except the big companies selling their products...i hope the world will start to push innovation a little more, else we will never make it to the day where teleportation exists!

    3. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sometimes we lose abilities. Time for a car analogy.

      In the past, cars had stout enough frames to tow RVs, and medium to large sized ones. The old 454 big blocks did not get nearly as much horsepower per cubic inch as engines today, but they could haul a 5000 pound Airstream up mountain passes.

      These days, if one tries that with a modern day front wheel drive car, the trailer would be sitting there with part of the car's frame still on the hitch. One might be able to tow a light (under 500 pounds) trailer, but a lot of cars actually forbid towing anything at all on pain of voiding the vehicle's warranty.

      Yes, we have more efficient vehicles, but they do less. These days, pretty much everything, be it performance, towing capacity, reliability, or safety are being sacrificed on the almighty MPG altar.

    4. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Smaller, faster, and cheaper is nice for everyone to some degree (most), but in another way, it can have a negative impact on the human identity in that it removes a sense of self. Maintaining identity in and of itself is an act which supersedes efficiency because humanity is built this way.

      Why do you think that people were generally happier 10 or 20 years ago versus today? Sure, no study that I'm aware of has researched whether this is true or not, but I know where I'd be putting my money if I had to place a bet...

    5. Re:Wrong by Wovel · · Score: 1

      So you believe moving from vacuum tubes to transistors was not a step forward? Many people now walk around with more computing power in their pocket then you could fit in a large building 50 years ago. That is at least as much a leap forward as the invention of television.

      It is also not the only thing people are working on. Improving the broom did not hinder the development of the vacuum cleaner.

    6. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hauling a RV or even a boat once or twice a year and buying a monster truck to drive with, 365 days of the year is just for morons with cheap gas obtained by other peoples kids dying for them in foreign lands.

      Just rent the damned thing at the destination or pay somebody to haul it and use a sensitive car to drive to work the rest of the year.

    7. Re:Wrong by Xugumad · · Score: 1

      I don't see a lack of vehicles that can be used that way, I see fuel prices (partly driven by scarcity, although given the drop in oil prices it's difficult to argue that for all of this) that make many of those vehicles infeasible.

    8. Re:Wrong by Xugumad · · Score: 2

      I'd particularly like to point out, as someone working on making something expensive (education) more efficient/cheaper, that part of the point is to enable everyone to partake of these things.

    9. Re:Wrong by MellowTigger · · Score: 1
      "We're not going to get more resources through magic!"

      If all we're pursuing is optimization of current technologies, then no, we're not going to experience the "magic" of totally new concepts.

    10. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We have plenty of ideas, just not all of them serve mankind - they server our technological or cultural needs."

      Ah yes, those are "big, thought-provoking ideas that can't instantly be monetized"?

    11. Re:Wrong by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      Just rent the damned thing at the destination or pay somebody to haul it and use a sensitive car to drive to work the rest of the year.

      This is a valid technical solution, but it comes with hidden costs such as lack of control and autonomy. If you have to depend on a rental agency, or some hauling company, you have sacrificed some freedoms.

      Now, I admit that it is arguable that you might find that cost worth the environmental benefits. That is an interesting argument though. The environmental argument, though, boils down to something like how much am I willing to sacrifice the standard of living of my children today for the benefit of people some arbitrary number of generations in the future? Incidentally, this is the type of "thinking" to which the article is really referring.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    12. Re:Wrong by N0Man74 · · Score: 1

      Smart Phones today are pocket-sized multi-media internet capable computers that (through clever use of the variety of sensors and/or internet resources) allow these devices to do surprising (and useful) tasks that go beyond what even the designers likely expected of them.

      Just because the average person only uses their smart phone to make inane Facebook posts, viral cat videos (or pictures of cats that look like Hitler), and to play Angry Birds does not mean that there is some damn impressive, powerful, and useful technology here.

    13. Re:Wrong by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Cheaper, smaller, faster, better, only allows us to do what we already can do, just in a more "efficient" way. Real progress involves creating entirely new tools and systems which enable us to go beyond what is possible today.

      The world is not going to be changed by 5g iPhones, and bigger hard discs. It's changed by things like lasers, mobile phones, and P2P software. Big umbrella ideas change things, not refinements on those ideas.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    14. Re:Wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yes, we have more efficient vehicles, but they do less. These days, pretty much everything, be it performance, towing capacity, reliability, or safety are being sacrificed on the almighty MPG altar.

      This proves your post is nonsense. Modern cars are so much more reliable than older cars it's not even funny. Breaking down on the side of the road was commonplace with those old 454 big-block cars with their carburetors, points ignition, etc. Now it's a rarity, and generally only happens with cars that are 15+ years old because things are wearing out, and frequently because they haven't been maintained well.

      Safety, too, is leaps and bounds better than in old cars, thanks to things like seat belts and airbags, plus energy-absorbing structures, collapsible steering columns so you don't get impaled, etc.

      The idea that old cars were either safe or reliable is just plain idiotic. As for performance, most of today's midrange cars seem to be able to go 0-60 in 6-7 seconds, which used to be muscle-car territory.

      The only thing modern cars aren't good at is towing anything heavy (1000 pounds is no problem, sometimes 2000 depending on car and engine). I don't know where you get the 500 pound figure, but class 1 hitches start at 1000 pounds; there's no such thing as a hitch rated for 500 pounds. I also have never heard of a car that forbids towing. Maybe you're looking at econoboxes or something, but from what I've seen most midrange cars don't have that restriction. Not everyone drives an econobox, in fact they're not all that popular. But anyway, who cares? If you're towing an RV, then just rent a vehicle that can tow it. Or better yet, ditch the stupid RV and try one of these options: 1) hotel, 2) tent. With the cost of fuel, tow vehicle, and the RV itself, staying in a hotel or an extended-stay inn will be much cheaper.

    15. Re:Wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This is a valid technical solution, but it comes with hidden costs such as lack of control and autonomy. If you have to depend on a rental agency, or some hauling company, you have sacrificed some freedoms.

      Oh please. If this kind of "freedom" is important to you, then have you also sworn off commercial aviation, gotten a pilot's license, and purchased a Learjet (no, fractional ownership doesn't count because that lacks autonomy)? Can you imagine what a wasteful society we'd be if we all had our own RVs, tow vehicles, and private jets? And no, you can't use a Cessna either, because they don't have the range to leave the continent, so that's a big lack of freedom.

      Now, I admit that it is arguable that you might find that cost worth the environmental benefits.

      It has little to do with environmental benefits, and a lot to do with financial benefits. Buying expensive capital equipment that you rarely use is generally stupid; it's cheaper to just rent it. That's the whole reason we have places that rent cars, trucks, tow/hauling equipment, industrial equipment, etc.

      An even better solution is not dragging a crappy hotel room around on wheels, and simply renting a permanently-built hotel room at a hotel. You get a nicer room (don't get the cheap places), and you can drive a lot faster on the way there, and the end cost is much cheaper after you take into account the savings on fuel, the cost of a tow vehicle, the yearly difference in fuel costs if you would have used the tow vehicle as your main vehicle, and the up-front cost of the RV, plus of course any interest on those items if you would have financed them. And if you're staying in the woods, get a $60 tent. What's the point of being close to nature if you're going to isolate yourself from it in an RV?

    16. Re:Wrong by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      These days, pretty much everything, be it performance, towing capacity, reliability, or safety are being sacrificed on the almighty MPG altar.

      Safety being sacrificed? Please, it's the Safety Altar if anything. In the '70s little Datsuns with fridge-like aerodynamics and engines that were primitive as hell by today's standards were getting 40MPG without even trying. Why can't we do that today? Because you need to be able to walk away from accidents that would have turned you into a bloody shredded mess in that old 120Y, says the government.

      If you called it the "SAFETY dammit SAFETY! (oh, and MPG) altar" I would agree, that's where things have been headed over the last 15 years.

      But why should a car need to be able to tow a trailer? That's unnecessary inefficiency for most. It's the same reason most laptops aren't gaming laptops. And I'll bet on a recent Hilux, Patrol utility pickup or Dodge 3500 against any old pickup for towing capability any day.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    17. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What on earth makes you think that lasers, mobile phones, and holy crap P2P software are "big umbrella ideas" rather than refinements of pre-existing ideas?

    18. Re:Wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Instead of 10 or 20 years, how about 35 years? Back then, it was the 70s, and the economy was also in terrible shape, arguably the worst since the Great Depression. I don't remember the 70s being a time of general happiness. In fact, with all the protests against the Vietnam war starting 40 or so years ago, I'd say Americans weren't terribly happy people at that time.

      It shouldn't be any big surprise that general happiness goes up and down with economic cycles. When the economy's booming, people are happy. When the economy is shit, people are sad. Were people happy during the Great Depression? I don't think so. We happen to be in another depression, with possibly a worse, "double dip" coming up, so of course people aren't going to be as happy as they were in the roaring 1990s.

    19. Re:Wrong by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      We also have cars that tow just fine, nothing has been lost.

      Since most people don't want to tow RVs around most of the time only a retard would not trade off towing performance for things that most people actually do care about - at least in the product aimed at most people.

      We haven't lost any of the things you mentioned (and clearly reliability and safety have improved by orders of magnitude) - you can still buy a vehicle to meet those requirements today. There are just additional much better options for the bulk of people who care more about running costs than being able to break the speed limit by a bigger margin or win a race from the traffic lights or tow an RV.

    20. Re:Wrong by arbulus · · Score: 0

      I also have never heard of a car that forbids towing

      I've even seen Smart Cars towing trailers down the interstate.

    21. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In way way does cheaper, smaller, faster not serve mankind? Efficiency is important for all of us - in fact it's what is keeping our bloated population alive. We're not going to get more resources through magic!

      I hope that we aren't that dependent on efficiency. If we are, then we're already dead.

      The problem with being hyper-efficient is that 100% efficiency is just the optimist's way of saying 0% reserve capacity. The smallest extra load and the whole thing flies apart.

    22. Re:Wrong by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Our forefathers dreamed of things we take for granted today. Electricity, transportation, communication, etc. Our ideas are about making things more efficient (smaller, faster, etc) or serving our corporate masters by making them cheaper or more profitable.

      Says an obvious non-biologist. Curing cancer, the common cold, HIV, spinal cord injuries, crops that grow easier... those are major goals, some corporations will profit off of them yes, but those are for us.

    23. Re:Wrong by lysdexia · · Score: 1

      I saw a guy towing his dog box with a Fortwo last year during `coon season. It was bizarre, but not unthinkable in Cincinnati, where it's about a 40 minute drive to get a pretty decent hunt in.

      Car analogies are becoming tedious. They are too easy to make and way too easy to disprove.

    24. Re:Wrong by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      The thing here is you want to use yesterday's tech (an old heavy trailer-house) with today's cars. How about you look at buying/leasing one of these instead? Far more technology and luxury available than 30 years ago, and no gas guzzling truck required for towing. What, wait, you can't afford it? That has nothing to do with technology, and everything to do with the (un)even distribution of wealth.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    25. Re:Wrong by HeckRuler · · Score: 1

      Newsflash. We are running out of cheap oil.

      We will always have access to some oil. Even if we have to distill down corn or boil it out of yeti-protected tar-sands. But for a finite resource distributed across varying levels of reachability, there comes a point where shit gets really expensive and you go find oil elsewhere. Peak oil. We've hit it in the USA. We're going to hit it world wide. Unless we find an economical alternative. Which would be awesome.

    26. Re:Wrong by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      If we're not there we will be within a generation or two. Many people speculate we are gliding through peak oil right now, which helps explain why oil prices stubbornly refuse to go down much despite the economic downturn. China and India are picking up the slack where the US and Europe are backing off. Platinum exhaustion is in sight, as is copper. It's not the end of the world, and we will become better at scavenging and recycling and even digging up old landfills, but yes we are very near that point. When I was a child there were 4 billion people in the world. Now we are closing in on 8 billion, and the overall growth rates haven't changed much.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    27. Re:Wrong by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Er, I am referring to the law of conservation of matter. You might be optimistic about the invention of Mr. Fusion, but I think thermodynamics will triumph in the end. You just can't beat entropy. It's the law.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    28. Re:Wrong by jd · · Score: 1

      If we need cheaper, smaller, faster every 3 months then we're solving the wrong problems.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    29. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After the invention of radio companies spent years making radios with bigger/better speakers. After the invention of TV companies spent years making TVs bigger with higher resolution. After the invention of the microwave, companies spent years adding more and more defrost buttons. Mobile computing is no different. It caused a paradigm shift and now that paradigm is in the process of refinement. Also, your examples are misleading in that they ignore some of the biggest innovations in the past several decades: space shuttles, the internet, solid state technology, relatively safe nuclear power, GPS, 3d animation, credit cards, computers, commercial jet airliners, speech recognition, digital data storage...and on and on. I guess not ALL of my examples are important as the microwave, but I would not call any of these ideas trivial.

    30. Re:Wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Um, these aren't analogies; this whole discussion is about cars (it started with someone complaining that newer cars can't tow anything).

      Otherwise, I'd agree, but they're just so convenient.

    31. Re:Wrong by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      You are in love with the past. Our forefathers where not anymore noble than we are today. The vast majority where interested in just getting rich. But just as today there where a few that cared more and had the resources to do it. I now that it isn't a popular thing to say but Bill Gates has grown into one of those people. He has all he needs and now is trying to give back. Odds are that 100 years from now people will remember Bill Gates as a great man but will only remember Microsoft as the company that made Bill Gates rich.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    32. Re:Wrong by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Yeah why would poor people need computers!

      Because these are small computers, not phones. The smaller they get the cheaper they get.

    33. Re:Wrong by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      The universe is a bit larger than just this one planet. There is a lot of matter out there. A lot.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    34. Re:Wrong by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Car analogies are kind of like cars. They can take you places, but if you don't turn the wheels at the right moment, you'll end up hitting a wall.

    35. Re:Wrong by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there's a lot of matter. Except it's out there. Far away. How do you plan to get there, or bring it here? Oh. Thermodynamics again.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    36. Re:Wrong by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      People wang cheaper/smaller/faster because these have essentially become status symbols. This may look impressive to onlookers but essentially it's just the same old thing. The web was a big idea, accessing the web from home is a new and novel thing, having your nose glued to a smartphone screen all day long so you can browse the web while on the toilet is neither.

      Similarly the automobile was a big idea and a world changing concept. Then it started becoming a status symbol and we actually went many decades with essentially no major progress in automobiles despite getting new models every year. We're nearly to that stagnant stage again I think.

    37. Re:Wrong by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Yes we're getting smaller and smaller computers, but we're also doing smaller and smaller things with them! Yes the desktop computer today is vastly more powerful and useful than the mainframes of the 1950s. But the smartphone is actually a dumber version of the desktop computer and you can do less with it. People are gushing over clever apps that are nothing more than a collection of URLs. The transistor radio was an improvement over vacuum tube radios because not only were they smaller and portable they also worked better and provided better reception; the miniature tape recorder was a vast improvement the older bulky tape recorders because now you could use them in different ways that you could not before. But the pocket computers are not really advancing anything in the same way as older advances.

    38. Re:Wrong by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

      Some problems with this approach:

      1. "Oh please. If this kind of "freedom" is important to you, then have you also sworn off commercial aviation, gotten a pilot's license, and purchased a Learjet" This assumes one can afford a Learjet. Lots of people can afford a truck, even if they only use it a few times per year. Most people cannot afford a Learjet. Most people, however, are willing to spend some extra money for some extra freedom and time savings.

      2. "That's the whole reason we have places that rent cars, trucks, tow/hauling equipment, industrial equipment, etc" So if one plans a weekend trip to the state park, one should spend half of that time driving 100 miles to the nearest rental business, renting a truck, drive it 100 miles back home, picking up the camper, and then driving 50 miles to the park so he can enjoy the 1/2 of his weekend that remains?

      3. "An even better solution is not dragging a crappy hotel room around on wheels, and simply renting a permanently-built hotel room at a hotel." Hotels are not generally built in the remote parts of the wilderness where people like to take campers. One could find a hotel nearby, but then half the weekend is lost in transit.

      I think the problem all comes down to time. If I have a camper and a truck, I can spend more of my precious weekend actually relaxing in the woods, and less time filing out rental agreements.

      --
      Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    39. Re:Wrong by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      We are doing 'smaller things with them? REALLY???? We are in the process of making it possible to easily and cheaply communicate with ANY OTHER HUMAN on the planet. I think you underestimate the fundamental importance of bringing this power to the human race. Fucking doing smaller shit, you sir are blind. I have a pocket computer that CAN STREAM LIVE VIDEO TO THE WORLD INSTANTLY that I paid a pittance for, and you say that is small? Pocket computers are not intended to replace your desktop, the right tool for the right job etc.

      --
      Good-bye
    40. Re:Wrong by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      Agree 100%. Does the average person , when looking at google maps on their smartphone really understand the symphony of data that is occurring to make it all possible? Satellite data, traffic data, map data, localization data, etc etc. I LOVE the fact that we measure traffic by using cell phone tower data. Its so brilliant and simple.

      --
      Good-bye
    41. Re:Wrong by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So if one plans a weekend trip to the state park, one should spend half of that time driving 100 miles to the nearest rental business

      You live 50 miles from the nearest rental business? As most of the population lives in a metro area, it's safe to assume this isn't a problem for most people. If you're out in the boonies, then yes, having your own truck may make more sense for this reason, but you're an exception.

      Hotels are not generally built in the remote parts of the wilderness where people like to take campers.

      1) Most people with campers that I see don't seem to be going to "remote parts of the wilderness", they're usually going to some little state park, or some campground (where the fees are nearly as much as a hotel room), or some national park. These places are not usually far from hotels. I've seen lots of people with RVs in the Grand Canyon, but there's tons of hotels right outside the main gate where you can stay. I've seen RVs at various state parks, but again these places are usually just a few miles from a town where there's hotels. In fact, if a destination is so interesting that lots of people want to go camping there, there's usually hotels not too far away.

      but then half the weekend is lost in transit.

      It takes you half the weekend to drive 10 miles roundtrip from the hotel in the nearby town? You must have a slow car; it only takes me about 15-20 minutes to drive that far, less on highways. That's a lot less than "half the weekend", and the fact that I can drive 10-30mph faster in my car than a person towing an RV on the x00-mile trip from home to the destination easily makes up for any time lost driving between the hotel and the park.

      2) If I'm going to the wilderness, and really want to be surrounded by it, I'll sleep in a tent. It weighs less than 5 pounds, costs less than $100, fits easily in a car trunk, and lets me hear the wildlife at night and breathe clean air unlike the inside of a manufactured box. If you're too unfit to sleep on the ground, then you have no business driving an RV or being outside of a nursing home (though I would suggest a nice air mattress).

    42. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cheaper, smaller, faster, better, only allows us to do what we already can do, just in a more "efficient" way.

      And then eventually they push past some critical point and cause a phase-change.

      Incremental improvements in furnace-technology that were making bronze work more efficient... well, the state of the art advanced enough that the iron age became possible. Woot.

    43. Re:Wrong by sydbarrett74 · · Score: 1

      you have sacrificed some freedoms.

      Living in society with other fellow humans always requires giving up some freedoms, although the hardcore libertardians might disagree.

      --
      'He who has to break a thing to find out what it is, has left the path of wisdom.' -- Gandalf to Saruman
    44. Re:Wrong by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      missed the point completely, here is a drawing....
      IF (idea) = (revamp old tech) THEN profit....
      IF (idea) = (completely new f*cking idea!) THEN PROFIT!!!!!!

    45. Re:Wrong by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      you guys totally missed the point....sheesh.....
      the point is simple ...if you create a totally new tech or idea, then you make major profit, and mankind moves forward greatly (radio, tv, satelittes...fire, wheel etc...)
      if you just revamp an already existing idea (cell phone, iphone, ipad....) then you make money but do not serve mankind.

    46. Re:Wrong by N0Man74 · · Score: 1

      No, you miss the point.

      The devices which you are citing as being stagnant are devices that didn't even exist a few years ago, and already you are complaining about how they aren't moving forward fast enough?. Seriously, what are you expectations of technology?

      Also, by your logic, we could say that each generation of CPU and GPU is just "revamping an already existing idea", right?

      Phone tech, like computing tech, has not simply added new gimmicks and regurgitated the same old idea. These "revamps" intended to sell more products have the secondary effects pushing prices down on existing tech and expanding on what these devices can deliver, and more importantly (for mankind), broadening the audience that this technology is accessible to.

      In other parts of the world, the phone *is* their gateway to the internet, and surely you have to agree that the internet should be listed among a tech that can move mankind forward, right? Did you catch the other article posted here on /. that discussed the popularity of a cheap android phone in Kenya?

      Beyond the internet, I could point out how that many in healthcare use these devices (which again, have become cheaper and more powerful due to these "revamps" caused by competition) to get information quickly that could impact the health of patients. There is also personal health. I use my Android phone all the time to assist me with matters of my personal health. I can even monitor my heart-rate, with only my phone, through an application developer's clever use of the camera hardware.

      I could go on, but I think it is clear that your view of technology, and the world, are rather limited.

    47. Re:Wrong by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      >No, you miss the point

      Really, i was the one who posted my "point".....you commented on my post, therefor you would have to agree your reply was to MY point.
      If you are making another point, instead of trying to change MY point...then I would say I agree with you,
      if you are trying to make MY point seem useless or wrong, then I would say you went about the wrong way.....
      you would have had to bring my character into judgement, and unfortunately..you can not do that on /....
      as we are all with a little too much time on our hands, to say the least...therefore to judge me, would be to judge all of /.

      Be careful when opening a can of worms....there might be a rusty serrated edge you might cut yourself on, and get tetanus and die from.....

    48. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Car analogies about car analogies are like cars: you can keep pilling things inside, tying them on the roof, etc. but there's no guarantee that you will be able to get where you're going or, for that matter, be able to see what you're doing.

  4. Nah by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The difference is people expect instant feedback/results from their new ideas in the same way they get instant results from almost everything else these days. The bottom line is it takes a lot of hard work and convincing to get an even vaguely new idea into circulation - exactly the same as it always did. Also it depends on the field, in technology new ideas are constantly being tried out and adopted or discarded.

    1. Re:Nah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference is in the educational system. All schools world wide teach mostly the same things, and mostly through the same methods. Two hundred years ago, people learned from a variety of sources and a variety of things, a lot wrong things and through poor methods, but it's those differences that sparked such unique thoughts and brought amazing ideas to life.

      Today's students go to school with one particular mindset, and after 12-16 years of "schooling" they all think mostly the same, the differences are there, but still minor compared to students that benefit from other types of education.

      Then there's the environment that forces everyone to think the same, TV, magazines, internet they all tell us what's cool to wear, what's cool to watch and so on. It shouldn't affect people very much, but those 12+ years of training ensure you'll care about those things.

      This also explains the vast difference from geeks and the rest of the world. We have Star Trek, board games and other things, instead of the regular TV programming, and it shows in behaviour and school results.

    2. Re:Nah by Eivind · · Score: 1

      I can't agree with the premise at all. There are plenty of big ideas currently, and people work diligently for decades to further those ideas they believe in.

      How about this for a vision ? "To provide the sum total of human knowledge to every human being, in all languages, for free." That a radical enough or "big" enough idea to count ?

      Ownership and control over the machines and data that make up the information-world less relevant than the same over the factories a century earlier ?

    3. Re:Nah by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Another problem is that every idea gets snatched up by corporations and IP law. Even the Music industry is trying to say they own all the recordings they ever recorded of an Artist because Artists are contracted to make the music for the company. This is instead of the Artists owning their own music. You can't even make a tech startup these days without getting patent-trolled. The real problem is not the lack of ideas, its the lack of ambition to try and implement them for fear of getting smacked down by bloated legal departments abusing patent, copyright and trademark law. These corporations don't just make to stop doing what you are doing, they make it either impossible to compete, or they ruin you financially for the rest of your life. Its a fucking joke and I hate America for being this way.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
  5. Meh by Anrego · · Score: 1

    I think we care, we just don't have the framework in place to explore big ideas any more.

    We have become very good at improving existing technology. Release product, take user feedback, make improvements, sell update product.. rinse and repeat.

    The magic word of the day has become ROI.

    We don't have Bell labs doing hard core research any more, and no one will invest in anything which doesn't have a clear pathway to profit.

    1. Re:Meh by Stormthirst · · Score: 1

      And worse, people trying to make it alone often can't get the new ideas out there because it costs so much to do it. Especially if patents are involved.

    2. Re:Meh by Anrego · · Score: 1

      Indeed.

      The best argument against patents is to apply their use today to innovation of the past. You can't just go out and invent something these days.. without violating a patent on soldering a copper wire to a metal pin or something stupid (ok, I know.. hyperbole.. but you get the point).

    3. Re:Meh by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      I think if you look back I'm not sure we ever had big ideas at any time. Everything is small steps. Give me an example of something that was a genuine big idea that wasn't done without lots of small tiny increments.
      Man on the moon: ever greater size rockets. Ever greater rockets, small steps of improvements over earlier ones. The original rocket, was built in someone's shed.
      The first working airplane: built by a pair of bicycle builders in their spare time.
      Telephone: preceded by speaking tubes, and microphones and speakers as separete developments.
      The computer: need I spell it out?

      They only seem like big massive ideas in retrospect. Look at Bell lab's transistor development, that wasn't a big idea just an interesting discovery that took years to get working reliably and in production. Same with fibre optics, the idea was had in the 60s, it took until the 80s/90s for the glass technology to catch up.
      To me this sounds like the author of the article can't see the trees in the forest because of all the trees popping up all over the place.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    4. Re:Meh by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      Has everyone forgotten there are hundreds of universities out there doing pie in the sky research every day that will most likely take decades to monetize, if ever?

      What about our national research labs? Sandia, Fermilab, Los Alamos... amazing things have come out of these places and they're still doing great work that again, won't readily be monetized. How about NASA's mars missions, both past and future?

      And for crying out loud.... CERN? How much more pie in the sky can you get? The LHC cost $9billion and what exactly is the ROI of that?

    5. Re:Meh by Anrego · · Score: 1

      Things like the transistor, which from my understanding came out of basic fundemental research vice trying to make a profitable end product, are mostly what I was talking about. Seems like we arn't doing this any more (or maybe I just don't notice because it's subtile). People do R&D .. but it always seems specific goal oriented, rather than "give some smart people some money and see what we get" oriented.

      I do generally agree with your point, and my post was poorly worded in that regard. Innovation is a bunch of baby steps.

    6. Re:Meh by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      The magic word of the day has become ROI.

      We don't have Bell labs doing hard core research any more

      I think it's pretty clear that private industry has let us down in a big way. From Pharma to energy and telecommunications. Manufacturing.

      And they deflect responsibility by saying it's all the fault of "big government" for giving them what they want.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    7. Re:Meh by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      IBM and MS still have research labs. Pharmaceutical companies all have labs. I am sure many other industries have companies with similar facilities. Just because one lab that was famous amongst techies no longer exists does not mean that research has come to an end.

    8. Re:Meh by gtall · · Score: 1

      While I agree with what you said, I also think that necessity is the mother of invention. Most of the low hanging fruit has been picked, those inventions have been done. The necessities spawning them were small. Now our necessities are much larger. Take energy, how does one "solve" the energy problem? Not with a single silver bullet. There won't be a single grand idea that does it all. The situation is the same in medicine and just about every other area I can think of. Also, previous inventors didn't have the regulatory structure to get over or the insane patent system. The latter is hopeless, the former simply puts a price on the externalities previous inventors could take for granted.

      Also, what appeared to be a big idea back in the day doesn't appear to big now simply because we've seen so much more already. And modern communication has a tendency to make big ideas look small because every whacko can now get airtime complaining about some new idea being a bad idea.

    9. Re:Meh by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Private industry has, for the most part, done exactly as its mandated to do -- produce larger and larger profits at any cost.

      The problem is that we (as a general political consensus) have got this idea that profit is the only thing worth having combined with the even flakier idea that government intervention is not only useless, but actually counter-productive.

      The government's real job (at least as it relates to industry) is to reduce that "at any cost" clause down to "at a manageable cost". That is, its the government's job to consider and protect pretty much everything EXCEPT profit.

      You know, silly little things like freedoms, rights and people in general.

      And all of the push for privitization is just showing how badly our governments are failing us. Basically any industry that has such a high barrier to entry that competition becomes implausible (due to cost, right-of-way restrictions, etc) should be a public utility. Not because the government runs it better as a profit-building business, but because the government is (somewhat) better at providing for the people even if it means taking a loss and no matter how niche a particular market area is. Road systems, police forces, telephone systems (at least the expensive wires) and so on.

      Now this is understandable. People are, in general, greedy and selfish -- the entire capitalist system is based on this premise. The US in particular though takes this to an extreme when it comes to things like taxation. Basically, Americans don't want to pay for social services (though they're happy to benefit from them!) All they see is the taxes going out rather than the benefits coming in. Especially in areas like health care where everyone thinks it should be someone else's problem.. until they get sick and end up $10-100k in debt.

      The capitalist system is flawed. The communist system was flawed. But as with most things in life, this isn't a black-and-white choice. There's a whole range of semi-social greys in between, and many of those greys are in use around the world with great success.

    10. Re:Meh by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      People are, in general, greedy and selfish -- the entire capitalist system is based on this premise.

      The interesting part of this notion is the fact that people, though greedy, are not nearly as greedy as the institutions they have created. Private industry is not a law of nature. It is a choice we make. Though corporations exist only to make a profit, private industry exists to serve our (peoples') needs. When it ceases to do so, we are free to re-evaluate its place in our lives. There appears to be a sweet spot where private industry can go so far and no further, and socialistic tendencies balance it. I've spent significant time in such places, and despite the best efforts of communications industry to inform us so, these places have a much higher standard of living, and more personal freedom than the United States. I understand why corporate media does not want that story to get out, so people who have not visited these places are told that the people there have no freedom, that the people are taxed so heavily that nobody had any money, that everyone is miserable there. The funny thing is that there are places to which Americans can drive to see for themselves that this is not so, yet the false impression remains. Nobody seems to wonder why there is so little immigration from those countries. To be honest, if hadn't been for an academic career that has allowed me to live and work in these places, I might not believe they exist either.

      this isn't a black-and-white choice

      And yet billions of dollars are spent to convince us that it is a black-and-white choice. To even suggest that it is not a black-and-white choice raises suspicions about one's character. The outlook is grim for the United States I'm afraid, and the downward spiral has been baked into the cake for at least 30 years. Before that, there were still two possible roads we could take as a society. Now, as we enter a year where all limits on corporate influence on public discourse have been lifted, it seems like we're beyond the point where we can make any choices.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  6. Timeless BS by paiute · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My big idea is that I do not even have to RTFA to know that this is one of those pieces which is all about the world going to hell in a handbasket, no, this time for real. We are always less smart/less moral/less disciplined/less tough than our imaginary forefathers and apparently always will be.

    --
    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    1. Re:Timeless BS by mooingyak · · Score: 4, Funny

      My favorite response to this is "Nostalgia isn't what it used to be."

      --
      William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
    2. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that we're perfect and shouldn't strive to be better? Even if the past wasn't the golden age of wonder that some make it out to be, what's wrong with an article that pushes us to find it "again?"

    3. Re:Timeless BS by zildgulf · · Score: 1

      Yes it does seem to read like that. I think he, and others like him, are using the wrong metric, a metric was was true in the past but not the present. It would be like saying medicine is stuck because we have not discovered any new bodily organ for over 100 years. Believe it or not back in the 18th and 19th Centuries the progress of medicine was measured in how many new organs we can discover, or at least seemed to be by the small number of books we have on medicine from back then. Today we use a totally different metric.

      We don't generate tons of "deep thought ideas" because those kind of ideas are required to be better and more able to withstand the "well, we tried that idea exactly that way and this is the result", which is easier to find now. For example, back in the 19th century you could come up with many ideas new collectivism and capitalism in society. Today we know the result of those ideas so any new idea on that subject can't be a rehash to be defined as a "new idea".

    4. Re:Timeless BS by Wovel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      These articles are silly. They are nostalgic for a time that never was. They don't understand that history is a highlight reel. The big ideas happen once, maybe twice in a generation and few people actually contribute to them. "Public intellectuals" are no less or more important today then they were 100 years ago. What big ideas does the author think are being ignored?

      SETI is still operating, that is about as big as ideas get. Quantum Physic/Mechanicss is still widely researched and very well funded. Neither of these subjects has any immediate commercial value.

      My big idea is that TFA was written by a moron that fancies himself an intellectual. Oh shoot, does that make me a pundit?

    5. Re:Timeless BS by Wovel · · Score: 1

      I now respond to my own punditry. I was wrong to expect an intelligent well-reasoned opinion-piece in the New York Times.

    6. Re:Timeless BS by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Chillax, gramps. The NY Times wasn't even on your lawn!

    7. Re:Timeless BS by BobNET · · Score: 1

      I remember being more nostalgic in the past. Those were good times.

    8. Re:Timeless BS by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      You don't need to be told that you're a moron compared to your ancestors and that you'll never amount to anything. It's not a particularly good motivator. Especially when it's not true.

    9. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you rather make his point for him. Trivialising the other persons viewpoint is not the same as rational argument.

    10. Re:Timeless BS by CrowdedBrainzzzsand9 · · Score: 2

      In the print era, the few big-media outlets and the scientific journals filtered the idea space "for us." What they liked, we heard about; what they flushed, we didn't hear about. Now, anyone with ten bucks per month to spare can have a world wide stage. The published idea space has mushroomed. The author of TFA failed to have a Big Idea about how to effectively filter the present embarrassment of riches of ideas, to find the Big Ones.

    11. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent up. This one should "go to 11"

    12. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe you should RTFA instead of talking about something you know nothing about

    13. Re:Timeless BS by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      I've heard that joke before, and it was better the last time.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    14. Re:Timeless BS by mooingyak · · Score: 1

      And next time, your memory of it won't be as good as this time.

      --
      William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
    15. Re:Timeless BS by radtea · · Score: 1

      These articles are silly. They are nostalgic for a time that never was. They don't understand that history is a highlight reel.

      He actually does have a point, although manages to miss it. He isn't lamenting the decline of big ideas. He's lamenting the loss of freedom to make shit up like Freud and Marx did. The "big ideas" he's talking about are mostly false, or so widely misunderstood and misapplied (relativity) they may as well be false.

      He's saying, "I'm sad that the world is no longer routinely gripped by a mania for the latest plausible bullshit." He specifically dismisses the deeper understanding of the world coming out of the sciences because it isn't "big" enough for him, where "bigness" is apparently measured by the number of facts it ignores.

      It isn't social networking that has created this situation, but the Internet generally and Wikipedia specifically: people can now easily check facts and determine that some idiot promoting the labour theory of value or the collective unconscious has been thoroughly debunked by mere empiricism many times. The plethora of easily available factual information is what kills off the "big speculations", leaving behind only the niche nutjobs, who predictably cling ever more fervently to their increasingly untenable claims via the usual selection effect observed in these cases.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    16. Re:Timeless BS by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      But next time, i'll be deadly serious next time!

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    17. Re:Timeless BS by hitmark · · Score: 1

      Freud may have been smoking something in addition to cigars (but he still managed to awaken interesting in workings of the mind), but Marx seemed to have been on the right track. Sadly Marx managed to sidetrack himself by focusing too much on the worker and not enough on industrial machinery.

      http://www.debtdeflation.com/blogs/wp-content/uploads/papers/Keen1993MisinterpMarxTheoryValue_JHET15pp282-300.pdf

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    18. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      never mind all this has happened before and will happen again

    19. Re:Timeless BS by v(*_*)vvvv · · Score: 1

      Spot on. Kinda like the "web is dead" headline, it's overly provocative to generate reaction. But we knew that since it's a NY Times piece.

      FYI The article starts with a criticism of The Atlantic trumpets the “14 Biggest Ideas of the Year.” which is a pathetic list and nothing to base any science on. Then the author drags on to criticize everything he doesn't like or understand about modern pop culture in comparison with historic intellects. It turns out most of his complaints are about modern media and the influences it has that are unintellectual... In that context, one could say this is a fairly accurate article written by someone with a front row seat. But it still doesn't change how ridiculous his premise is and how fast he digresses into what he really wants to talk about.

    20. Re:Timeless BS by Quirkz · · Score: 2

      The internet's definitely at play. Not just the preponderance of facts, but the preponderance of ideas. Things get thrown at you from every direction, and there so many people throwing them around. As an extension of that I think there's both 1) a lot of dilution because there are so many voices, and 2) a lot of gridlock from masses of quasi-anonymous voices quibbling with each other. One of the more valuable, but also frustrating, things I've learned from slashdot is the numerous means for debunking bad arguments. There's a point where, even if you've got enough integrity not to stoop to ad hominems and appeals to authority, by the time you've waded through the straw men, hyperbole, bad logic, etc., it often feels there's very little left that's safe to say. It's probably not really true. There's probably a great deal that's still worth saying. But it's easy to be so steeped in the the sea of crappy small ideas and self-correcting yourself to silence that it *feels* like there's no real point in trying to put forth a good idea. We've learned cynicism and irony will eventually wear down the next "big idea" and call it off before it really gets started.

    21. Re:Timeless BS by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Galileo and Darwin didn't exactly have the 'freedom' to make shit up either. They did it anyway and while they were prosecuted at the time, we've later come to realize how important their ideas area.

      I think a lot of these comments have the right of it -- big ideas are pretty damned infrequent. The article itself references what? Less than a dozen people spanning over a century (maybe more, I didn't recognize all the names).

      That amounts to a big idea every 10 years at best. I would suggest that perhaps Tim Berners-Lee should get the award for the 90s -- popularization of the internet isn't exactly what one can call a small social change.

      Facebook (or Myspace or whichever social media website you decide should be credited) could be a good candidate for the 2000s. Regardless of whether you consider the effects of social media good or bad, the fact of the matter is that its significantly and to some extent fundamentally changed how the world works.

      Of course my examples come from the computer world -- its where I live. Perhaps there's equally strong ideas presented in other fields, but I don't think any of them have as much public mindshare as the two I've mentioned (at least, not yet!)

      And keep in mind also that this discussion (and the article) primarily revolves around that concept of public mindshare. I would suggest that Feynman & friends working out the kinks in QED has been more important on a human scale than Einstein working out GR. Tracking the motion of galaxies a billion light years away is fascinating and all, but it doesn't really do anything on a practical level. Of course Einstein did lots of useful work on more down-to-earth physics as well, but GR is generally what people think of first when Einstein comes up.

      So who's going to take the prize for the 2010s? Hard to say -- the decade is still young. Don't be surprised if it comes from China or India though. I suspect they'll both be starting to throw the ball back into the world's idea pool over the next couple of decades as they become more industrialized and larger portions of their populations are able to start thinking about more than where their next meal is coming from.

    22. Re:Timeless BS by dgriff · · Score: 1

      Likewise this is typical smart-ass Slashdot BS along the usual lines of "nothing to see here, move along please". By not even bothering to read or think about the article (no time, so many feeds to keep up with!) you're kind of making his point for him.

    23. Re:Timeless BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And keep in mind also that this discussion (and the article) primarily revolves around that concept of public mindshare. I would suggest that Feynman & friends working out the kinks in QED has been more important on a human scale than Einstein working out GR. Tracking the motion of galaxies a billion light years away is fascinating and all, but it doesn't really do anything on a practical level. Of course Einstein did lots of useful work on more down-to-earth physics as well, but GR is generally what people think of first when Einstein comes up.

      I am not sure what applications for QED are (I assume it's useful for designing modern microprocessors, I am just not sure at what point it is needed), but GR is required for GPS to work right, which seems pretty important to me.

    24. Re:Timeless BS by skelly33 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about your forefathers, but mine are not imaginary. I think.

      Anyway, I don't think profitability is necessarily even the right thing to attribute the rise/fall of innovation. What is more alarming to me is the general feeling that the walls are closing in on us with respect to legal barriers to accomplishment. The U.S. in particular has adopted an increasing mentality of "you can't do that", and is reinforced by extended copyright, asinine patent, and punitive damages to anyone who so much as moves in a direction that someone else has already thought of. How many viable businesses, processes, and potential jobs are sitting locked away in the patent system right now just waiting for someone to get their act together? How come I can't dig a hole in my yard without the county demanding cash for a permit or they put me out on the street?

      We have paralyzed ourselves, and I'm sure this same dysfunction is spreading...

    25. Re:Timeless BS by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Yes and no. GPS would work pretty well without GR and just having tiny adjustments applied periodically (ie: GR shift is simply another source of error to correct for even if the underlying cause isn't known precisely).

      This page gives a big stack of math to back that up. GR shift accounts for something like 4 parts in 10 billion. It accumulates over time to be sure, but its not severe enough to prevent GPS working without it.

      Of course, I don't know that the full QED is really needed for all of our modern day electronics either, so it my example could be just as overzealous as requiring GR for GPS ;). I suspect though that our ability to control EM and light waves will give QED a much stronger (practical applications) role in the future even if its not entirely there yet.

      Then again, there may come a day when our space exploration blossoms past a few unmanned probes here and there. Then GR might become more relevant in day-to-day life (even then though, I'm not sure what scale we have to reach before we worry about it to any great extent. Definitely inter-galactic. Probably inter-stellar. Inter-planetary? Not so sure).

  7. We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by petes_PoV · · Score: 2

    All the good ideas have already been patented. Try doing anything innovative and some lawyer, somewhere will tie you up in litigation until the sun goes cold or you run out of money.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it's not that all the good ideas have been patented. It's that if and when you come up with a good idea and make it work, some one else will claim your idea infringes on some patent which is sometime something so vague and arbitrary that it might have been about something totally different. Or about something so common and everyday like breathing but because it relates to some technology it's considered Intellectual Property. Prime example would be Android and all the patent trolls that are going after it because it's so popular. Also kind of strange that no one bothered to go after Apple when they made it with iPod. Seems like they're not the first to come up with a MP3 player. I guess that was then when innovation actually matter.

    2. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 1

      That is because the iPod came befor the following Big Idea: in a world where everything is so complex and interconnected as ours, any device, programme, design is derivative of something. Therefore, you but need a couple patents and some ayers to make a living.

      Hopefully, the next Big Idea will be that in a world where everything is so complex and interconnected as ours, claiming ownership of an idea is preposterous.

    3. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right up until such time as we all get smart and start mulching the lawyers and some ass-hat CEO's into some tomato gardens used to feed the homeless...

    4. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by tepples · · Score: 1

      Patents expire after 20 years. Were you thinking of trademarks, which can be renewed indefinitely, or copyrights, which can be legislatively extended indefinitely on the installment plan?

    5. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by erice · · Score: 1

      Patents expire after 20 years. Were you thinking of trademarks, which can be renewed indefinitely, or copyrights, which can be legislatively extended indefinitely on the installment plan?

      *A patent* expires after 20 years. *Patents* are filed all the time, just about guaranteeing that some ill-conceived patents will be around to cause trouble no matter when you go to market. Also, many fields move fast enough that, even if you can still apply a twenty year old idea, the impact is minimal and so is the profit.

    6. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Not true. All the good ideas can't be patented because a patent troll will invent some bullshit excuse as to why something that obviously DOES NOT violate their patent DOES. Then theirs the media industry that just steals all the copyrights from their artists. There is no reason to waste your time doing anything if its just going to get stolen from you or tie you up in a legal battle until you are financially ruined. Its modern feudalism.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    7. Re:We have ideas, we just can't exploit them by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Apple was sued by Creative for $100M, Personal Audio LLC for $8M, and probably more I'm forgetting about. They actually tried to deflect one of the lawsuits by admitting the basic idea was invented in 1979. Apple's situation exactly demonstrates both major problems here. No real innovation, just refinement of existing ideas with a better look/feel. And they were only able to survive because they could shrug off a ridiculous $100M lawsuit from Creative and keep going.

  8. The reason why by hardburlyboogerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ideas seem not so important is because today's society is based on GREED.Instant wealth and power over the new item or it doesn't get to the people.Sounds a lot like Apple and their i(fill in the blank) whatevers.

    --
    Geek Hillbilly
    1. Re:The reason why by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Ideas seem not so important is because today's society is based on GREED.Instant wealth and power

      Try reading a history book. Every important society in the whole of history was based on exactly those principles.

      The only examples I can think of where that wasn't true are societies where there's nothing much to steal from each other, eg. the Bushmen of the Kalahari.

      --
      No sig today...
    2. Re:The reason why by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      There was always something to steal. Food. Shelter. Women. Even in a place of plenty, it's often easier to let someone else gather the food and then take it from them.

    3. Re:The reason why by Kiuas · · Score: 1

      Maybe so, but tell me: how is that different from history? Ever since the birth of organized societies, wealth has always equalled power.

      I dislike Apple too but it's not as if they invented greed.

      --
      "It is the business of the future to be dangerous" -Alfred North Whitehead
    4. Re:The reason why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are no more greedy now than in the past.

    5. Re:The reason why by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      As opposed to when America was starting, and we were driving native Americans off their land and using slaves to produce our crops? Yeah, total greedy bastards, that's us today...

    6. Re:The reason why by couchslug · · Score: 1

      As opposed to the sweet, sweet Past where idealism held purest sway, King and peasant loved each other as brothers, and all lived each according to his needs provided for by each according to his abilities.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    7. Re:The reason why by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Historically, when human beings shifted from hunter-gatherers to farming communities and cities there began a social structure that allowed wealth, power and warfare. Before that it was all minor squabbles between tribes, but even so it was extremely limited in comparison to farming societies battling eachother. The population density of hunter-gatherers was low enough, and resources plentiful enough they did not have to fight as often if at all. As a side note, hunter-gatherers did not accumulate as much wealth because they had to be on the move. This allowed for them to all more-or-less be equals short of ranks such as "holy man" or "chieften". Case in point, Native Americans did not have war with eachother until white settlers started pushing them further and further west.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    8. Re:The reason why by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Well, it used to be better in the US from about 1940-1980. Now, IP law, business sectors, and wealth is being concentrated into the hands of a few while laws protecting their assets increase. Its a new sort of feudalism that will ultimately cycle back through failure after a few million people die either in revolution, starvation from economic collapse, or in warfare between nations.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    9. Re:The reason why by sjames · · Score: 1

      I think the tipping point is where the society becomes crass enough that it doesn't even try to cover the greed with a more respectable veneer.

  9. A counter-example by SirGarlon · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think there are plenty of good ideas -- small, medium, and large -- today. For example, see TED.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    1. Re:A counter-example by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      those ideas are what are the ideas in "post ideas".

      "the shareable future", "finding planets around stars", "one day of peace"(really? is it the 60's? or '20s now?), "ending hunger now", "surprising math of cities and corporations","how algorithms shape our world","breakthrough touchscreen", "animal rescue".. see where I'm getting? it's not new stuff at all. there's some technical methods on some talks which sophisticate existing methods though, but that's more iterative.

      not only that, but if you pick up the archives of say popular mechanics and read them from fifties to today you'll see a lot of ideas that just get rehashed again and again into futuristic visions, usually ignoring the same practicalities every time - yet we eat and live the same as modern people in fifties lived, you got the same appliances, same reasons for wars, same reasons for inability to distribute food. same reasons for why people do the wrong thing.

      But not only that! nowadays people are also actively encouraged to NOT try out their ideas, because they're dangerous, need toxic materials, cause potential harm to the environment, or just change to environment, might put people in potential danger..

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:A counter-example by vlm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I like TED speeches, but they are just murmuring popular memes using great sophistry skills at each other. Don't confused TED talks with actual new ideas. I suppose it is possible to be ignorant enough to learn something from a TED talk, but ... probably unlikely.

      Real new ideas are not a rehash of "lets try world peace", "lets all feel catholic style guilt at destroying the earth", "computers make pretty pictures".

      Real new ideas, historically, were the result of things like "what happens if I shine a UV light at a piece of metal in a vacuum, for no better reason than no one tried this before?" "what happens if I store a tank of double bonded fluorocarbons in a sorta catalytic environment for a long time, just because we can?" "what if we tried to simulate the orbit of an electron using discrete energy levels, just for the heck of it?"

      Not, "here's a popular fuzzy idea that no one politically correct or socially acceptable could possibly dislike, now let me sharpen my sophistry skills upon it for less than 18 minutes"

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    3. Re:A counter-example by Wovel · · Score: 1

      TED is maybe not the best example, but the world is still pursuing big ideas. I pointed out two earlier in this discussion as an example. You have to live in a bubble to believe he world is out of big ideas.

    4. Re:A counter-example by mapkinase · · Score: 1

      TED is overrated. It present flashiness instead of real thought.

      The fact that one has to combine together 3 very different animals: technology, entertainment, design - into one proves the point of the NYT article: there was not enough ideas for technology alone, so one had to throw in design and entertainment.

      Take one of the most popular talks by the Swedish guy which rotates mainly about his graphic presentation. A graphic presentation is BIG idea? A graphic presentation, no matter how fresh for graphic presentations?

      Marxism was a big idea.

      --
      I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
    5. Re:A counter-example by Grizzley9 · · Score: 1

      "Great minds discuss ideas;
      average minds discuss events;
      small minds discuss people."
      - Eleanor Roosevelt

      In many regards we have become the latter but it is likely due to the rise of available information in near real time. Not everyone can be a great mind, in fact I'd say we need a mixture of all 3.

    6. Re:A counter-example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, yeah, click on, and filter by "Informative," and see how many results you get.

    7. Re:A counter-example by Mandrel · · Score: 1

      I find it hard to sit through TED talks when ten times faster I could skim a transcript to focus on any information that's new to me.

    8. Re:A counter-example by hitmark · · Score: 1

      And then there are those discoveries that are closer to real life then the popular image of Archimedes, where someone takes a look at a output and goes "that's odd"...

      --
      comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
    9. Re:A counter-example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Don't confused TED talks with actual new ideas. I suppose it is possible to be ignorant enough to learn something from a TED talk, but ... probably unlikely."

      Not only are you kind of being a dick - but you're flat wrong. Many speakers come and speak about research they are actively doing (new ideas) and certainly not every speech is some kind of hollow Save the Planet/Children/etc. Go to Ted.com, and click ...Ingenious. Every single one of the talks that come up are about an idea and each of these is very likely to be a new idea to most people that watch them.

      "here's a popular fuzzy idea that no one politically correct or socially acceptable could possibly dislike, now let me sharpen my sophistry skills upon it for less than 18 minutes"

      What's politically correct or socially acceptable about this talk?: Sam Harris - Science and Moral Values
      This is basically as opposite of politically correct as I can imagine. There are many other controversial talks on TED as well, so it's just silly to say this.

    10. Re:A counter-example by Altrag · · Score: 1

      TED is overrated. It present flashiness instead of real thought.

      You're doing it wrong. TED is about expressing ideas in a way that a good majority of people can understand.

      A truly novel idea cannot be expressed in detail to someone unfamiliar with the field in 18 minutes. I don't care how simple the idea or what field its in -- filling in the background knowledge alone would take far far longer.

      Saying TED should produce new ideas (and not only new, but BIG new ideas) is like saying your local newspaper should describe the full state of the world. Its beyond wrong and into patently absurd.

      And to bring in your example of graphic representation. You're right, the general concept of graphic representation is not new (its been around since the ancient Greeks and their geometry-based math.) The "new" ideas in graphic representation are mostly about coming up with ways to represent not just data, but huge amounts of data, in a way that makes sense to the average non-specialized viewer.

      While graphic representaion is not likely to change the world in any fundamental way, its still extremely useful in the modern world as businesses, governments and even individuals try to grapple with the phenomenal amount of information that's become available to us in the past couple of decades.

      And once in a while, graphic representations DO consistute a BIG idea. Feynman diagrams revolutionized quantum mechanics, even though they don't provide any more information than the purely mathematical formulations. And they're often harder to compute. But they're (relatively) easy to understand, and that made a huge difference.

    11. Re:A counter-example by hedpe2003 · · Score: 1

      Agreed +1

      --
      Comprehensive solutions via a competition of ideas like no other.
    12. Re:A counter-example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like TED speeches, but they are just murmuring popular memes using great sophistry skills at each other.

      Thank you. It's about time someone said this!

    13. Re:A counter-example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sam Harris - Science and Moral Values

      Sam Harris never met a straw man he didn't like.

      This is basically as opposite of politically correct as I can imagine.

      Only in America.

  10. Maybe we know better? by Tei · · Score: 0

    Success is as much a product of concept, but as implementation, luck and be the right person on the right moment.

    Work is about 40 times more important than the idea. Luck 10 times. And implementation 2 or 3 times.
    Since everyone has ideas, the expensive thing is hard work and luck. You can't really buy luck, so is preciuous.

    --

    -Woof woof woof!

    1. Re:Maybe we know better? by Dunbal · · Score: 2

      And your numbers are half as accurate as mine. I can pull them from 3 inches deeper in my rectum than you. And that's 100 times better!

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    2. Re:Maybe we know better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can pull them from 3 inches deeper in my rectum than you.

      You must be the goatse man.

  11. Ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That is why we don't have such things as 'The Large Haldron Super Collider', The Mars Rover series, The ISS and now private space ships, electric cars, etc. Because of course - none of these things can be monetized immediately.

    And folks wonder about the death of Newspapers.

  12. Or... by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps the easiest ideas have already been thought of in previous generation and creating new ideas has become harder.
    On the other hand, even though the quantity of ideas has decreased, the quality (in absolute terms) has increased due to the exact same reasons.
    All of this has happened before and all of this will happen again.

    For example; I'm a programmer and have invented many algorithms. Most of these turned out to have been invented by other programmers before I was even born. There was a time when bubble sorting was a new idea, nowadays you have to think of something much more complex in order for it to be a truely new idea. Quite simply; the intellectual barrier to generating new ideas has become much greater.

    --
    Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    1. Re:Or... by Sique · · Score: 1

      It's the "standing on the shoulders of giants" argument in reverse.
      Basicly the author complains that today, we don't have giants anymore.
      But only in the future we will be able to find out the few giants of our generation, because then we will see how long their shadow really is.
      If you get into science history and read about those famous giants like Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, Galileo Galilei, Pythagoras or Sun Tsu, you see that they actually floated in a large pond of similar ideas. They just knew or worked out which of those ideas actually made sense.
      If you ask someone who invented the steam engine, the answer will more often than not be "James Watt", totally disregarding the fact that for instance Thomas Savary patented a steam engine years before James Watt even was born! Today James Watt seems like a giant to us, but what he actually invented was not the steam engine, but the separate condensor, the epicyclic gear (to avoid patent hassle about the crank drive), the parallel motion linkage, the double action engine and the centrifugal governor (and a letter copying machine ;) ).
      While most of them are tightly coupled with the steam engine, they are not the invention of the steam engine, they are very successful improvements upon it. From the author's point of view, James Watt was a "small ideas man", going for ideas easily to monetize.
      But today he looks like a giant, because his inventions, which made the steam engine fit for the purposes of the industrial revolution, overshadowed all the other inventors contributing to the steam engine like Thomas Newcomen, Denis Papin, Heron of Alexandria or the above mentioned Thomas Savary.
      We create giants by forgetting the shoulders the dwarfs are standing on.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    2. Re:Or... by kidcharles · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I would say most of the fundamental ideas have already been thought of in every field. I'm sure there's a lot more to know about life on earth but no one will ever come up with ideas as big as "natural selection with random mutation" or "DNA" ever again. Same in physics, the people working at CERN are going to find out new things but every other physics researcher is going to be tinkering around with what is already basically known.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig.
  13. MAybe, but we generate more ideas I think by backslashdot · · Score: 1

    I think we generate more ideas .. I mean there are like decades that used to go by without a single new idea .. like say 2500 BC to 2900 BC .. how many new ideas? Writing was invented ... Pyramids .. the concept had been thought of .. maybe a mathematical concept or an improvement to writing happening but can we say new ideas in comparison to what we see nowadays over the past few years (faster CPUs, better phone user interfaces, social networking, etc) ? Doubtful.

    1. Re:MAybe, but we generate more ideas I think by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Well, the relevant measure is of course ideas/person. I think today there are more people living in New York than 2500BC on the whole earth.

      Also, don't underestimate the number of ideas from former times. Many things which were found back then are so standard today that we don't even think about it any more. Figuring out the concept of zero was orders of magnitudes more complicated than figuring out how to make usable light bulbs. Also the invention of the alphabet was a major breakthrough.

      Speaking about the alphabet: Most ideas from before invention of the alphabet are probably lost. There's no way to find out how many there were. Indeed, many ideas from afterwards are probably lost, too, because few people knew how to write back then.

      Also note that many ideas from back then are totally useless today. An improvement in the way to hunt a mammoth may have been just a big achievement as some innovation in a modern processor. However that knowledge became useless as soon as mammoths disappeared. Of course that will be the case for many today's inventions as well. For example, all the inventions on oil production will stop being useful as soon as the last oil was removed from earth.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
  14. Note where the ideas are coming from. Government. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Note where they aren't: Corporations. They're seeing a faster ROI by patenting a minor change, rather than researching a major breakthrough. And, worse, they're getting lots of face-time to either cut that ideas factory (The Government) down to nothing or make it a publicly funded R&D outsourced center, where they pay nothing and get to patent the lot.

  15. There we go, *again* by drobety · · Score: 1

    That some things were better in some distant past is a recurring idea.

  16. What about TED? by dlingman · · Score: 1

    I'm calling bullshit on this article. I'm guessing the author has never heard of TED. Sadly, neither have most of the general population. The ideas are still coming, but the masses don't care, if they don't fit in a 140 character tweet, or a 30 second youtube clip. (or an animated GIF)

    1. Re:What about TED? by Gideon+Wells · · Score: 1

      I am wondering if this all isn't just a modified case of nostalgia myself. TED is an example. Did everyone have big, grand ideas or do we just remember those who had those ideas out of proportion of what really happened? Everyone remembers the Einsteins and Edisons, but how many recall Tesla?

      The culture has changed some too, I do have to concede. Are our ideas less big because we don't have Edisons electrocuting full grown elephants to death in public to prove how dangerous his opponent's competing project is or Teslas building (privately) attempts at giant power transmitters and death rays? I suspect the big ideas exist. They just aren't as flamboyant.

      --
      by Anonymous Coward: I, for one, welcome the shift from car analogies to pizza analogies. um.. overlords?
    2. Re:What about TED? by Neil+Boekend · · Score: 1

      When you build a giant death ray nowadays you have to keep it secret to prevent breaching your contract with DARPA.

      --
      Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
    3. Re:What about TED? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing the author has never heard of TED. Sadly, neither have most of the general population.
      The ideas are still coming, but the masses don't care, if they don't fit in a 140 character tweet, or a 30 second youtube clip. (or an animated GIF)

      That's the point of TFA:

      This isn’t to say that the successors of Rosenberg, Rawls and Keynes don’t exist, only that if they do, they are not likely to get traction in a culture that has so little use for ideas, especially big, exciting, dangerous ones, and that’s true whether the ideas come from academics or others who are not part of elite organizations and who challenge the conventional wisdom. All thinkers are victims of information glut, and the ideas of today’s thinkers are also victims of that glut.

    4. Re:What about TED? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The human race has now become highly specialized. Almost every field is advancing at a fast pace, but because the fields are so specialized the layperson whose only exposure to engineering is changing the filter on his air conditioner once in a while, whose only exposure to physics is comparing the kW ratings of the engines of the next car he is going to lease, whose only exposure to mathematics is trying to figure out how much he can afford to pay down his credit card next month, and whose only exposure to science is taking a drug whose name he can't pronounce for a condition he has no idea and doesn't care about, well for these people science has stagnated.

      After all we had tv's, computers and electricity when I was a kid too, right?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    5. Re:What about TED? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      The really big change? Poor people have access to to information now. When 80% of the population was illiterate, the target market for anything written was the privileged elite who could afford to spend most of their time contemplating abstract ideas. There weren't more big ideas, but they made up a much higher percentage of total material. No one was publishing mass-market trash when there was no mass market.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    6. Re:What about TED? by shadowrat · · Score: 1

      I agree, it's a case of looking back over many years and seeing a large collection of great ideas, then comparing it to a small snapshot of present time.

      I also wonder if the big ideas of today are simply too specialized for lay people to understand easily. Talking about quantum computing, multiverses, exotic higgs bossons, etc makes people's heads hurt. It's not as easy to swallow today's ideas because they've gone further down the roads started by yesterday's ideas.

      I know in my field, data oriented programming is creating a buzz. That seems like a big idea. It's not something i can discuss with my family around the dinner table though.

  17. I'm not sure this is correct. by Chalnoth · · Score: 1

    These days, it seems to me that the place to read a large variety of in-depth, thought-provoking writing for general audiences lies in the blogosphere. Of course, the blogosphere varies tremendously in content and in quality, and I really have no clue how much this compares in terms of volume with previous ideas. But I strongly suspect the author is concerned only with the popular news media, and ignoring new media (well, it looks like new media is mentioned and dismissed in a single sentence). But I don't think there is any real problem with a lack of good, in-depth, well thought out ideas.

    Another point to be made is that you can't dumbly compare fractions of media content over time and expect them to compare. The difficulty here is that you might be reaching different groups of people entirely. For instance, the places where you saw thought-provoking essays in the past were generally magazines, many of which were read primarily by people in the middle class and higher, not by poorer people. But these days, even poorer people have no difficulty getting online, so even if the previous magazine readers have moved online for their reading, so have the people who never read magazines in the first place. So even if the number of thought-provoking essays goes down as a fraction of total web content, it may still be reaching no smaller a readership than it did before.

    So, in the end, I guess I'll just leave it that I am skeptical.

  18. So it begins... by AntEater · · Score: 2

    Evidence of our slow but inevitable descent towards Idiocracy.

    --
    Alex, I'll take keybindings not used by Emacs for $400....
    1. Re:So it begins... by royallthefourth · · Score: 1

      Evidence of our slow but inevitable descent towards Idiocracy.

      I don't take a stupid op-ed as evidence of anything except that the NYT is unsurprisingly still shit

    2. Re:So it begins... by Wovel · · Score: 1

      However, we should be concerned tha some people do.

  19. tl;dr by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    #lol

  20. The author is a stupid wanker... by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    ...and he does not seem to understand a difference between an idea and a witty expression.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  21. I've already seen this movie... by tdp252 · · Score: 2, Interesting
  22. Its universal ADHD by AvderTheTerrible · · Score: 0

    The whole world seems to be developing some kind of ADHD that is detrimental to new ideas that take longer to develop than what is now considered normal. Investors want their returns now, news outlets don't want to bother reporting on something besides an election that takes months to develop, and consumers don't want to wait, they'll just take the next best thing that pops up. The pace of life arguably has something to do with it, as we increasingly work as a society to eliminate the need to wait for anything. Want news? Well back in the 70s you had to wait for your local newscast to tell you what happened in summary, and then you got the paper the next morning for the details. Then came cable news, and you could watch stuff develop live. More cable news outlets came out and copied and expanded on it. Anyone remember how some people were glued to their sets day after day watching the OJ Simpson trial go down in real time? And now in comes the internet and you can get your news from thousands of outlets on the web, social networks, and once you hear about it you tend to not care anymore. People have forgotten how to be patient and a lot of it can be attributed to the "I want it NOW" mentality that our society seems to promote above all else. We need to calm the hell down, or we'll run over the next big as we dash off in our overfinanced and undeserved sports cars to get our next quick fix of overpriced whatever the hell it is that they're serving today. Slow down.

    1. Re:Its universal ADHD by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      I came for this theme but I'll raise it up a positive level.

      There are some severe downsides to be sure, but we are teaching ourselves slowly, painfully, to be racially smarter. The Flynn Effect is a lagging representation of us getting "ten steps farther in the idea flow" within days rather than weeks or even months. For example it's in general way harder for con artists to snowball people. Not counting brilliant psychological exploits like Facebook, the garden variety cons don't work anymore. If you see something suspicious, you visit a smart forum and post a note. Basically within a day, you have reasonably good proof whether it's remotely legit or not. As a funny example, the internet busted Phone-a-Friend on the gameshow Millionaire.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    2. Re:Its universal ADHD by nitehawk214 · · Score: 0

      The whole world seems to be developing some kind of ADHD that is detrimental to new ideas that take longer to develop than what is now considered normal. Investors want their returns now, news outlets don't want to bother reporting on something besides an election that takes months to develop, and consumers don't want to wait, they'll just take the next best thing that pops up.

      The pace of life arguably has something to do with it, as we increasingly work as a society to eliminate the need to wait for anything. Want news? Well back in the 70s you had to wait for your local newscast to tell you what happened in summary, and then you got the paper the next morning for the details. Then came cable news, and you could watch stuff develop live. More cable news outlets came out and copied and expanded on it. Anyone remember how some people were glued to their sets day after day watching the OJ Simpson trial go down in real time? And now in comes the internet and you can get your news from thousands of outlets on the web, social networks, and once you hear about it you tend to not care anymore.

      People have forgotten how to be patient and a lot of it can be attributed to the "I want it NOW" mentality that our society seems to promote above all else. We need to calm the hell down, or we'll run over the next big as we dash off in our overfinanced and undeserved sports cars to get our next quick fix of overpriced whatever the hell it is that they're serving today.

      Slow down.

      tl;dr

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  23. More like the post-idea media by SirGarlon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    TFA to me says more about the media failing their role as societal and intellectual catalysts, than about a shortage of ideas as such. There are big ideas out there, you just don't hear about them from the media.

    At the risk of opening up a political flame war, even the political parties here in the U.S. have big ideas built into their platforms. What level of service and what level of taxation do we really want from our government? How do we distribute the costs of government? Why is illegal immigration a problem and how do we address it? What are the costs of dealing with global warming, and what are the costs of not dealing with it?

    It's just that no one is having an intelligent discussion about these topics. They prefer to stake out a position on blind faith and then denounce everyone who disagrees. Seems to me more like a lack of discussion than a shortage of societal challenges or of ideas to deal with those challenges.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    1. Re:More like the post-idea media by Wovel · · Score: 1

      You are correct. NYT could have devoted that space to a survey of current theories in quantum mechanics, but they chose to print a piece that denies realit.

    2. Re:More like the post-idea media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's really a cry of anguish that the elite media has lost its stranglehold on the dissemination of ideas. In the worldview of the NYT, and their wannabe clones, nothing is of value if they have not vetted it and proclaimed it be suitable for consumption by the 'little people.'

    3. Re:More like the post-idea media by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1
      A rare, truly insightful post. Thank you.

      It's just that no one is having an intelligent discussion about these topics. They prefer to stake out a position on blind faith and then denounce everyone who disagrees. Seems to me more like a lack of discussion than a shortage of societal challenges or of ideas to deal with those challenges.

      Actually, it's both -- one begets the other. Two main political parties now seems to mean that there are only two ideological viewpoints on any issue. Some of these viewpoints may be interesting, with novel ideas; others are not. The media and the political systems are working together to keep every issue to two ideas, and those ideas are usually wrapped up with the "blind faith" in one side of the political "spectrum" (which in reality has many dimensions, despite that fact that politics makes us think there are only one or two).

  24. narrow minded nonsense by CProgrammer98 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Max Planck was told in 1874 when looking for a university course "it is hardly worth entering physics anymore because there is nothing important left to discover”

    This was long before the days of the atomic model, quantum mechanics, radiation, wave-particle duality etc. All that good stuff that brought us all our shiny electronics and the internet,.

    The same is still true - the more we know the more we realise that there's a lot more we still don;t know. Just in the last week I've read about gravity dipoles in qyuantum vacuum fluctuations, and discovery of very dark planets to name but two (ok the latter is a discovery rather than an idea, but we'll now need to work on explaining it, which may lead to new tech., or it may not). It just takes a very very long time for these esoteric ideas to turn into actual useful every day stuff.

    --
    And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour Isaiah 3:5
    1. Re:narrow minded nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You might want to remove the quotes from that "quotation" since (a) it's a paraphrasing of (b) a remark made in German.

    2. Re:narrow minded nonsense by avg_joe_01 · · Score: 1

      I like this idea. I think it's spot on. I'm the first one to complain about a lack of new ideas and how (especially in movies lately!) it's all been done, but lately I've realized that the process of churning out new and innovative ideas takes time and patience, which is not part of our current model. The ideas that fill the gaps are probably going to be constant rehashes of existing ideas because they are already available and can be quickly converted. The rehashes themselves are also not without value, even though we may be sick of them already. I just hope the "filler" ideas don't become too influential; I hope that the new ideas don't quash or artificially direct the new, innovative stuff out of its natural habitat and thereby limit its relevance and/or survival.

    3. Re:narrow minded nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might like to bear in mind they are "speech marks" not "quote marks".

  25. Survival of the most fit to survive by MrKaos · · Score: 1

    This is why our vapid society has driven over the edge of the cliff and is in that moment of free fall as the ground rushes up to deliver us to our eventual fate. Big ideas don't matter to most of the population because they think we are flying so big ideas that solve problems just aren't relevant to them any more. Meanwhile stockmarkets oscillate wildly and politicians cannot come up with solutions to the most fundamental structural issues facing our society.

    Those who are coming up with those big ideas are enlightened enough to realise that we are falling and are try desperately to stop us from crashing our entire society into an oblivion where the few of us who do survive will speak of times where we used to do the impossible around campfire in the relics of our civilisation.

    --
    My ism, it's full of beliefs.
  26. The nutcases of wayback are todays smart classics by Qbertino · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think the problem here is that good essays and insights get lost in the everyday noise and only show their value as they persist over time and more and more people get to see the ingenuity and foresight in them.

    I don't think Senecas letters were very famous back then or well know beyond a very small group of people (those he wrote them to). And I also am pretty sure that most citizens of the roman empire didn't care squat about a broad transcendent view on life beyond 'lets pray to jupiter as to win this racing bet'. It is only centuries latter that the quality stuff is still around whilst everyday drivel and non-sense go lost in time and replaced with todays everday drivel and non-sense. Thus we get the impression that back in Senecas time society was full of smart and witty politicians and philosophers making great speeches.

    When people in 200 years look at todays Inet Tech era and read Paul Grahams essays - which will still exist while every techcrunch feed will have gone the way of the dodo - people will get the same impression. Lot's of very smart and educated people back then, everything today is degenerated, grand old masters, blabla, jadajada ...

    My 2 cents.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  27. Really though? by Twinbee · · Score: 1

    Maybe that's because a lot of the good ideas have already been thought of, so the low hanging fruit is nearly gone. However, there's still a lot of low hanging fruit left (for example my own software project I'm currently working on which x?yy***yzzzzz%%%yyr***trvvrtv), and also that heatsink which rotates instead of the fan rotating. See the programme "Dragon's Den" for many more examples.

    --
    Why OpalCalc is the best Windows calc
  28. Patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With patents covering up basic day to day things like clicking a mouse button, how do you want new ground breaking ideas to be implemented ? Even if they are truly new and were never thought of before, they will still most likely infringe on an existing patent. Once the idea starst disrupting the market,big players with huge patent portfolio will come out and kill it through prosecution or buy it and bury it.

    I have no research to back my claim though.

  29. It's true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here are some big ideas, in no particular order. Good luck making them happen.

    Gov't:
    Monetary policy: Sell all the gold in ft knox, depressing the gold futures market, and getting investors to put money back into stocks/bonds/banks. Give the revenue to NASA. Barriers are rich a-holes with congressman in pocket.
    Social policy: How about a 1 time amnesty deal for illegal immigrants. If you can show your visa was stamped a year ago, you get amnesty, but never get to collect social security/medicare/food stamps etc. Barriers are poor a-holes in thrall to rich ones.
    Technology:
    Handhelds: Develop rifle mounts for androids, the rifle is a device. Trigger pulls upload camera stills to command. This changes the PR,training,tactical goals, all at once, provides the grunt with new capabilities. Barriers are patents and bureaucracy.
    Agriculture:
    Cheaper robots mean more distributed farming, greater safety from famine and more health. Good luck getting funding for that, you're putting farmers out of business!
    Space:
    How about we start using those rail guns to shoot projectiles filled with ice into orbit. A satellite could catch them and use solar arrays to start splitting up the water into H and O for rocket fuel to the stars. See the first idea for why this isn't easy, nasa doesn't have any money.

    These ideas are free and public domain. ENJOY.

  30. I will agree... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Woody Allen movies are far less known than the latest Vin Diesel or The Rock movies. A baby doesn't laugh at a joke with a long setup because they just don't get it. Most people wandering around have really experienced so little that shows like the Office go like mad because people can just relate. It's sad because we really are blowing away our human experience and the wisdom of the ages because it's not in a glossy package.

  31. There are several factors at play here by fridaynightsmoke · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ideas are plentiful. With ~7,000,000,000 people in the world and a large & growing fraction of them having access to the internet, there are ideas everywhere. You're reading my ideas right now, along with those of hundreds of other people all on this one page.

    Ideas are easy. Any idiot can come up with ideas. World peace. Flying cars that run on dog poo. Cities on the moon. Ideas are substantially easier to come up with than they are to actually implement. People who come up with 'concepts' for residential towers with farms hanging off the sides; or city vehicles with odd numbers of wheels powered by unobtanium, or political systems where everyone just gets along and are happy are ten a penny, and the abundance of communication that the internet provides makes this painfully obvious.

    There are fewer 'good' big ideas left. With all the ideas that everyone has already had and are coming up with all the time, fewer new ideas are actually 'original'; and the originality of an idea can be quickly proved or disproved with 30 seconds on Google.

    Specialisation. With the bigger ideas aleady thought of and written about, the lions share of ideas these days is in specialised niches; the 'long tail' if you will. The problem is that such ideas cannot capture the imagination of people at large. There are people coming more ideas than ever, but it's hard to raise enthusiasm for big ideas in computer science or industrial management.

    "Good-old-fashioned nostalgia" History seems to be chock full of bold people with big ideas, but a lot of the time it's just dumb nostalgia. Sure, those Victorians wrote a lot of well-considered books and built a fair deal of physical and social infrastructure that persists to this day, but we're talking about 60-100 years here. The innovations and achievements of the past 60 years blow any other 60 year period in history into oblivion. Of course in the past everyone was more 'rational' (ignoring the bigger participation in and seriousness of religion then), was 'healthier' (ignoring the starvation), 'got on better' (ignoring the regular riots/wars/crime) blah blah blah. Probably back then concerned intellectuals railed against the talents of the world being wasted on arranging girders to support mechanical horses, or on the manufacture of cloth etc. No doubt in 100 years time people will be talking in hushed tones about those 'heroes' of the early 21st century, when there were big ideas, and people lived happily in peace without the nefarious influence of xx yy...

    --
    This is a substitute for a clever sig that fits within the maximum number of characters.
    1. Re:There are several factors at play here by vlm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course in the past everyone was more 'rational' (ignoring the bigger participation in and seriousness of religion then)

      You're looking at the rewriting of history and thinking the rewrite is true. "The victorians" were much less constrained by religion than we currently are today. All of that "founded by christians" and "in god we trust" is a post WWII addition to the history books, mostly on a anti-commie trip.

      Your basic argument remains correct, that was just a bad example.

      One important point you missed is its too expensive to F around. For example, a large part of quantum mechanics was brought about by shining a UV light on a piece of metal and being surprised at the highly unexpected characteristics of the emitted electrons. Back then, a guy could F around in the lab and pretty much do what he wants without a PERT chart. Most time spent screwing around in the lab, was, of course, wasted, but some time developed into the field of quantum mechanics. Now a days, you're not going to be allowed to do blue sky experimentation at a billion dollar national lab, therefore, no progress will be made there. Whoops. The MBA manager points at the PERT chart and says, here is where you'll invent something on schedule and as planned. Or most likely not.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    2. Re:There are several factors at play here by mochan_s · · Score: 1

      Ideas are plentiful

      Ideas are infinite and ideas are possibly independent of humans as well. When we talk about ideas, we are possibly talking about a subset of those that would lead to better human lives; finding those good ones among the many useless ones is what is not plentiful. It's not evident that just having more people could lead to finding those good ideas, especially if there are rewards for good ideas.

      Ideas are easy

      Again good ideas are not easy.

      There are fewer 'good' big ideas left

      For all we know, there might be an infinite number of good big ideas and would probably never be fewer of great ideas.

      Specialization

      Every teenager knows something about the intricacies of operating systems and telecommunication systems now - something of a niche 10 years ago. People use the freeway everyday where 100 years ago it would be niche. The tail of a distribution is still an infinite, under a condition can be a [0,1] distribution.

      Good-old-fashioned nostalgia

      Today's benefits were ideas of people generations ago and the whole point of the article was that maybe good ideas aren't being promoted as well as before. We have to keep a careful check to make sure new good ideas are constantly being generated even though the benefits will not probably be realized in our lifetimes.

    3. Re:There are several factors at play here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Of course in the past everyone was more 'rational' (ignoring the bigger participation in and seriousness of religion then)

      One important point you missed is its too expensive to F around. For example, a large part of quantum mechanics was brought about by shining a UV light on a piece of metal and being surprised at the highly unexpected characteristics of the emitted electrons. Back then, a guy could F around in the lab and pretty much do what he wants without a PERT chart. Most time spent screwing around in the lab, was, of course, wasted, but some time developed into the field of quantum mechanics. Now a days, you're not going to be allowed to do blue sky experimentation at a billion dollar national lab, therefore, no progress will be made there. Whoops. The MBA manager points at the PERT chart and says, here is where you'll invent something on schedule and as planned. Or most likely not.

      The pressure on everyone today to hatch instantly monetized innovations is the restricting factor. All the major advances in physics took place early in the 20th century, when professors were allowed to speculate the theoretical without the university or commercial lab they worked for demanding something patentable today. From universities to corporate R&D, theoretical work is starving. Yes, Edison tried to monetize electricity, about a hundred years after Franklin proved its existence. The great explorers tried to monetize the discoveries of Gallileo. Theoretical work precedes real innovation. Today, we don't see innovation; we see refinements of existing ideas -- better cell phones, more powerful microprocessors; but is anyone playing with a successor to the transistor, or really esoteric sources of energy? We call these innovations, but they are far from the major theoretical accomplishments of earlier generations.

      Another aspect is the choking nature of the outrageous patents being granted. Patents are being granted for mere concepts (like one-click ordering) and patent trolls exist merely to extort money from anyone who tries to innovate. As a result, I wonder how many innovations are happening in garages anymore -- like Henry Ford's assembly line, Apple Computer, Microsoft software, the Wright Brothers airplane, etc., etc., etc.

        Maybe we're just coming off an especially creative time, and it's just a natural slump; but there really is less patience for theoretical discussions than there were in previous generations. Americans of the 19th century discussed politics at length, along with the nature of man, political economy, geometry and math, etc. Benjamin Franklin was a printer, who became a statesman and dabbled in theoretical science. Nobody can do that anymore; their "discoveries" would get laughed out the door of the office as they pack up their desk. These days, if it's not on American Idol, Americans don't want to hear it.

    4. Re:There are several factors at play here by howlingfrog · · Score: 1

      Regarding nostalgia, don't forget the test-of-time effect. We think Victorian literature, 1930s movies, Ancient Greek philosophy, etc. are superior to today's because only the worthwhile stuff stuck around. There was a Michael Bay in early Hollywood. There was a Danielle Steele in 1880s London. There was a Glenn Beck in 1790s Philadelphia. We just don't republish them any more.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    5. Re:There are several factors at play here by radtea · · Score: 1

      The innovations and achievements of the past 60 years blow any other 60 year period in history into oblivion

      1951 - 2011 saw spaceflight, micro-electronics, computers and the Internet, and cell phones.

      1891 - 1951 saw aircraft, movies, vacuum tube technology, radio, television, universal electrification, the shift from coal to oil, anti-biotics, insulin, universal vaccination, nuclear reactors, nuclear weapons, rocketry, the automobile...

      The pace of change in the latter half of the 20th century was much, much slower the first half. It merely looks faster because it is closer.

      My impression is that the pace is picking up again, but that could just be getting old.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    6. Re:There are several factors at play here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The innovations and achievements of the past 60 years" pale into insignificance beside those of 1850-1910. Think about it:

      Railways - made cities as we know them possible. Before railways, you had to live within a few hours' cart-journey of your food source. Big, sprawling cities, such as London, had patches of farmland right in areas that we're accustomed to thinking of as "the middle" of them.

      Electrification, refrigeration, sewerage, running water, the internal combustion engine, antiseptic surgery, the telephone... Each of these things, I suggest, changed our everyday lives more than the entire field of IT has managed yet. If computers didn't exist, many of us would be living much the same lives, just with a lot more paper. But if you can't get clean fresh water out of a tap... that really makes a difference.

    7. Re:There are several factors at play here by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      You're looking at the rewriting of history and thinking the rewrite is true. "The victorians" were much less constrained by religion than we currently are today. All of that "founded by christians" and "in god we trust" is a post WWII addition to the history books, mostly on a anti-commie trip.

      Agree with the general point. But your specific examples are off.

      No one ever disputed that almost all of the "Founding Fathers" were practicing Christians. Tolerant ones, it is true. And quite a few had some qualms about certain tenets of Christianity (as most "Christians" do today), some more than others. (One can argue about Deism all you want, but the fact is that except for Jefferson and a couple others, everybody pretty much went to a mainstream Christian church and publicly supported them.) But the "history books" didn't mention it until recently because everyone assumed it was true. It's only with the rise and recognition of multiculturalism that we had to mention it, and admittedly, some people have gotten defensive about it.

      As for "In God We Trust," that's been on currency since the Civil War. And it probably derives from The Star-Spangled Banner's final verse ("...and this be our motto, in God is our trust..."), which of course was written during the War of 1812. It became the national motto after WWII, but it was an important element of U.S. patriotic imagery for at least a century before that.

      Again, this is not to dispute your larger point.

  32. Ideas. Not Inventions. by ThosLives · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Too many comments so far are missing the point: the article isn't about lack of new "things." The article is about a lack of critical thinking.

    It used to be that, in the past, magazines and newspapers and other "common-man" publications would have essays about heady topics. Now you just get articles about how to get rich quick, how some superstar or politician has done something, or some other essentially mundane topic.

    Even the "debates" on economics, social norms, climate change, or intellectual property are very sparse on respectful discourse and are instead filled with emotional responses. There's an interesting quote to which I cannot recall attribution, along the lines of "If you get angry when you're defending your topic, that's probably a sign that you don't feel it can stand on its own merits." The lack of temperance in such discussions - from all viewpoints - is fairly damning.

    Modern society seems to frown upon thought for thought's sake: if you can't monetize it, why bother? I'd say that "modern society" in this case has missed the point: earning wealth is not the only goal.

    --
    "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    1. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Isn't the best example of this the piece itself?

    2. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      No way. You're a stupid head. ;)

      As I remember, in the past there were fewer ads, business was a more respected profession, and people were more excited by changing the world than in money. Intelligent discourse was more common too. Read an Archie comic from the 50s... the characters talk about words, definitions, puns. Not so much now.

    3. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The debates didn't disappear, they just moved. Real debates now take place on forums like Slashdot (yes scary I know). These are much better suited to the critical exchange of ideas because they're structured as a conversation rather than an essay from just one person who may or may not have anything useful/worthwhile to say. I've encountered more new ideas on Slashdot than all the newspapers I've ever read, and I've seen plenty of ideas that initially sounded good be debunked as well.

      I have to say, I've always wondered why the Slashcode type format hasn't been more successful on other non-tech sites. I suspect the user interface, especially the partially hidden tree structure, isn't very easy to handle for many people. I also suspect the very wide and huge space devoted to comments wouldn't mesh well with many sites pre-existing designs. Sadly the result is that too often the comments are just a long list of unmoderated, artificially shortened blurbs with no reward system in place for producing something worth reading.

    4. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      I've encountered more new ideas on Slashdot than all the newspapers I've ever read...

      Exactly...Slashdot is by no means a "common-man" publication. The mainstream media doesn't really espouse deep thinking any more.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    5. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Mandrel · · Score: 1

      If you've got any ideas on how to structure a high quality forum that's easy for people to start using, I invite you to add them here.

    6. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd agree with you, but I don't. That quote is made by someone in power. It is wrong.

      "If you get angry when you're defending your topic, that's probably a sign that you don't feel it can stand on its own merits." The lack of temperance in such discussions - from all viewpoints - is fairly damning.

      The fact that you quote the one in power says it all. It's damning to the community below it. You therefore support the same social order you then condemn. That configures a rather dim enlightenment.

      If we live in a one-eyed society, the other half doesn't get any merit (but oppression). So the above is a sign of social weakness covered up by dominance, like in governance by power, not authority, where arguments have no merit, because they do not really matter. We are trapped by knowledge. And we all know it to be true.

      That process is covered up by wisdom carried over from a time where persons were in fact persons, with real feelings, not agents looking for status, whom have no merit in themselves, but are in power nevertheless.

      Need a great idea, the biggest in fact, but also the simplest: www.dauntown.com. If you can muster it. If you aren't conceptually trapped in preconceived notions about Christ and the world and hide at one side of the dichotomy.

      Christ has a message, and it's directed at us, "modern men", willing to create ourselves in a society befitting to whom we **need** to be. One that hears the voice we have, without insult.

    7. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      There's an interesting quote to which I cannot recall attribution, along the lines of "If you get angry when you're defending your topic, that's probably a sign that you don't feel it can stand on its own merits." The lack of temperance in such discussions - from all viewpoints - is fairly damning.

      That sounds like something said by someone who's good at keeping a cool head in an argument. And of _course_ he's always right, ergo...

      Judging arguments by emotional content is stupid, whether you prejudice yourself towards the people who speak out passionately or towards the people who stay calm but are good at riling up the other side. Judge by what they say, not the tone in which they say it.

      Just as there is no cause so just that you cannot find an easily provoked fool following it, there is rarely a cause so foolish that you can't find an otherwise calm and intelligent person bamboozled by it. (Or supporting it for hidden ulterior motives of course.)

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    8. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by PPH · · Score: 1

      Critical thinking is discouraged by those at the top of the social power structure. It makes the population difficult to control.

      Back in the old days (pre Internet) people with different ideas could be written off as crackpots and pushed into obscurity. Now, its more difficult to accomplish this. For an example, look at the Arab Spring and the enabling effect that social networking had. Even the Soviet August 1991 coup against Gorbachev failed in part because the Communist Party could no longer control technology like pagers and fax machines, enabling a popular resistance movement to build around Yeltsin. So now, its easier to swamp the signals from the thinkers under noise about Lady Gaga and the Kardashians than it is to unplug their network.

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
    9. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      That sounds like something said by someone who's good at keeping a cool head in an argument. And of _course_ he's always right, ergo...

      I really didn't quote it correctly, to be sure. The idea behind the quote isn't that you can't be angry about the thing which causes you to have a discussion, but that you shouldn't resort to anger as a means to get your point across. I wish I could find the actual quote...

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    10. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      Okay, i certainly agree that staying calm during a debate/argument is a goal that should be striven for. I just don't think failure to reach/maintain that goal is necessarily an indicator either that the idea is wrong or that the person doesn't believe in the idea sufficiently.

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    11. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Similar quote
      Violence is an admission that one's ideas and goals cannot prevail on their own merits.
      ~Edward M. Kennedy

    12. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by howlingfrog · · Score: 1

      It used to be that, in the past, magazines and newspapers and other "common-man" publications would have essays about heady topics.

      Yes, very very rarely. Just like today.

      Now you just get articles about how to get rich quick, how some superstar or politician has done something, or some other essentially mundane topic.

      Just as it's always been--we only remember the occasional exceptions because they're the only things worth remembering.

      Even the "debates" on economics, social norms, climate change, or intellectual property are very sparse on respectful discourse and are instead filled with emotional responses.

      Andrew Jackson. Aaron Burr. Adolph Hitler. Eisenhower-Stephenson. McCarthy. As bad as it is now--and it is pretty bad--it was ten times worse in antebellum America, and even that was a dramatic improvement over any previous civilization in the history of the world.

      --
      The original Howling Frog is a fictional character and has no UID.
    13. Re:Ideas. Not Inventions. by Comrade+Ogilvy · · Score: 1

      When exactly was this golden age of reasoned debate and difficult ideas debated rationally in public?

      The US Civil War, the Spanish-American War, the massive US intervention in Vietnam, the 2003 invasion of Iraq were all manufactured political crises where emotionalism won the day over reason.

  33. Big Ideas are there; he just doesn't see them by Will+Steinhelm · · Score: 1

    If the author thinks that a big idea looks like "Marx or a Nietzsche," he's going to be waiting a while. The definition of a "big idea" is that it is novel and game-changing, but based on the examples he gives in the article it appears that what the author is really lamenting is that the world no longer sees the philosophies that excited him in his formative years as new and exciting. I'm not arguing for or against the validity of the examples he gives, but rather that they have matured and are by no means on the front lines of new ideas. Maybe he's just getting old.

  34. Space elevators and personal fission generators by tmosley · · Score: 1

    Weren't we JUST discussing space elevator technologies and personal fission generators that never needed refueling just a couple of days ago?

    End of ideas my ass. It's like those idiots in the late 1800's who thought they knew everything there was to know about the universe, and that all that was left was to "tie up the loose ends".

    1. Re:Space elevators and personal fission generators by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      uh, those ideas aren't exactly fresh.

      if you have an idea about how to actually do it and actually DID IT then personal fission and space elevators would be fresh - as it is, they're just on a slightly different theoretical level than a decade ago - or what they were in the 60's.

      which is a bit what causes the idea shortage - better knoweledge about previous ideas. you can't have the idea's that were used to push the communist revolution now and call them new ideas. you could do that in early 1900's though, even if the same idea's had been used elsewhere before.

      in internal combustion engines there was a period of about 70 years where you could invent stuff, have a glorious idea, execute it and sell it - and only after that read in history books that someone had executed the idea long before you.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    2. Re:Space elevators and personal fission generators by Wovel · · Score: 1

      Of course they are fresh until they are implemented proven impractical. It is easy to claim there are o big ideas by simply shrugging off the ones people have been thinking about for a while.

    3. Re:Space elevators and personal fission generators by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Uhhh, those stories both had new ideas about how to make those things work. You don't think slashdot just reposts reposts for the sake of reposting reposts, do you?

      Don't answer that...

      But seriously, graphene is less than 6 years old, and stands to revolutionize the space elevator ribbon, in that it is easily mass produced at macro scales now, they just need to build a plant that is larger than lab scale (where they are already making 1mx1m squares, and the size was limited by the size of the bench they made it on in the lab). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphene

  35. Impact of IP by itilguy · · Score: 1

    Perhapps recent intelectual property protection process and corporate patent practices have served to stifle creativity or at least the promise of potential benefit for most individuals with a spirit of inginuity.

  36. This is ridiculous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is near impossible to dedicate one's life for brewing great ideas for the benefit of mankind. How on earth am I supposed to fund that? The second I have to spend eight hours working to make ends meet, I've already occupied myself with such high hindrances that make formulating great ideas nigh impossible.

    I was not lucky to be born into aristocracy-- on the contrary, I was born to the bottom 1% of wealth distribution in my country.

    Still, it was not enough. I did not know where to dedicate my research before I was 25, and by then it was already too late to fund the research without considerable out of curriculum work. It is infuriating, as I'm absolutely certain that given a few years of time and funding, I would be able to contribute significantly to one of the most important fields of modern sciences.

    And University studies are not always the way either, as some fields have been corrupted with false premises almost a century ago, effectively crippling everyone who is force-fed with the reigning ideas, barring them from reaching the conclusion hidden in plain sight.

    If only there were active patrons today who would fund the independent (or collaborated) research of motivated young people with great ideas. Even research institutes effectively require you to have at least Master's degree, and to complete that you need to absorb parrot false ideas for several years.

    It is so, so infuriating-- I guess this is how impotency feels.

  37. List of Big Ideas by boyfaceddog · · Score: 1

    Communism
    Fascism
    Eugenics
    Killing off all bothersome insects with DDT
    Endless suburbs
    A car in every garage
    The Atomic Bomb
    Perfect White Bread
    Cheap sweeteners
    Eliminating all infectious disease with antibiotics

    I know I don't trust big ideas because those ideas are usually the ones that lead to big problems.

    --
    Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
    1. Re:List of Big Ideas by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      Just a few added to your list...

      Plastics
      Corporations as People
      Lawyers
      Spy Satellites
      Patented Seeds
      Farm Subsidies
      Corn Subsidies (cheap sweeteners)
      Sugar Tariffs
      NAFTA
      DMCA
      Perpetual Copyright
      Soap Operas
      Fruit Roll Ups
      Nachos without onions...

      Though, I would point out that DDT is very effective in eliminating malaria-carrying mosquitoes in high malaria areas... The elimination of DDT has caused an unchecked increase in malaria throughout those areas affected by the disease. (It was almost wiped out.) Still, one poison for another... gets you to wondering. :) National Geographic had a great article about it (and malaria) a while back... (too lazy to google it right now.)

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    2. Re:List of Big Ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why we have politicians battling over the middle ground, trying to look as innocuous as possible and winning votes by pointing out the failures of incumbents rather than by selling their own ideas.

      That's not to say that big ideas aren't still attractive. Monetarism was a big idea and one that a surprising amount of people still believe in. Arguably, the Tea Party is a big idea organisation - not a good idea, but a big one. Seems like all the big ideas are on the right, the left having yet to get over the loss of the cold war.

      ...fewer people are generating them and fewer outlets are disseminating them, the Internet notwithstanding.

      Yeah, well where else do you think ideas live these days? There's a ton of brilliant thinking and debate happening on the Internet, holy wars not withstanding. From the Tea Party to the Arab Spring, it's bringing big ideas into reality. It's the new home of unfashionable left wing politics and right wing conspiracy theorising. While big media stifles political debate to fit it's own dated world view, the Internet has taken over as the place where ideological battles are won and lost.

    3. Re:List of Big Ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The poor blind wandering dude getting his rug back would be the biggest f'n idea all day.

    4. Re:List of Big Ideas by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Dude plastics rock. And spy satellites are just misused mapping satellites.

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    5. Re:List of Big Ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot transistors, microprocessors, motion pictures, audio recordings, video recordings, artificial heart valves, artificial joints, the natural rights of man, the dignity of every human, freedom of the individual conscience, long distance communication (telegraph, telephone, radio, internet), terraced farming, atomic energy, mass production, assembly lines, the airfoil, jet propulsion, quantum mechanics, relativity, partical physics.....

      Those are just the most recent ones I can think of.

      ALL human endeavors yield good and bad results. The challenge for society is to choose the good.

    6. Re:List of Big Ideas by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      Better life through plastics... or was it chemistry?

      I mentioned satellites because of Sputnik and the "spy hysteria" the western world was caught up in after it launched. :) I personally want a nuclear powered car like the wrecks I find in Fallout 3. :)

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    7. Re:List of Big Ideas by boyfaceddog · · Score: 1

      My point exactly. Every endeavor had good as its aim but somewhere along the road to a better world the law of unintended consequences jumps out and hijacks the caravan. DDT was fantastic and it DID save lives. Communism is a wonderful theory to show the inherent evils of capitalism. High Fructose Corn Syrup is a great and cheap way to make sweet, low-cost foods. All of these things are good but the damage wreaked by these big ideas outweighs any benefits we could possibly obtain.

      Oh, and the items on your list are the flip side of the coin. These are the things that -- so far -- no one has managed to screw up. With the exception of atomic energy. I think one might go on my list after this year.

      --
      Here will be an old abusing of God's patience and the king's English.
  38. Idea Poofery by Azghoul · · Score: 1

    This guy seems to be wanting to coin the "idea" that "ideas are dead".

  39. What? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Now we have the Snuggie, dammit!

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:What? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

      Don't forget social media and the Shake Weight!

      --
      "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  40. It's a trap by stoicio · · Score: 1

    Yes. Then he can copyright the 'Post Idea World' idea and sue everyone who coins it for money.
    The 'medium' is not the 'message', it's a trap.

  41. here's a high-minded concept for you: by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    historical myopia

    the perception things are changing, only because you are forgetting how things really were

    people are not more or less susceptible to bad ideas, or outrageous propaganda, or visual aesthetic, than they were in 2011 BC as they are now. why? because sociology and psychology are constants. culture and civilization changes, not our basic mental weaknesses and strengths

    this idea that certain social phenomena are getting worse over time is a side effect of forgetting. when in truth, much of social phenomena are constants across all cultures and all times. you see it constantly inn conservative thinking: freak outs about rising crime, barbarism, immorality, disrespect... when of course, these things are constant, if not getting better. there is no magical past, there is only nostalgia: the effect of forgetting all the bad parts, remembering only the good, and misremembering made up feel good impressions

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    1. Re:here's a high-minded concept for you: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I remember when keyboards used to have a shift key. Although really, if I had to give up shift to get rid of caps-lock, I guess I'd make the same decision you did.

    2. Re:here's a high-minded concept for you: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you could make a movie about ahistorical zombies. That would be great.

  42. Total BS by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    The Author of the article looks at todays popular culture and wonders where all the big ideas are... they had big ideas 100 years ago he says! But he's comparing today's popular culture to yesterdays underground subculture. If he were to look at the pop-culture of 100 years ago he'd see a plethora of paperback westerns in which Indians were evil savages. There's plenty of big ideas going on right now, all the author is revealing is the not-so-new trend of the media being too lazy to go look for it.

    1. Re:Total BS by callmehank · · Score: 1

      I think his point was that the plethora of garbage information has drowned out the voice of critical thought and analysis.

  43. On modern heroes & the democratisation of cult by Aceticon · · Score: 2

    I would say that the dearth of grand-visions problem is twofold:
    - One one side, is the widespread, modern concept of the "hero", the one people others look up to. The "heroes" of today are sportsman and celebrities, not thinkers or explorers which both feeds and reflects a society that values luck, inherent ability and monetary success above all.
    - On the other side is the democratisation of culture, where everybody is supposed to have a voice and (unsurprisingly) those who think the least, react the fastest, use the shortest soundbites and shout the most drown out those who actually think about things.

  44. Ah, that'd be a list of Big False Lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DDT IS NOT BANNED. It was intended to be used where necessary and not for spraying widely over crops. However, it WAS used like that and mozzies started to show resistance to DDT. It was ALWAYS not for agricultural spraying and the ban is an explicit ban on agricultural spraying.

    The biggest reduction of malaria cases were far cheaper use of insecticidal mosquito nets. NOTE: FAR CHEAPER. This is a problem for a company who can sell DDT in huge quantities for indiscriminate spraying.

    Cases of death by malaria HAS NOT increased since DDT spraying stopped and HAS DECREASED with more widespread use of nets.

    I would suggest if you wish to inform yourself, you check out what's going on, rather than relying on a PR puff piece from the chemical brothers.

    1. Re:Ah, that'd be a list of Big False Lies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to welcome you and your mosquito net to my Rio de Janeiro apartment in the middle of dengue season.

    2. Re:Ah, that'd be a list of Big False Lies. by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      Tell that to National Geographic... where I read most of what I wrote.

      Guess they're the chemical brothers, troll.

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
    3. Re:Ah, that'd be a list of Big False Lies. by Doctor_Jest · · Score: 1

      Oh, and BY THE WAY, Pedantic Pete... Chemical resistance to DDT by mosquitoes happened in areas where DDT was used in FARMING. There IS no chemical resistance when DDT is used to fight malaria... because it doesn't take a HUGE dose of DDT to protect people FROM malaria (Ecuador, when it increased DDT usage malaria rates went DOWN 60%. And places where DDT was curtailed? MALARIA RATES WENT UP, sparky.)

      DDT is STILL the leading help in combating malaria in the REAL world... not fucking mosquito nets. Next time you start ranting about chemicals, Mr. EDF... take some Drano. Do the world a favor.

      --
      It's the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
  45. We're not even having the same conversation by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People are just doing their own shit. There can't be era-defining ideas because all the different little conversations we're having don't even connect anymore. For an idea to make an impact on society, we first need a society that's more or less on the same page. That's what's missing. Sure, the internet makes everything easier, including the communication of ideas. Just look at fora.tv or bigthink or TED. You can fill every free minute listening to brilliant people talk about some pretty deep ideas. But what you can't expect is that these ideas will be a part of some larger social conversation. They happen off to the side somewhere. My academic friends and I give a fuck, but not many other people do. Or maybe they do, but they have no idea that I do too, because nobody can assume anymore that the people standing around the watercooler read the same "ideas" books, saw the same "ideas" discussion - or even the same news program. Only events are a part of our common culture, so you can talk to anyone about Breivik, or dumping Bin Laden's body in the sea, or the future of the Euro. But there are very few ideas in general social circulation, apart from maybe stuff about Keynsian interventions and other macroeconimic stuff. These are big ideas for sure, but nobody I know (myself included) feels like they have any solid understanding of what's involved. Macroeconomics looks like voodoo, so it's hard to talk about while feeling like you're having an informed conversation.

    It's not just nostalgia or some historical distortion that things were different between the two world wars. There was relativity, Communism, anarchism, feminism/sufferage, the uncertainty principle, Bauhaus functionalism and a dozen other art "schools" organized around ideas, the incompleteness theorem, Freud, social Darwinism, logical positivism... and I really could go on and on. And cafes were abuzz with conversation about this very stuff. Not everyone had an opinion about all of it, but everyone did have an opinion about some of it, and it was in your face, because people took it as obvious that these aren't just ideas. Each one you accept gives you an obligation to act, and these actions were impossible to miss for anyone who lived in a major European or North American city. Things really are quite different now. Big ideas are still being thought, but somewhere out of sight. Which means that they don't get a chance to get "big" in the same way they used to be.

    1. Re:We're not even having the same conversation by callmehank · · Score: 1

      Well at least someone wrote an article about it, and Slashdot put it up. It would have been a sin of omission not to.

      Much of what social media has done is to place real-time junk information on equal footing with thoughtful discourse. There's no filtering the noise, no prioritization.

    2. Re:We're not even having the same conversation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Is that really different from the past, though? Yes, Norman Mailer and Gore Vidal went on talk shows (the author's example). As far as I can tell, all the article really says is that he no longer watches talk shows, because he goes on to complain about Richard Dawkins not getting the same kind of treatment... but Richard Dawkins is on TV all the time. He makes a circuit every time he has a new book out. He has TV specials. He goes on lecture / reading tours.

      Yes, Richard Dawkins has to compete with Snookie and the American Idol flavor of the week for attention. Does the author not remember that Marilyn Monroe and Grace Kelley and a whole host of other movie stars were competing for air time with Gore Vidal in the 60s? The worthless stuff gets forgotten over the course of 100 years, but I guarantee you that there was a lot of it competing for time with Freud and Marx.

      So let's go through your list and find some parallels in recent history: string theory, moderate socialism and universal health care, nihilism, gay rights, the multiverse, neomodernism and a bunch of loosely grouped design schools working in cross-cultural fusion styles, NP Completeness, Dr. Phil (he's wrong, but so was Freud), memetics, pragmatism (which coincidentally was developed partially as a critique of logical positivism)... all these things, as well as all the things you listed, are being debated vigorously on the internet 24 hours a day, as well as in person by a fair number of people.

      I'm not saying the author is completely wrong... there's a definitely worrying strain of anti-intellectualism in recent public discourse on a national scale, and our news media has certainly declined a bit from the standards of quality they once held. But that removes a section of the populace from the debate... it doesn't destroy the debate altogether, unless your standard is that every single person cares as much as you do.

    3. Re:We're not even having the same conversation by cartman · · Score: 1

      It's not just nostalgia or some historical distortion that things were different between the two world wars. There was relativity, Communism, anarchism, feminism/sufferage, the uncertainty principle, Bauhaus functionalism and a dozen other art "schools" organized around ideas, the incompleteness theorem, Freud, social Darwinism, logical positivism... and I really could go on and on.

      I submit that part of what you're saying is just nostalgia. You're bringing up Communism, relativity, the incompleteness theorem, Freud, and logical positivism, but those ideas aren't from the same period. Those ideas span almost a century. You've compressed a century's worth of ideas into the single inter-war period, which is precisely the problem with our evaluation of the past: we compress it and pay attention only to the highlights. Freud was not a contemporary of A.J Ayer.

      Granted, there may be less discussion now of the ideas you mentioned (like communism). However the reason isn't because people are less intellectual, but rather, because there is consensus now, and many of those ideas are discredited. Almost everyone agrees on Democracy and some form of capitalism. The remaining questions involve things like how much regulation we should have of banks.

      Part of the reason there's consensus now is because some of the ideas you mentioned (like Communism and Social Darwinism) were frankly idiotic to begin with and were popular only because they're so amenable to vulgar forms.

      For example, Marxism was totally idiotic to begin with. I'm not talking here about the failure of communist economies. I'm talking about the economic ideas of Marx, with which I'm very familiar. Marx deduced everything from the labor theory of value, which is easily refuted and could be proven false at the time, and which was refuted to any reasonable person's satisfaction within a decade of Capital's publication. But it's not just that; almost every page of Marx is filled with severe intellectual errors or obvious problems, and almost every prediction of his was refuted almost right away by events. Marx was a second-rate mind, if even that, and almost everyone within academic economics rightly thought so. Quoting Keynes: "Marxian Socialism must always remain a portent to the historians of Opinion — how a doctrine so illogical and so dull can have exercised so powerful and enduring an influence over the minds of men, and, through them, the events of history."

      I suspect Marxism prevailed because it was a theory so capable of simplification and vulgar understanding. What most people meant when they said Marxism, was something along the lines of "greedy people are stealing everything through profits, and if we just get rid of those people, and just care for each other, and pass laws that all wages must be much higher, then everything will be wonderful." Marxism is a perfect vulgar opinion: it reduces all our problems to a single cause (greedy businessmen and their profits), it locates an identifiable group within society which is responsible for everything bad, it posits a promised land if we just do x, it can be easily reduced to a few sound-bites even if they misrepresent the original, it has a mystical core doctrine which nobody has read, and so on. Frankly it's like some of the other "ideas" you mentioned: social Darwininsm, Anarchism, and even Fascism (which you didn't mention but was certainly prevalent during the period you're talking about). These aren't really "grand ideas" but rather vulgar ideas. If anything, the inter-war period you speak of was when everyone thought he was an intellectual. I'm not sure that was better. It was definitely worse in some of its consequences.

    4. Re:We're not even having the same conversation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "When I was younger and spent a lot of time in cafes talking about ideas, I saw a lot more people in cafes talking about ideas. Now that I'm older and don't hear people engaged in college-age pondering of the imponderable like *we* once did, there's a lot less people pondering the imponderable!"

  46. Magics of money ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In reality, cheaper products are mandated because the slaves of today earn far less money than the people of older times; the same thing goes for making things faster ...

    Going back to the topic of Magic, the members of the Central Banking Cartels simply invoke money out of electrical patterns in computer hard drives (not exactly out of thin air, but as close as you can get). Similar magic is practiced in both Intellectual Property laws & Corporate tax code.

    Concerning the other ressources, the Magic involved would have to do with ecological use (instead of agro-chemical abuse) of the planet, along with space-mining, and perhaps a bit of trash-mining for what has been blatantly abused in the past.

  47. Re:I have an idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, let's eliminate the race difference. Then we'll be able to think about our differences of religions. After that, the differences about hair colors. And after that, the sex difference.

  48. I disagree by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If our ideas seem smaller nowadays, it's not because we are dumber than our forebears but because we just don't care as much about ideas as they did.

    I do not agree with this statement at all, people have ideas. The problem is that if they can actually make money then those ideas are quickly "stolen" by big corporations who know that an average individual does not have the resources necessary to fight them in court.

    So most people just keep their mouths shut.

    1. Re:I disagree by etwills · · Score: 1

      "If our ideas seem smaller nowadays, it's not because we are dumber than our forebears but..."

      If our ideas seem smaller nowadays, it's ... because we're standing on the shoulders of giants?

  49. Rule 34 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Rule #34 of the internet stops idea-generation through a negative Pavlov feedback loop. At some point you'll give up generating ideas after you've googled a few of your attempts, and already found porn of it.

  50. really... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I have no idea what you are talking about.

  51. It's the patent system, stupid. by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 2

    Seriously. Most people are motivated by money. If corporate ownership of patents were outlawed tomorrow, and only individual flesh-and-blood humans could hold patents, you'd see a creativity explosion of "big" AND small ideas.

    Ideas are a dime a dozen, but if, in order to work, my company forces me to sign a contract whereby it owns anything I think up, why bother? I'd go to another company, but they all do the same thing. I'd start my own company if I had the capital, but I don't. If I get the capital from someone else, I'm right back where I started from, signing away my patent rights.

    And no offense, but I don't want to publish a $500 million idea and get a $5K bonus and a pat on the head for it. Fuck 'em.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  52. The Failure of Ideas by howlinmonkey · · Score: 1

    Disillusionment with "ideas" permeates our culture and has lead to a lack of interest in pursuing and discussing new ideas. Despite all of the grand ideas of the past 125 years, our wealth gap is widening and for the first time we are losing ground financially, educationally and socially. All of the past ideas have not changed one thing about the realities we live with. As a matter of fact we could argue that many of those ideas got us into the mess we are facing today.

    People are tired of ideas. Ideas don't work in resolving the issues of survival most of our society is facing, they don't put food on the table, and they haven't lead us to the Promised Land envisioned by many Enlightenment and modernist thinkers.

    1. Re:The Failure of Ideas by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Yes, actually ideas did solve most of the issues people HAD. And it prevents them from coming back.

      " they don't put food on the table,"
      Thatc racks me up. It's because of a Big Idea that 1/3 of the human population even eats.
      Big Ideas is exactly why many people put food on their table.. not just food, but an abundance of food.

      The promised land is a goal you set to always be better. Here are some thing you might want to consider:
      Polio, pretty much GONE.
      Most childhood diseases, gone.
      Between those two things, child death has moved from expected, to tragic.
      Because of the highway system, my work option are far wider, my life style is higher, everyone's in the US's is higher.
      I can sit in my home and watch pretty much any movie any time.
      I can also go tot he park and play with a baseball. A purchase which helped put food on the table on the other side of the world.
      Contrary to what some people trying to choke this country have said, life is better then it was even 20 years ago.

      The current economy? would have LOVED for it to be this good in the 80's.
      Safety Crime? Way the fuck down since the 70's and 80s.

      In the US, it's like everyone forgot to look at history when the bitch or put forth complaints like yours.

      It will get better, and big ideas is what will do it.

      You can post on /. because of big ideas.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:The Failure of Ideas by howlinmonkey · · Score: 1

      That cracks me up. It's because of a Big Idea that 1/3 of the human population even eats. Big Ideas is exactly why many people put food on their table.. not just food, but an abundance of food.

      We have an abundance of unhealthy food. Simple carbs and fat laden crap. Most families can't afford to purchase fresh fruits and vegetables. Add to that the vast urban tracts that don't even have access to a decent grocery store and you can see that we have a real food problem that isn't being addressed.

      The promised land is a goal you set to always be better. Here are some thing you might want to consider: Polio, pretty much GONE. Most childhood diseases, gone. Between those two things, child death has moved from expected, to tragic. I can sit in my home and watch pretty much any movie any time. I can also go tot he park and play with a baseball. A purchase which helped put food on the table on the other side of the world. Contrary to what some people trying to choke this country have said, life is better then it was even 20 years ago.

      It is great that childhood diseases are gone. We have picked the low hanging fruit. We are making very little headway on resolving diseases of aging such as dementia, Alzheimers and cancer. The options that are available are so expensive that they are only available to people with $$$. We continue to defund research and pay pharmaceutical companies billions to create drugs to treat symptoms, but don't actually solve problems.

      Because of the highway system, my work option are far wider, my life style is higher, everyone's in the US's is higher.

      You can drive your car to a non-existent job? Well goody for you. Again, there is a large and growing underclass in this country that can't afford a car or the outrageous fuel prices to run it. Employment has stagnated and the options for employment have narrowed. It is a choice between something in the tech field or a low paying service job. Middle class jobs are becoming extinct.

      The current economy? would have LOVED for it to be this good in the 80's. Safety Crime? Way the fuck down since the 70's and 80s.

      I think you need to look at history and see that the majority of Americans are not benefiting from big ideas today. The gulf between rich and poor widens, access to basics like health care and education is becoming more difficult and real income is shrinking. Some things have gotten better. Increased access to broadband internet and by extension all kinds of information is nice, but that doesn't address basic needs. We are not better off as a society than we were 20 years ago when you look at the big picture.

  53. Supply and Demand by m50d · · Score: 1

    "Big ideas" are ten-a-penny, particularly now that the internet makes it so easy to publish them. It should be no surprise that incremental improvements - which evidently require more thought and are more useful - are more valued.

    --
    I am trolling
  54. ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a slightly different way of thinking about what ideas are than most people. I'm saying that this is more of a philosophy than a truth but my belief is that it's better to look upon ideas in this way, true or not:

    Ideas are not finite. Ideas existed before man and will exist after we have gone extinct. Ideas exist outside of human consciousness. Ideas can be seen, and eventually realized, by those who are looking for them and have their eyes open. Ideas are also often stumbled upon when not looking for them. Ideas can be overlooked (or worse, rejected) if eclipsed by lies. If you "come up with an idea", then you saw an idea and have a facsimile, a working model, of it in your mind, but the idea itself (despite what your ego might tell you) wasn't conjured into existence by your all mighty brain, and almost certainly you weren't the only one to see it. Ideas are not products; they cannot be owned, bought and sold.

  55. "Can't Monitize" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you imagine people three thousand years ago thinking about how they could monetize lightning? Look at people writing software. The return on programming can be incredible when it is effectively written and marketed to address a particular need. Imagine J.P. Getty or John Jacob Astor, two men who funded many of the technological innovations at the turn of the 20th century, suggesting "software" would eclipse all other technological investment. Ideas are still valued. There are just so many ideas being communicated so fast that people become immune to them. Being "comfortable" in life is and always was the only goal. People have different definitions of "comfort". For some comfort is nothing more than clean and plentiful water. For others comfort is the Biltmore estate. For others "comfort" is shoving their ideology down the throats of others the way Anonymous and Terrorists and various governments and groups do. For some "comfort" is simply expressing their 1 in 6 billion opinion on a message board hoping that it encourages others to think.

  56. Depends on the idea by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    There's plenty of ideas out there, but most of the good ones are ones that they NYTimes politburo disagrees with and ignores.. All of the 'great' State-embiggening social program ideas were already had, tried, and proved failures for the most part..

    As far as tech goes, plenty of ideas still get funded, and some of them are even good!

    1. Re:Depends on the idea by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Social program have been a huge success. I have no idea why you think they were proved failures.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  57. Science by coldsalmon · · Score: 1

    I think the main reason for the lack of grand, all-encompassing ideas is that these ideas are almost always scientifically wrong. Look at Marx, Freud, and really the whole history of philosophy: when you try to examine their claims scientifically, they fall apart or evaporate. These days, if someone makes a claim we say "Prove it: where's the data?" If they can't come up with something scientifically substantial, we ignore them. Our willingness to call bullshit may be due to our increased access to information, but it is mad to say that this is a bad thing.

  58. Louder boring people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is that the sort of people who don't get good ideas are now as loud as the sort that do. Used to be that the boring, whiny people would talk to their barber. Now they write stupid articles that get featured on ./.

  59. Actually, this is wrong by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    The reason is that America and the west are giving away their economy. Here in America, even pols count on the gov to do things, rather than the gov. helping the citizens to do things. We used to care about having schools, infrastructure, even top vaccines. But we also had the BUSINESS to do this. Not any more. So now, ppl do not have access to the resources to be able to dream big. Unless we restart manufacturing and our economies, then we lose the ability to have big dreams.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
  60. Are they living under a rock? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    I the link wasn't working for me, so thi is just based of the summary; which is probably foolhardy.

    No big ideas? NO BIG IDEAS? are you blind?

    Besides:
    Driver-less cars?
    Mapping all the roads in the world?
    Exploring other planets?
    Building a build over a half mile high?
    Peering into the very clock work of the universe?
    Finding a common means for the whole world to communicate?
    I Have a device in my pocket, right now, then can translate any language for me, talk to almost anyone on the planet, give me direction to almost anyplace on the planet.

    So, don't tell me no one values big ideas. What we have is too many simple minded people who have no clue what a big idea is unless it meets their personal immediate need.... or the summary is inaccurate; which I hope it is.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:Are they living under a rock? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's some more:
      Distributed renewable energy; the end of the big nasty power plant!
      Replacing broadcast media with egalitarian networks!
      Mining the seafloors!
      Culture and software created with great effort, then freely shared with the world! (Eben Moglen vid: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbcy_ZxXLl8)
      On-demand book printing and binding!
      Circuits embedded in temporary tattoos!
      Windmills spinning a wire to make electricity, instead of spinning millstones to make flour!

      And here's a couple of ideas that are old, but finally popular in the public consciousness:
      Electric cars!
      Saving energy!

  61. Sure, politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When expressing your ideas cause an instant censorship, ban, a police shows up on your door, or an incoherent stream of "OMG! Why do you hate [insert your country]!? PONIES!" screams flow in your general direction, you have expressed a meaningful idea in this non-ideal world. Claiming ideas don't matter on the global scale is nonsense, as much as claiming ideas being more difficult to express in a visual culture is.

  62. We are not in the age of big ideas by CommieLib · · Score: 1
    We are in the age of keep your head down, and try to make it through the next decade intact. The age of big ideas comes when this age ends:
    • Civil War => Transcontinental Railroad / Opening of the West
    • World War II => Walking on the Fricking Moon
    • Bankrupt America =>

    I'm pessimistic / optimistic - we're not at the worst of this time yet, but after we pass it, (literally) unthinkably wonderful things will become possible as our civilization regains its collective confidence.

    --
    If your bitterest enemies are people who hack the heads off civilians, then I would say you're doing something right.
    1. Re:We are not in the age of big ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll play your Fill-in-the-blank Category, Trebek:

      • Civil War => Transcontinental Railroad / Opening of the West
      • World War II => Walking on the Fricking Moon
      • Bankrupt America => (????)

      What is ""WIN THE FUTURE""?

      "Win the future" is all we've heard American leadership promote as a "goal" so far (though nobody really takes that speech seriously enough to even remember quoting it a mere 6 months later.) I also wasn't impressed with the implementation. The prospect of creating NEW rail connections between apathetic states being what will drive 300 million people out of the grave holes we've been digging for decades in time for reelection is not going to help at all.

    2. Re:We are not in the age of big ideas by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      What is ""WIN THE FUTURE""?

      I believe the idea is that everyone plays the lottery and then uses their winnings to pay off the national debt?

  63. Re:On modern heroes & the democratisation of c by geekoid · · Score: 1

    " The "heroes" of today are sportsman and celebrities,"
    Just like it's always been.

    Big ideas need to be backed with money, and that means government money, and that means...Taxes duh, duh, DUUUUuuuuuhhh.

    Who looked up to Columbus? Galileo? Thomas MacDonald? Joseph Strauss? Ford? Edison?

    None of them were Hero's before the implemented their big ideas. and 2 of them you probably never even heard of.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  64. Re:Note where the ideas are coming from. Governmen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What part of "PRIVATE" space ships was unclear? SpaceX isn't a corporation? Tesla roadsters aren't made by a corporation? That's half of the examples given, so I'm not noticing the trend that you seem to be.

    Seriously, the anti-corporate hate is approaching a mental disease on this board.

  65. what's a big idea? by kwikrick · · Score: 1

    The author of TFA is simply having problems FINDING his 'big ideas'. I believe there are plenty of great ideas out there, and and plenty of thinkers too. But you have to look in the right place. I suspect that the author, and in general the media, and perhaps all of us, are simply not very good at sifting through the surge of information available to us with social networking, news feeds, the web, etc. Or, perhaps, he's not very good at identifying 'big ideas'. What is a 'big idea' anyway?

    I think the author is confusing ideas, scientific theories and ideologies. An idea is nice, but not necessarily valuable. Scientific theories (if they stand scrutiny) are ideas that enable us to understand and shape the world around us, and are therefore valuable. There are plenty of new and possibly useful scientific ideas out there, but you need to look in scientific journals or popular science magazines. And you need to be somewhat knowledgeable the scientific field to understand them. The author calls Einsteins work a 'great idea' but does he understand it? I suspect he calls it a great idea because it resulted in the A-bomb and nuclear power, but that doesn't per se make it a greater idea than new theories, for example the hypothetical Higgs boson (which, who knows, might give us anti-gravity technology or FTL space travel?).

    Ideologies, on the other hand, are not valuable like scientific theories. In fact, some ideologies have kindled hatred, caused wars, held back prosperity etc. There are more benign ideologies, promoting things like 'equal rights' and 'peace' and 'save the planet', but these are very generic and obvious wishes, not practical ideas. Ideologies that prescribe ' the way' for obtaining these goods are often dangerous when followed through, because they are not based on science. Ideologies cannot be proved right or wrong, their value is not easily shown, and can be thought up by quite stupid people and still become popular. Perhaps the author finds that ideologies are getting less attention? That would not be such a bad thing. Unfortunately, there are still plenty of hateful ideologies and backward religions - they make the news all the time. And I have no doubt that there will be plenty popular and potentially harmful ideologies in the future.

    All other ideas are just opinions. And there are plenty of those (with merit or without) on twitter, facebook, blogs, magazines, newspapers, etc. See for example TFA.

    --
    assignment != equality != identity
  66. Well maybe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IMHO The ideas are still there, nothing has changed, it's just we've become a society of fear mongers. We have to many people who are afraid that a new idea maybe cause harm to the 'environment' and then there are the ones who will sue just about anyone to make money. We need tog et rid of the lawyers and you will see more and more ideas come to fruition.

  67. not quite by archen · · Score: 1

    Ideas are plentiful. Imagination is scarce.

  68. drugs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take a pill to not have big thoughtful ideas, thank you very much.

  69. Talk about a lack of critical thinking by stinkbomb · · Score: 1

    I think the author could use a refresher in critical thinking. It seems to me that he's making an appeal to ignorance; I don't know of any big ideas, therefore they don't exist. These days it's easy to point at things like the rise of social media and the rapid dissemination of trivia, but that isn't evidence of a reduction of big ideas. It's just that the signal/noise ratio is particularly bad if you stick to the regular old internet.

    Look deeper.

  70. The ideas are there, It's the thinkers that left by BlackHeron · · Score: 1

    Since many people who posted here did not bother to read the article, and just read the title like good time conservative Americans would do, I will point out that the title is a little misleading. The author is not asserting that there are no good ideas to be had but rather that the body of people willing and/or capable of contributing to the development of those ideas is dwindling at a time when our population is growing more rapidly due to advances in communications, transportation, medicine and other technological fields. The ever growing amount of distractions presented by consumerist popular culture don't stop people from thinking, or exhibiting intelligent behavior, most people are just too distracted by entertainment or the rigors of working to survive to contribute to the communal consciences in the form of relevant ideas that impact large numbers of people for the "better". The issue we are presented is that problems are evident but large portions of the population have been lead to believe that they are too disenfranchised to even make an iota of a difference in any of these issues, so they have fallen into the realm of apathy for lack of affecting mechanisms (capital, organization, policy).

  71. Re:Note where the ideas are coming from. Governmen by GameboyRMH · · Score: 1

    His point is that corporations are making mostly evolutionary improvements while governments are doing the revolutionary/breakthrough stuff, which has a poor ROI (pharmaceuticals being an obvious exception - they've got enough money to dump billions of dollars and years of time into research).

    The billionaire space adventure companies and Tesla Motors have only made evolutionary changes to existing tech. Heck, a gearhead with a six-figure budget could have easily built the Tesla Roadster in his garage using off-the-shelf parts.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  72. Fear of risk... by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    The problem is, nobody wants to knowingly take any sort of risk. Implementing a Big Idea usually involves going out on a limb to a certain extent. If you take a "brave decision" and it goes pear-shaped you'll have inquiries/reviews/committees/auditors sifting through the wreckage with 20/20 hindsight and the clear knowledge that witch hunters won't get employed again unless they turn up a few pointy hats. Of course, if you're high enough up the greasy pole then all that means is you'll only get a 6-digit bonus this year or, at worst, will have to resign and spend a decent interval pruning your roses until another directorship comes along - but hey, all suffering is relative and they seem to think its a big deal. If you're lower down the pecking order, though, you're scapegoat material, and mistakes are not an option.

    And of course, he who makes no mistakes, makes nothing.

    However, politics would benefit from a few less Big Ideas (like Capitalism, The Market, Socialism, Libertarianism) - a bit more emphasis on tailoring solutions to problems based on evidence and critical reason and a bit less time thumbing through Karl Marx or Adam Smith in search of a one-size-fits-nobody solution.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  73. integral theory - a goldmine of big new ideas by awsx123 · · Score: 1

    perhaps big, bold new ideas in terms of the current worldview and paragdim are indeed a bit thin on the ground.

    but there is some very radical new thinking starting to appear right now, which is conducted from the post-rational perspectives that are starting to appear at the leading edge of culture. by "post-rational", i don't mean "irrational", but rather of a higher order of cognitive complexity than that required for basic rational thinking.

    not only are integral perspectives sufficiently radical to turn the thinking of the current paradigm on it's head, they are starting to become increasingly visible in the success stories of the world. why is apple so successful? why did facebook's specific information architecture take the world by storm?

    because integral perspectives are of a different paradigm to the prevailing (post enlightenment) worldview, they aren't generally visible though. you won't see them in the mainstream, in the status quo, or in the universities, any more than during the age of the enlightenment you would go to church to hear the leading edge scientific thinking.

    anyone interested in integral, i'd recommend checking out "a theory of everything" by ken wilbur.

    phil

  74. Is this a "Fourth Wave" of civilization? by peter303 · · Score: 1

    40 years ago Alex Toffler coined the Third Wave of the knowledge industry, following manufacturing and agriculture. It is unclear whether there anything to follow the third wave.

    1. Re:Is this a "Fourth Wave" of civilization? by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      sadly, from now on it appears each wave number will be synonymous with the current ipad/iphone version number.

  75. Stop the presses: Intellectuals still a minority by urusan · · Score: 1

    The main problem with this idea (other than the fact that it is a paradoxically self-defeating idea) is that they are comparing modern popular culture with past intellectual culture.

    Do they not remember a not so distant time when "nerd" and "geek" were insults in mainstream culture? Computer geeks only get any respect today because they make the wheels turn for everyone else. It's the same sort of respect a airplane pilot or train conductor gets.

    My grandfather had to defy his father in order to graduate from high school because his father felt that much education was useless...the past is full of such stories that just get forgotten with the passage of time.

    In any case, what this writer is observing is a sort of Jevons Paradox for information. As the efficiency of exchanging information electronically has increased, it has become more and more heavily used...and in particular it is being used for more and more things that would have not been worthwhile when efficiency was lower (and therefore the cost higher). As one might expect, most of the things that would not be worthwhile at a high cost are not particularly worthwhile. Usually it's because the information has little to no practical or intellectual value ("I'm eating a delicious sandwich"), but it can also be because the idea is unpolished and unready.

    This second case really changes our perception of the emergence of world-changing ideas even in intellectual circles. In the olden days, a new idea would seemingly emerge fully formed from out of the blue. One day you open the paper and there's an article on this newfangled "airplane" thing that just made its first flight yesterday in North Carolina. Perhaps instead you walk into a bookstore and at the recommendation of one of your friends you pick up copy of this Nietzsche guy's book. For most consumers of ideas in this era, there's a clear dividing line between the world before the idea and the world after. However, for the originator of the idea there's not such a clear line. Big ideas have long private and semi-public histories before they reached their final public form. In the electronic age, we are more likely to be privy to this long history. When the big breakthrough happens we're much less likely to realize its importance, because its really just an incremental but important step up from what we knew before. In this way, even highly intelligent people can miss big changes as they occur. Instead, we usually notice years later...when we wake up one morning and HOLY SHIT THERE'S A ROBOT CLEANING MY FLOOR.

    It'll be interesting to look back and see which big ideas stand the test of time. There's a good chance it will be the ideas of intellectuals that few people know about or take seriously today, like this guy: http://marshallbrain.com/ or this guy http://www.peoplescapitalism.org/

    Those are some pretty big ideas if you ask me...

  76. Same thing by bussdriver · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The changes in culture and the rise of extreme consumerism are having very similar changes to ideas AND imagination. (they are not the same but are close enough to be equally harmed.) My mother was an art teacher, she's seen the huge plunge in imagination over the decades -- you don't get that many good ideas without imagination; in fact, all studies show that students with art education (the old kind) do better in other topics-- the well rounded mind does do better.

    However, we are now undermining that as well. Art is being turned into a standards testing gig and a cover for helping do the other subjects; they've taken art out of art. Soon, money and lack of peripheral benefits will eliminate art programs. People won't be clever enough to realize why it changed; even more likely, they'll just assume it has always been that way and never investigate if it was any different.

    We have increasing numbers of entering college students who do not even have the elementary skill of discriminating between fact and opinion! How is such a person going to even START to investigate anything further? Its like trying to get a Rush or Fox viewer to read...

    Customization technology is giving us the ability to live inside a bubble where all unpleasant thoughts are filtered out. Just the hint of some disruptive idea and it gets filtered out and the mind's defenses are deployed. The geometry problem that starts to look like it will undermine your belief in a FLAT earth is just a trick for some crazy liberal with their round earth conspiracy promoting their disturbing opinions so they can change your way of live (which is better than theirs.) Oh, and its politically incorrect to upset anybody...

    Good ideas should shake things up a bit; they require some imagination to even realize the possibilities involved-- which are often upsetting in many ways; the more touchy you are the sooner your ego will jump in to defend you with mindless rationalizations (and if you can't tell fact from opinion you'll have a hell of a time defeating your natural illogical defenses.)

    This is also why democracy does not work. The culture has to be healthy for its democracy to be healthy; essentially, the democratic government reflects the people and rather than see it as some removed mythical creation (as many do today) it should be seen as a manifestation of the social development of the society. A really complex survey/study in people's collective decision making. (yeah, today's system is broken; it is our collective fault... the reasons Americans are so big on responsibility and accountability is because they are over compensating for their lack of it. They are in denial.)

  77. Another thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those who are busy inventing & researching don't have time to call radio shows or post on the net every day. Unfortunately there's a large group of people who think that's where the truth is. "I know it's true I read it on the net" is a joke where I work, as is the thought that everything good existed before 1980, sorry I meant 1990, no 2000, well 2010 for sure...

  78. It is not the apocalypse by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

    ...and absolutely nobody is working on completely pie-in-the-shy ideas like, eg., space elevators, SETI, etc.

    That's not really true. There are people working on those things, but nobody cares because most people don't have any money.

    I can't even imagine what it's like for a 22 year old graduate hoping for a future.

    You make it sound like it is the end of the world. It isn't. What a 22-year old young grad should expect for a future depends on

    1. What he/she did in HS (yes, it does count),

    2. what discipline the youngling is graduating from. Sad but true (not to mention that a 4-year college experience is not necessarily the right thing for everyone),

    3. what he/she has done through college (just take courses VS taking courses beyond the curriculum + networking + looking for internships (specially this) + study-related part time jobs at college),

    4. GPA (yes, it does count),

    5. went to community college first as opposed to go straight to college and was willing to leave with parents as much as possible vs racking up an additional $25-$35K (or even more) on loans just to be on a dorm on a 4-year college more often than not needlessly far away.

    6. willing/unwilling to go to grad school either directly off undergrad school or on a part-time basis while working full-time

    7. has not racked up unnecessary debt through college, and lives under a budget, driving a beat-up car, living in a hole in a wall until he/she saves at least 1 year of salary (or reduces his/her student loans by at least a 1/3), OR racks up the credit cards to get an expensive car (or some other unnecessary things), leaving beyond his/her means. *

    It has been true before, it is true now, and it will be true again. In education and college experience, you get what you put in.

    * Regarding #7, I speak from experience since I was very guilty of that in my youth (in addition to several others in this list.) If you live wrong through college, you will have a bleak prospect even when the economy is booming. Live intelligent, and a 22-year old recent graduate will do fine, if not great, even in this economy.

    It is bad out there, but it is not the end of times. It will be pretty f* up if we do stupid shit with our education and finances.

    1. Re:It is not the apocalypse by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      5. went to community college first as opposed to go straight to college and was willing to leave

      with parents as much as possible vs racking up an additional $25-$35K (or even more) on loans just to be on a dorm on a 4-year college more often than not needlessly far away.

      Maybe it's worthwhile to save the commute and spend the extra time studying grammar?

      I kid. 4-year colleges don't teach grammar anymore either.

    2. Re:It is not the apocalypse by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

      5. went to community college first as opposed to go straight to college and was willing to leave

      with parents as much as possible vs racking up an additional $25-$35K (or even more) on loans just to be on a dorm on a 4-year college more often than not needlessly far away.

      Maybe it's worthwhile to save the commute and spend the extra time studying grammar?

      I kid. 4-year colleges don't teach grammar anymore either.

      What can I say? as a non-native English speaker, I still mix a and an, even after using English for 18 years. Or you can scratch that out as a/an typing error made in jets in a forum in the interweebz (OH NOES, TEH LOLCATS!!). Either way, here is a cookie, a trophy for your nomination for the Interweebz Nazi Gramm3r awards.

    3. Re:It is not the apocalypse by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      You make it sound like it is the end of the world.

      I don't believe it's the end of the world, just the end for the United States. I'm sure there are young people elsewhere that can still hope for a brighter future, but here in the United States, there is only coming to terms with a lower standard of living than their parents and grandparents. This might not be completely a bad thing, but for a 22 year-old, it could be a bit depressing.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
  79. Re:Stop the presses: Intellectuals still a minorit by urusan · · Score: 1

    Oh, one last thing. Constant distraction is indeed a bad thing for deep thought, but this isn't really a difficult problem to solve. One simply needs to cut down on the distractions. Go somewhere quiet and unplug nearly all forms of communication. Only leave open one channel of communication (if that) and only give it to people who can be trusted to only contact you that way if it is truly important. For most people the world isn't going to stop because they're not there to keep it turning (or at the very least there are regular times in the day where your absence will not be critical).

    There are some very important jobs that require you to be in constant connection with the rest of the world. If you get into one of those careers, don't expect to think deeply very much. If deep intellectual thought is important to you, then you should consider getting a different job. This is one of several reasons I gave up on a career as a system administrator.

  80. "The decline of the public intellectual" by rlglende · · Score: 1

    How sad. Literary intellectuals Krugman, et al ... can't get any attention despite the fact that they have solutions for all of our problems.

    They have done so much for our civilization : if only we had listened to our very educated denizens from the worlds best educational institutions, we might have avoided the world-wide depression, massive failure of the banks, bankruptcy of nations, and failure of every single gov-based institutions, e.g. science funding (global warming advocates don't support research which could disprove their positions, high-energy physicists won't support research into 'cold fusion'), the FDA becoming protector of the US's domestic drug manufacturers, the dept of agriculture pushing gasohol, ... And, of course, we would have avoided all of the recent wars had we listened to their excellent foreign policy advice.

    We might have heeded their advice to reduce costs of college, so the current generation isn't burdened with debt in a time of no jobs. You all read all of those warnings from our intellectual elite, right?

    Right. They are just another interest group sucking off the public tit, hoping that the NYTimes can stay in business to publish opinion pieces like this.

    Progressives in both parties have a lot to answer for.

    --
    "The Constitution, the WHOLE Constitution, and nothing but the CONSTITUTION."
  81. Instant Gratification = Dumbing Down of Society by Sir_Eptishous · · Score: 1

    I think the article, and the general sense in American culture now, is that technology has engendered a sort of "fast food" mentality towards information. The firehose of bullshit that comes through our phones and computers has led to a "least common denominator" cultural context that we now live in, whereby any intelligent, thoughtful discussion is steamrolled over by angry political rants and "keeping up with the Joneses" ala web 2.0, and instant everything. This is probably the best line from TFA: "We prefer knowing to thinking because knowing has more immediate value."

    --
    We play the game with the bravery of being out of range
  82. Can't compete with history. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Oh, I wish people would feel a different way about things."

    The guy who wrote this article is probably OLD. From Jules Verne's point of view, this guy is going to be dead immediately. This guy is sunsetting intelligence because he doesn't want to miss anything! Isn't he just monetizing his dumb idea with his stupid column?

    People, with their tiny lifespans and insignificant personal accomplishments, don't have the imagination to see how things that are started today will end up in 100 years.

    The present happens so slowly, and we have all these hang-ups about it because we're in the middle of it. Oh, and because of our mortality.

  83. Why bother? by PPH · · Score: 1

    Its probably already patented. If not, some corporation will claim it infringes with their generic "do anything on the Internet" patent and haul me in to court for the rest of my life.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  84. you are part of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could build a space elevator with a trillion dollars. The necessary technological developments aren't there yet, but we've got enough figured out to know that a space elevator is entirely possible and exactly what we need to do to build one. Give me a trillion dollars right now and I will give you a space elevator in 30 years or less.
    Stop dreaming tiny dreams, we are capable of so much more than you can imagine.

  85. It's the opposite: too many ideas by mcvos · · Score: 1

    I think it's the opposite. We have so many ideas that we don't recognize them anymore. We have more people on earth, a greater percentage of those people is educated, involved in science, technology, or other sources of big ideas. In centuries past, when somebody wrote a book, it was a Big Thing. Nowadays, thousands of books are published every day. Any one of them could hold some big ideas, but no book is read by everybody, and we're too spread out to let any one idea get a significant impetus. But below the surface, some ideas still grow, and suddenly erupt, and then everybody wonders where it's coming from.

    The big ideas of today are mostly about democratization. About getting stuff done without needing big corporations or governments. Look at the open source movement, MythTV, CyanogenMod, musicians, writers and others publishing their work without help from record labels and publishers, crowd-sourcing/crowd-funding stuff that used to require big studios and deep pockets, Wikipedia, organizations like WikiLeaks, Anonymous and Lulzsec taking on really big opponents in ways nobody considered possible, revolts in northern Africa fueled partially by social networks, etc.

  86. "Post-Enlightenment age" by Animats · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From the article

    "It is no secret, especially here in America, that we live in a post-Enlightenment age in which rationality, science, evidence, logical argument and debate have lost the battle in many sectors, and perhaps even in society generally, to superstition, faith, opinion and orthodoxy."

    They have a point. And it's a real problem, because when some new problem comes along, society seems unable to deal with it.

    Consider the current messes. Nobody in public life expresses a good understanding of the current economic situation. The political consensus is "it's just a big recession". It might be a permanent situation. (Japan had a real estate crash in 1989, and neither real estate nor the stock market ever came back. To some extent, the current US model of capitalism is broken, yet nobody is proposing a better model. (Should we have a tax model that doesn't favor debt so much? The US taxes companies' dividends but not interest paid on debt, stock buybacks, or executive compensation. As a result, most companies don't pay dividends and borrow too much.)

    In the 1930s, it was very different. All sorts of big ideas were proposed to deal with the Great Depression. Some of them were nutty, like Technocracy. Some of them were implemented, like the Works Progress Administration. It was a tough time, but the problems were discussed and solutions tried.

    There's a fundamental assumption that economic growth will continue. That may be incorrect. Looking ahead, we have big issues. Some major natural resources run out in the next few decades. There's no cheap source of energy even being seriously talked about. No new source of energy has been developed in the last 50 years. (Nuclear reactors and solar cells are now more than 50 years old.) Demand is going up as China modernizes. Now what? We have no clue how to run a post-oil world with 6 billion people. World oil production peaked in 2005.

    At venture capital conferences, I'm not seeing new great ideas. More like endless me-too presentations. (Way too much "social networking". I've seen a pitch for a social network for cats.)

    We're seeing regression in developed countries. Israel used to be a modern country dominated by kibbutzim with a strong work ethic, the people who "made the desert bloom". Now, Israeli politics is dominated by the religious right (the "ultra-orthodox"), who are a welfare-supported dead weight on the country. The Islamic world's religious right is at least as bad. (It's amusing to observe how much the Jewish and Islamic right wings resemble each other. Oppress women, check. Anti-education, check. Anti-progress, check. Old Testament mindset, check. Old guys in black with beards in charge, check.)

    1. Re:"Post-Enlightenment age" by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

      The US taxes companies' dividends but not interest paid on debt, stock buybacks, or executive compensation. As a result, most companies don't pay dividends and borrow too much.

      I can think of a handful of companies that got into trouble from borrowing too much: AIG, Lehman Brothers. (Chrysler and GM's troubles, I think, stemmed more from not getting their money's worth out of the inflated union wages they were paying.) There are far more companies in the opposite situation: they're sitting on large piles of cash, and would like to hire more workers, but not in the current climate. Read what Steve Wynn has to say about that, for example: http://bit.ly/nL3rIQ

      Government's borrowing addiction is a much more serious problem than corporate borrowing. National debt is $14.3 trillion, and on track to rise to $22.2 trillion under the recent "deficit reduction compromise" (see http://paul.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=280 ).

      We have no clue how to run a post-oil world with 6 billion people

      Somebody has a clue. For a Big Idea about a new source of energy, go here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Criswell

      --
      That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    2. Re:"Post-Enlightenment age" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's interesting how much of that superstition, faith, opinion and orthodoxy is embeded into our everyday understanding of our surroundings. Case in point:

      To some extent, the current US model of capitalism is broken, yet nobody is proposing a better model.

      It's difficult for the thing that really isn't being used (in this case the actual "economic capitalism" part) being blamed for all of the problems caused when some other thing (in this case it's primarily "heavy-handed attempts at socio-economic socialism") is the actual cause of the problems. It's like blaming a pregnancy on the failures of abstinence: one simply can't blame the problems that result on the thing that's obviously not being used without showing a fair degree of ignorance.

      If we were working on an economic model involving as little regulation as necessary (and I don' t mean no regulation, just no unnecessary regulation), an assumption that more people/companies earning and spending money can generate the same or more total tax revenues at lower tax rates, then we'd be talking about economic capitalism. When more money changes hands more times, more revenue is generated though the use of sales and/or income taxes.

      If the people managing the overall budget are only spending what they have available (often called "living within one's means" and "being fiscally responsibile") and aren't blatantly over-spending, then we wouldn't be constantly running at a deficit. Compounding the problem is people who truly believe that "personal responsibility" is expected to exist exclusively within their consitiuents (you are responsible for paying our debt that I pushed so hard to create), and seem to push it off on others long before the pen ever hits paper. That the economic and social components of so many of these issues are also being (intentionally) confused is not helping.

      The finances don't care if Grandma has enough to eat, nor whether or not Crazy Uncle Frank can afford to fix his unwillingness to pay for medical services before he has to go to an emergency room. If there isn't enough money in the budget, those things can happen, but it's still a personal choice.

      The majority of your energy statements are largely involved in that whole "regulation" thing that happens with anything that even tries to make it big in that field. Assuming the taxes and regulations aren't prohibitive to the point of ruining the project, then it's often the "special interest groups" pressing polititians, lawsuits, petitions, demonstrations, rallies, and anything else they can come up with into service in order to squash that thing they either don't understand, or just plain don't like. "How do we know if it's safe" is, in effect, often the first thing we will hear about these "new" technologies, or all of the talking points will refer to the old and out-dated designs on similar technologies that we have no plans on reproducing.

      I don't know about you, but I don't really think that we "don't care as much about ideas" as it is "those with ideas are drowned out by the common stupidity". How often have you heard the same sound bites, read the same inane ramblings, seen the same flashy images? All of things that are either blatant lies, or don't actually involve the topic at all? All of those combine to push the very concept of idealism into the realm of "kooks and crazies." Couple that with the pervasive "toe the line or leave" mentality and the big push to eliminate any assumption of individuality, and you get the "don't care" attitude in spades, and the "we couldn't do anything about it even if we wanted to" mindset.

      The ideas themselves don't care who has them, so long as they get out and some get put to use when they can arguably show an overall benefit.

  87. New Visual Thinking by Bob9113 · · Score: 1

    and there is the rise of an increasingly visual culture, especially among the young â" a form in which ideas are more difficult to express.

    While I agree that there is a dearth of visually-oriented critical thinking pieces out there, I think it may simply be that we have not yet adapted to the new media. It used to be difficult for Joe Thinker to put out something with a significant visual component, so most critical thinking has been focused on prose. You can, however, go at least as far back as Tufte, or as recent as Lessig and TED, to find that people are putting critical thinking into visual forms.

    So while the article may be right, I think the message that we (critical thinkers) should take from it is that we need to put some effort into the visual component to remain fresh and expressive in tomorrow's world.

  88. The Elites have Changed by catchblue22 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most people have not cared about new big ideas throughout history.

    Well, maybe, and maybe not. I think you might be surprised at how widespread Enlightenment ideas were in Europe. Faraday used to give public scientific demonstrations that were widely attended. However, what matters I think more is that the elites of our society, those who make the important decisions are increasingly seeing the world through dollar signs. The Public Interest is less important to them, and private interest is their dominant concern. They backhandedly acknowledge the Public Interest by saying that it is served by everyone acting in their own private interests. This is a profound shift from the Enlightenment approach, that led to the rise of our modern democratic systems. Enlightenment philosophes like Locke, Rousseau, and Voltaire tried to balance the Public and private interests; they believed in liberty and justice for all members of society. Today, politics seems to be an exercise in maximizing the gross national product.

    --
    This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)
  89. Disproportional Perspectives by v(*_*)vvvv · · Score: 2

    The way in which the author is comparing now with history gives history a huge advantage. The chances of today being as good as your best day is small, because the past contains more days. So on any day I could write a "today is dead" article as long as today isn't my best day ever, and I could do that for any day in the past.

    There is an elegant way around this skewing of perspective: Make the comparisons proportional. If we compare today with a day before, and then look ahead to a day after, today is rarely dead. It is usually much like yesterday, and most days are the same. No drama, no article.

    Now expand "day" to "50 years" for the purpose of this article. Comparing the big ideas between 1910 and 1960 with those between 1961 and 2010, and then looking ahead to the next 50 years, I find it is extremely difficult to be pessimistic. Rather, one could easily argue they are getting bigger. And that would be an article more worthy of a read.

    1. Re:Disproportional Perspectives by caitsith01 · · Score: 1

      The author is also engaging in time compression with respect to history.

      How can you write an article about how ideas are dead when we are quite literally in the middle of the biggest technological revolutions in human history? First, computers and the internet. Second, biomedical and biotech.

      Day to day it looks like there are "no good ideas" blah blah - but step back even to the decade scale and we are in the middle of an explosion of amazing ideas.

      --
      Read Pynchon.
  90. Ideas aren't created by us. by aleckais · · Score: 1

    A widely held prejudice this, that ideas are somehow created by our arrogant selves. There's another side to reality, the inner. Is it all that unbelievable that, being more and more enticed and accustomed to interact one with the other, we leave unexercised that other organ, the one dealing with that other side, the abstract, well structured and beautifully ordered? Again, we should acqaint ourselves with this http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2011/05/10/1008636108.full.pdf

  91. They just do not know the ideas... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I believe the authors just do not notice the ideas that appeared in recent times:

    * digitalization (huge one - video, sound, pictures, text)

    * Internet

    * Free and Open Source Software

    * office software

    * PCs and now smartphones

    * computer games, MMO games

    * slashdot-like journaling

    These are all new ideas, they all impact billions or at least hundreds of millions of people.

    They are just much more technical than before and thus harder to notice for being 'ideas'.

    And we have the thought leaders for these categories: Linus Thorvalds, Richard Stallman and many, many others.

    Too bad the authors of the article mentioned nothing about it...

  92. Everybody off to sleep now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A post-idea world is a post-consciousness world.

  93. Some of us are talking seriously about star travel by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

    I wouldn't call that a small idea (on the other hand, there are you "young people" who can't seem to think of anything more exciting than 3D movies on your 'pods...)

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  94. we live for ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think almost everyone on slashdot will argue that this article is BS. We live for ideas!

  95. refreshingly honest by superwiz · · Score: 1

    of NYT to confess their own marching orders

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  96. Kernel of Truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ironically, the article is more of a rant than the carful expression of an idea, but I think Gabler hits on a kernel of truth. It’s difficult to articulate change while it’s happening. Sure, change is an ongoing, ubiquitous process that never really starts or stops, but historical epochs do tend to precipitate out of that contiguous flow (in other words there are changes that can be codified). Gabler is trying to articulate changes he perceives around him—changes that are probably real—but he does a poor job. At the very least he overgeneralizes and overemphasizes, and I suspect his experience of change is exacerbated by an inability to acknowledge certain historical constants. I do agree, though, that big ideas are becoming increasingly marginalized, and there is an alarming rise of anti-intellectualism in America. I’m not going to attempt to articulate these changes in any systematic way. That would require time and effort I’m neither able nor willing to expend ATM (and maybe I couldn’t if I tried). I’ll just make a few quick comments.

    1- One thing that Gabler hits on indirectly is the power of communication networks. The average person today is just a small minded as the average person in the 40s or back in Socrates’ day. The difference is the average person now has a platform and more media choices, so small ideas get a lot more play. In other words, tweets haven’t killed big ideas; they have just amplified the small ideas that have always been there. Likewise, intellectuals weren’t on late night TV in the past because thats what people chose to watch, it’s what media executives chose to put on, and people watched because that’s what was on. It may have made Joe sixpack think, but Joe sixpack changed the channel when he had a choice, so executives changed the programing to compensate. I think Gabler is making this point, but he does it in a way that creates the illusion of a false causality.

    2- The other thing that Gabler hits on, but should probably spend more time on, is the monetization of the social ethic and value systems. We live in a world where profit is increasingly seen as the only real motive for action and engine for change. In a world in which profit is the prime motivator, profit becomes the prime value. Big ideas thus become ideas that lead to big profits, other ideas need not apply.

    Again, those are very cursory comments. My main point is that Gabler is on to something, but he articulates his thesis poorly.

    1. Re:Kernel of Truth by Baron+von+Daren · · Score: 1

      I wrote the “Kernel of Truth” comment, but I didn’t realize I wasn’t logged in. In any case, I think I can make my point more concisely after a few moments of thought.

      I’m not sure Gabler is saying that we live in a time where there are no big ideas. I think he is saying that big ideas are increasingly irrelevant in the public consciousness. The general populace is no longer ‘fed’ big ideas and as a result the category of thought is easily drowned out in a deluge of small ideas, gossip, and conspicuous consumption. Big ideas may still be happening, but they are no longer of any importance to the average citizen the way the Apollo program was important to its epoch. New inventions may become the next iPad, but they don’t spark the imagination the way the ‘home of the future’ did.

      There are a lot of implications to this kind of change, not the least of which are political, but that’s a whole other topic. To reiterate, I think Gabler has a point, but it’s a very easy to misinterpret his point to mean that big ideas are themselves becoming scarce.

      PS The Slashdot community is not a good measuring stick of the public consciousness. Just because you and your peeps still like and know about big ideas, doesn’t mean that is statistically typical.

  97. New Frontiers... by asdbffg · · Score: 1

    Big ideas are happening all the time, but you can't look for them in all the old places and expect to find anything. We're making huge advances in neuroscience that are completely revolutionizing the way we look at the human mind. We're finding novel ways to collect energy, discovering new ways of communicating that are having powerful societal effects, making advances in artificially intelligent machines, moving the power of manufacturing into our homes with the promise of 3D-printing, building autonomous vehicles, putting space travel into the reach of civilians, changing our genes, developing regenerative medicine technologies, and on and on and on...

  98. Is It Me? by His+Shadow · · Score: 1

    Or is this article entirely backwards from reality? There is something inverse about this idea about ideas.

    --

    Fiat Homos et Pereat Theos

  99. So tell me by sjames · · Score: 1

    Can we finally move on to a post post society? Declaring ourselves Post X is so passe and it gives us so many excuses to just stop trying.

  100. the need to self actualize by schlachter · · Score: 1

    We all need to apply our intellect towards something to self actualize.

    In the old days when little could be done, you philosophized.

    Now that so much can be done, we mostly do stuff.

    --
    My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
  101. Re:Ah yes (cont'd) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Space solar power, blimps to orbit, fusion power, interstellar probes, strong AI, utility fog...

  102. Said before... by TBBScorpion · · Score: 1

    "Everything that can be invented has been invented." ~Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. patent office, 1899

  103. Quantitative changes lead to qualitative ones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also, Cheaper/Smaller/Faster (Better, Harder, Stronger) leads to the kind of big obvious phase-changes that go into the history books.

    Someone made improvements in furnaces for bronze... Take a lot of those changes, and guess what: You've reached the temperature where you can smelt iron. Game changer!

  104. TFA is nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Today we measure everything, and so we evaluate ideas merit or value based on ability to measure effectiveness. Many "big ideas" of the past were either groupthink LSD trips that turned out to be silly in retrospect (communism), or actively destructive to civilization (fascism).
    Today we are more rigorous about demanding that ideas pass muster before giving them a chance to "make it big", and we test them and discard them faster if they are ineffective.
    This all in addition to the already noted huge intrinsic sample bias of comparing "history's top ideas of all time" to this year's ideas.
    Also, there is a huge bias caused because publishing was a bigger deal in the past than it is today, so obviously a higher percent of what is published/tweeted/etc. today is junk, but that doesn't mean there is a smaller absolute number of good ideas.
    Also, most big ideas aren't recognized as such till later, so today's big ideas aren't yet recognized.
    Also, knowledge has expanded to the point where nobody understands all the fields anymore, so it's almost impossible for an idea that is truly insightful in any field to be fully understood by most people outside the field. Or for a meta-idea to be meaningful inside all fields.
    Also, wasn't "Arab Spring" a big idea?
    Also, this article is just a transparent attempt to glorify the olden days when people bought the whole NY Times instead of reading one article online because they saw it on slashdot.
    I guess "print journalism is dead and intellectual discourse happens in numerous other venues instead" would not qualify as a big idea?

  105. likey forkie, likey knifey? by luis_a_espinal · · Score: 1

    5. went to community college first as opposed to go straight to college and was willing to leave

    with parents as much as possible vs racking up an additional $25-$35K (or even more) on loans just to be on a dorm on a 4-year college more often than not needlessly far away.

    Maybe it's worthwhile to save the commute and spend the extra time studying grammar?

    I kid. 4-year colleges don't teach grammar anymore either.

    In any event, it seems that a grammar error is all required to invalidate an argument. Me no know grammar, but me knows the logic do not work like that. Likey forkie? Likey knifey?

    What can I say? as a non-native English speaker, I still mix a and an, even after using English for 18 years. Or you can scratch that out as a/an typing error made in jets in a forum in the interweebz (OH NOES, TEH LOLCATS!!). Either way, here is a cookie, a trophy for your nomination for the Interweebz Nazi Gramm3r awards.

  106. People don't care about ideas? by AB3A · · Score: 1

    Then explain the popularity of TED. Explain the Maker Fairs. Explain the continuing development of computer software and media from the home.

    This idiot snob from the NYT (But I repeat myself) is acting as if these things need to show up in the Legacy Media to be considered "popular."

    Has it ever occurred to him that he might not be looking in the right places?

    --
    Nearly fifty percent of all graduates come from the bottom half of the class!
  107. You're on to something by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    Yes -- Slashdot has far and away the best system for moderating comments, and all web sites should adopt it! I would mod you up above Score:5 if I could. (Maybe the upper limit of 5 is a flaw in the system.)

    I bet many Slashdot users aren't even aware that you can see a sweet summary of all your comments, and how many replies each has received, by going to http://slashdot.org/~insert_your_User_ID_here/comments. That summary really facilitates the exchange of ideas.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  108. And you know this because... by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    It's not just nostalgia or some historical distortion that things were different between the two world wars... cafes were abuzz with conversation about this very stuff. Not everyone had an opinion about all of it, but everyone did have an opinion about some of it

    And you know this because you were alive and frequenting cafes in 1930?

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  109. The specific Big Ideas, by name by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    The big ideas happen once, maybe twice in a generation

    I can think of three specific really big sci/tech ideas in the last 100 years:
    * the Double-helix model of DNA (Watson and Crick, 1953)
    * General relativity (Einstein, 1916)
    * the Transistor (Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley, 1947)

    (Am I missing any?)

    Everything since then has been either a smaller idea, or an evolutionary refinement of one of these big ideas. We're about due for another big idea, don't you think?

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  110. TS Eliot complained about this too by DoctorLard · · Score: 1

    T.S.Eliot wrote (in a play about religious decline, in 1933):

    Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge?
    Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?

    Which is pretty much the tl;dr of TFA.

  111. The world of Mediocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting idea, and I can't deny the expression of this concept, good ideas are often lost amongst the tidal-wave every-other opinion, and most people simply aren't interested; it seems that we are lost in some bizarre quest for Mediocracy.

    But I don't believe we have lost the capacity for big thinking, it's harder these days because most of the big, easy, and obvious ideas have been done, the other parts of the issue are:

    -Increased Complexity: Today, the base level of complexity in technical work is immense, and the big thinkers end up in a specialisation; All complex jobs require it. There just isn't enough time in the day for pondering the big issues, or escape the things your responsible for...
    -Working Hours: Today, compared to 50 years ago, the expectation for a high throughput of work has us all worked to the bone...
    -Devaluation of Skilled Labour: When was the last time you where thanked/respected for being a software engineer, etc.??
    -The Complexity of Big Ideas: Most people don't have the time or inclination to understand the next big thing; better to wait until someone tweets it...
    -Vested interests; thinking dose not equal buying, etc...

    Here's an idea for today:

    Lets make war irrelevant, and expose the corruption that retards our word. Oh yes, someone is already working on that...
    At least the Noble org. is still capable of identifying the ideas that matter...

  112. People with good ideas are sued by Ramin_HAL9001 · · Score: 1

    I had a great idea once, but it turned out that implementing it required assembling numerous parts, 160 of which were each similar enough to about 160 different patents. I am confident that if I had opted to fight the patents in court, I could have defeated 159, if not all of the patent infringment claims, but I ran of money to pay the lawyers. Now I'm in debt, and my idea hasn't made me any money or even been offered capital investment (because no one wants to touch me for fear of the cost litigation).

    Full disclaimer, I am making this up, but it's still totally true.

    We're not in a "post-idea" world, we are in a world where ideas are heavily discouraged from being capitalized-on. Unless, that is, you work for a major corporation where your idea can be arbitrarily exploited by upper management with minimal compensation or remittance, arbitrarily have its development canceled and locked in a safe until after you have retired, or arbitrarily marketed to the wrong audience only to be declared that your idea was actually never very profitable. And by arbitrarily, I mean "depending on what Steve Jobs is doing today."

  113. Exactly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wealthy backers were certainly interested in monetizing the ideas being stolen, created or purchased by both inventors. This same model has been true throughout most of history. I am constantly amazed at the skulduggery that went on and how we've cleaned it up for the children's books from which we've all formed our current beliefs.

  114. Nonsense by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    AI, robots, nanotechnology, and genetic therapies will change mankind's future at least as much as electricity, transportation, and communication changed it in the past.

    I would also say that the full societal implications of the Internet are just now beginning to appear. It's hard to tell now, in the moment, but the truth is that global societies have already changed dramatically since the Web was launched in 1992. I would argue for the better.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
  115. trecking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google is not excepting any further ideas but as the 20 th August reported with the BBC extended Google's' street view to include walks or ridges through exotic places. I feel a further extension to this product would be to include historic trecks ( the term used here is South Africa to describe journeys). The trecks by the America pilgrim’s into the centre of America through Indian held territory is one that comes to mind, but here is SA the great treck is another.

            An organization In Barberton has signposted the route taken by the author of Jock of the Bushveld were it crosses a main existing road, which would be another interesting project to retrace the route taken by early transport riders

            Wondering if this idea will produce a result

                        krleggo@gmail.com