.changing employment the change from real world jobs to digitally
empowered blended services is not an unprecedented rundown. In the 1890s, around half
of the workforce in countries like the United States were in three occupations: agriculture, domestic service and jobs to
do with horse transport. By the 1970s these three were down to 4 per cent of the workforce. If this had been foretold in the
1890s, there would have been a wail. It would have been said that half the population was fit only to be farmworkers, parlourmaids
and sweepers-up of horse manure. Where would this half find jobs? The answer was by the 1970s the majority of them were much
more fully employed ( because more married women joined the workforce) doing jobs that would have sounded double-Dutch in
the 1890s: extracting oil instead of fish out of the North Sea; working as computer programmers, or as television engineers,
or as package-holiday tour operators chartering jet aircraft. The move in jobs in
the past fifty years in the rich countries has been out of manufacturing and into telecommuting. Changing education There
has been a sea-change in the traditional ages on man. Compared with 1974 our children in 2024 generally go out to paid work
(especially computer programming work) much earlier, maybe starting at nine, maybe at twelve, and we do not exploit them.
But young adults of twenty-three to forty-five stay at home to play much more than in 1974; it is quite usual today for one
parent (probably now generally the father, although sometimes the mother) to stay at home during the period when young children
are growing up. And today adults of forty-three to ninety-three go back to school - via computerised learning - much more
than they did in 1974. In most of the rich countries in 2024 children are not allowed to
leave school until they pass their Preliminary Exam. About 5 per cent of American children passed their exam last year before
their eight birthday, but the median age for passing it in 2024 is ten-and-a-half, and remedial education is generally needed
if a child has not passed it by the age of fifteen. A child who passes his Prelim can decide
whether to tale a job at once, and take up the remainder of his twelve years of free schooling later; or he can pass on to
secondary schooling forthwith, and start to study for his Higher Diploma. The mode of learning
for the under-twelves is nowadays generally computer-generated. The child sits at home or with a group of friends or (more
rarely) in an actual, traditional school building. She or he will be in touch with a computer program that has discovered
, during a preliminary assessment, her or his individual learning pattern. The computer will decide what next questions to
ask or task to set after each response from each child. A school teacher assessor, who may
live half a world away, will generally have been hired, via the voucher system by the family for each individual child. A
good assessor will probably have vouchers to monitor the progress of twenty-five individual children, although some parents
prefer to employ groups of assessors - one following the child's progress in emotional balance, one in mathematics, one in
civilized living, and so on - and these groups band together in telecommuting schools. Many
communities and districts also have on-the-spot 'uncles' and 'aunts'. They monitor childrens' educational performance by browsing
through the TC and also run play groups where they meet and get to know the children personally... Some of the parents who have temporarily opted out of employment to be a family educator also put up material on
the TC s for other parents to consult. Sometimes the advice is given for free, sometimes as a business. It is a business for
Joshua Ginsberg. He puts a parents advice newsletter on the TC , usually monthly. Over 300,000 people subscribe to it, nowadays
at a 25-cent fee per person, or less if you accept attached advertisements. Here's an entry from the current newsletter:.. | here you can download 2025 report-the whole of our 1984 book written to offer an alternative systems end game to orwell's big brother- you can also help us
coblog 37th annual revisions at www.bidenuni.com- Q&A welomme chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk in wash dc +1 240 316 8157to cop26 glasgow nov 2021 as well as connecting
the first 40 years of dad's diaries as teenager navigating allied bomber command over modernday myanmar/bangladesh to notes from keynes last class in cambridge to 40 years of scribbling leaders at the economist only 30 of 2000 of which he was permitted to sign - one anual suvey from age of 40 starting 1962 consider how japan (his teenage combatant)can help sustain two thirds of world's peoples who are asian. in fact the 1964 olympics was a
joyous time in tokyo with prince charles and japan emperor mapping back how to end all the poverty traps their nations had
compoubded in the past era or mercantile empires led by 2 small islands at exreme ends of the old world's continents -what
marred this celebration was jf kennedy did not live to brainstorm mon races down on earth nor the consequences of the first
wordwide satellite broadcast-and equally lives matter remapping did not kickstart inside the new world across peoples of every
skin type in my family tree 5 generations of diaspora scots -mainly medics social justice mediators, community builders
and british embassy storytellers of loving different peoples- saw the world wars as mainly due to london corporate empire's
mercantile age misusing james watt's and adam smiths machines stared up at glasgow u 1760- -if only lives mattered wherer
humans and machines linkied in the world - goodwill could have multiplied sustaiablity across the road- give moores laws exponentials
in dad's view the 2020s would be the last chance decade to humanise ai so that wherever next girl was born she and her community
thrived - 2025 report was revised in different ptint languages to 1993's sweden's new vikings - 
| wanted round world happiness letters rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk ....example
dc<>tokyo Dear Tsutomu and Yuko -happy new year to you and peoples in all hemispheres
would the publisher and you be interested
in making a shortlist of people to send an early review copy of Von Neumann in Japanese to?
one difficulty is finding people who joyfully remember how exciting
the 1960s seemed to be both because of Japan Rising with Deming and USA rising with Von Neumanns artificial intel and moon
race
sadly the main historian
at Harvard of this promise to unite youth: Ezra Vogel died in the last 10 days;
my guess is that leaves one pivotal Japanese person
in Boston to send a copy to as joi ito - you probably know he was headhunted to lead MIT media
lab and to bridge us-japan entrepreneurs; the media lab borders at least 5 generally interesting labs in addition to specific
ones such as health, agriculture, ;
the original artificial intelligence lab formed with 3 years of Von Neumann's death,
Tim Berner Lee's www lab,
Rosalind Picard's lab - how do advances in machines 5 senses also
augment senses for humans with disabilities
the new Schwarzman transformation of MIT linking in oxford and China's Tsinghua and 9 leading Japanese graduates, - if you could send a copy to Tokyo's Mayor/Governor Koike - she cares about education imagineering as much
as Beijing's mayor -and both are caught up in the mess covid has made for Olympics youth - i once hoped that Naomi Osaka would
win the tennis Olympics and go on to be Japans youth Sustainabiilty Development Goals ambassador but it looks like that world
stage for lives matter societies has been lost
and mobile tech end poverty labs- these dont have one simple name but having visited mit most years since 2008 i can
help ask around for a full list
none
of these labs integrated edu tech the way dad and my 2025report.com first debated in 1984- frankly Nordica and Chinese diaspora
eg Singapore seem to do that in ways that neither MIT AI lab nor the other twin AI lab at Stanford yet do
the japan society in new york one
block from the United Nations is a pivotal community discussion hub- except while covid reigns; they staged an event with
Joi Ito 2 years ago which i attended ; i tried to ask who was their new york number 1 humaniser of technology was but didnt
get an answer- indeed they were also in the process of changing the organisational team-it may be a question the publisher
can ask more directly than i
back
in 2007 my next door neighbor Shimada, Takehiro worked at the
japan embassy in DC; he was in charge of the annual cherry blossom festival; he connected me with the then head of JICA in
ysa Yamamoto Aiichiro who shared my interest in Bangladesh
as a tech lab for the poor as well as my fathers 1960/1970 surveys of japan and asia rising and humanising tech, I dont know
how to contact these two people but tech for sustainability goals is something only japan can lead collaboratively in todays
G7
Although my father supported
Schwab world economic forum in its early days as an apres ski dinner roundtable Schwab's weforum managers dont recall; however
it would be fascinating if Tokyo;s industrial revolution 4 hub of Schwab has any connections with the history of tech- I know
Schwab's AI conference organiser so i could ask her for one name at Schwab IR4 Tokyo lab but I am not sure if Japan'sG20 please
for society 5.0 and Osaka data track were ever understood in the west. probably the most highly connected person of all is Koji Tomita -
I dont know if there is somebody in his team at USA embassy who might have time to read von neumann BRIDGING 3 GENERATIONS WHO WIN OR LOSE OUR SPECIES A key future history
question seems to me to start up around who remembers why von neumanns inspirations in usa never came humanly together with
Deming's inspiration in japan; there is even the extraordinary story around 1965 when intel received its then largest silicon
chip order from a Japanese calculator company and rather than become too dependent on one client invented the programmable
chip -why didnt Japan and silicon valley twin in the 1970s?
back in 1964 Prince Charles was inspired by the Tokyo Olympics, met Akio Motita of Sony, asked him
to inwardly invest in wales one of the first Japanese inward investments in the west- but i dont know in both countries who
connects that 57 years on
i
realise both Prince Charles and the Emperors family are huge supporters of green technology; if anyone is preparing Japanese
connections with Glasgow cop 26 my friends are trying to celebrate all youth organisations without borders; we have hired
the Glasgow University Union for middle Saturday nov 6 so that youth and sdg led discussions connect with what Adam Smith
and James Watt started 260 years ago
the two places to host briainstorming remembrance events of my fathers work were Glasgow University and thanks to Ambassador
Sadoshima - in 2012 the Japanese Embassy in Dhaka - there my father's greatest end poverty hero chaired 2 dinner
sessions: *the future coalition of new universities needed if there is ever to
be a first sd generation * the future of fintech and economics for the poorest
billion female Asians
Compared
with the 1960s computing/commuications NIT team needed to code the moon landing, Moores law suggest we have multiplied capacity
to analyse 10 fold every 5 years -approaching a trillion times moore by 2025 - but we don't seem to have united human and
machine intel by any exponentially positive multiplier- i think von neumann would be sad that worldwide collaboration round
trust in tech-youth had not yet multiplied across asia , europe, usa but then i grew up optimistically with Yoko Ono and John
Lennon imagineering scripts in my mind-
the sdg generation is all to play for in the 2020s if Asians let it be -as we enter 2021 it is not likely to be led by America's 5% of peoples not the EU's 5% unless something hugely different
emerges at cop26
happy 2021
chris macrae wash dc +1 240 316 8157 Xglasgow.com
On Sunday, 20 December 2020, 21:44:07
GMT-5, Tsutomu Yawata wrote: Dear Chris
The Japanese publisher also thank you for the updated bio. They will include this summary in their
paperback edition. They appreciate your assistance.All the best, Tsutomu Yawata The English Agency (Japan) Ltd.
⌘⌘⌘
On 2020/12/19 21:55, christopher macrae wrote:Hello Tsutomu and Yuko -may i wish you
a happy/safe new year
I drafted
a biographical summary of Norman Macrae. Can you and the publisher choose if you want to use parts of it on the book cover
or inside?
I see Japan as
making unique world leading choices with Society5.0, Osaka track, Reiwa era...Olympics, Expo25...
Personally I don't well understand the world of
the 2020s: so please ignore this unless there are parts of it that resonate with you
Norman Macrae; Future Historian 1760s: When James Watt and Adam Smith started up lives of humans assisted by machines they hoped to map out worldwide
improvement of the human lot.
By 1843, it was
clear to Diaspora Scot James Wilson that empires led by Britain were spinning the opposite of a world in which all lives matter.
He started up The Economist as a newsletter mediating purposeful futures of London’s Royal Society. The Economist’s
1943 centenary autobiography written at the height of world war 2 summarises how much more trusted mediation needed doing
if technology was not to destroy the human race. At that time, Norman Macrae was spending his last days as a teenager in world
war 2 with allied bomber command hubbed out of modern-day Myanmar. 1945 Surviving world war 2, Norman saw the opportunity to Unite Nations as a chance to sustain our species. From
the last class at Cambridge to be instructed on Keynesian systems for ending poverty, Norman was overjoyed to be offered a
job at The Economist paying 8 pounds a week. The other two most joyful events in Norman’s second twenty years of life
were an interview with John Von Neumann on the legacy of his life’s work, and The Economist offering Norman one signed
survey per year from 1962. Norman chose 1962’s survey to be about the rise and rise of Japan, and hopes for all of Asia’s
reversal of the poverty traps that Empire had caused. 1960s John Von Neumann’s immediate
legacy after his death in 1957 comprised the moon race and two Artificial Intelligence labs- at MIT Boston facing the Atlantic
Coast, at Stanford facing the Pacific Coast.
Norman
disagreed with western economists who started hiring themselves out to big government and big corporations in the 1970s. He
sought to mediate an optimistic global village viewspaper and adopted the Keynesian role of future historian. 1970s Economist
surveys epitomised this: 1972 the next 40 years, 1975 Asia Pacific Century, 1976 the Entrepreneurial Revolution
of value chains integrated by small-medium sized enterprises, 1977 celebration that Asian village women empowered by rural
Keynesianism and China’s happy intent to seed transformational education. In 1984, his family joined Norman in editing
The 2025 Report- a 4 decade exponential countdown to sustainability In 1989, Norman started an active retirement receiving the huge honours of Japan’s Order of Rising Sun with
Gold Rays and Neck Ribbon and Britain’s CBE. His first project: this biography on John Von Neumann. Norman died in 2010
but not before discovering one more unacknowledged hero- women empowerment’s Sir Fazle Abed. 2020s. Post-covid19, will humans open every society anew and value the futureoflife.org? Will we the
peoples celebrate the third and probably ultimate chance to humanize machines by valuing all lives matter? Let it be: the future of the Olympics out of the Orient, the future of climate summits out of Smithian Glasgow, the
future of all humans-artificial intelligence communities everywhere : the flourishing of girls, boys, and every colored skin
under the sun. |
2025 report authors' prologue most popular -deadline 2000s - chapter 6 fintech for the unbanked, media true to goal of end poverty -- results- everyone failed true media- fintech worldrecordjobs.com - see quadir family from 1995, fazle abed digital cash bangladesh www.bkash.com later with gates/ma, jack ma with jerry yang
& masa son and pony ma , partially correct mpesa in afrca; idea but not yet execution of satoshi blockchain as way to
comeback from subprimed world and digital central bank currency for sdg dev
Future
HistoryNet Futures - The 2025 Report (title of american edition, english publisgers preferred 2024 report
ie orwell +40) | Back in 1984 , Norman and Chris Macrae wrote "The 2025 Report:
a future history of the next 40 years". It was the first book to: .provide readers with a brainstorming journey
of what people in an internetworking world might do - predict that a new economy would emerge with revolutionary
new productivity and social benefits enjoyed by all who interacted in a net-connected world, designed for every community
to thrive in diversity and goodwill multipliers of sustainability exponentials across generations
Our 1984 scenario of an internetworking world
Changing communications, and what makes people distant, bossy, etc Changing
national politics
Changing economics
Changing employment
Changing education
Our 1984 scenario of an internetworking world
The great technological event
of the next 40 years will be the steady rise in importance of the Telecommunications-Computer terminal (TC for short)... Eventually
books, files, television programmes, computer information and telecommunications will merge. We'll have this portable object
which is a television screen with first a typewriter, later a voice activator attached. Afterwards it will be minaturised
so that your personal access instrument can be carried in your buttonhole, but there will be these cheap terminals around
everywhere, more widely than telephones of 1984. The terminals will be used to access databases anywhere in the globe, and
will become the brainworker's mobile place of work. Brainworkers, which will increasingly mean all workers, will be able to
live in Tahiti if they want to and telecommute daily to the New York or Tokyo or Hamburg office through which they work. In
the satellite age costs of transmission will not depend mainly on distance. And knowledge once digitalised can be replicated
for use anywhere almost instantly. Over the last decade, I have written many articles in The Economist and delivered
lectures in nearly 30 countries across the world saying the future should be much more rosy. This book explores the lovely
future people could have if only all democrats made the right decisions. Norman Macrae, 1984. Changing communications, and what makes people distant, bossy etc
Telecommunications are now
recognised as the third of the three great transport revolutions that have, in swift succession, transformed society in the
past two hundred years. First, were the railways; second the automobile; and third, telecommunications-attached-to-the-computer,
which was bound to be the most far-reaching because in telecommunications, once the infrastructure is installed, the cost
of use does not depend greatly on distance. So by the early years of the twenty-first century brainworkers - which in rich
countries already meant most workers - no longer need to live near their work. All three revolutions were opposed by
the ruling establishments of their time, and therefore emerged fastest where government was weak. All three brought great
new freedoms to the common man, but the railway and motor-car ages temporarily made access to capital the most important source
of economic power. As most men and women did not like being bossed about by capitalists who could become more powerful because
they were born stinking rich, they voted to give greater economic power to governments during the railway and motor-car ages.
This was economically inefficient, and also made tyrannies more likely and more terrible. The information revolution was fortunately
the exact opposite of the steam engine's industrial revolution and of Henry Ford's mass production automobile revolution in
this respect. The steam engine and mass production has made start-up costs for the individual entrepreneur larger and larger,
so that in both the steam and automobile ages to quote Bell Canada's Gordon Thompson in the early 1970s, there was 'no way
an ordinary citizen could walk into a modern complex factory and use its facilities to construct something useful for himself'.
But, as Thompson forecast, the databases of the next decades were places into which every part-time enthusiast could tele-commute.
In all jobs connected with the use of information, start-up costs for the individual entrepreneur in 1984-2024 have grown
smaller and smaller. It was 'never thus', said Thompson, 'with power shovels and punch presses'. In consequence, in
the TC age, the most important economic resource is no longer ownership of or access to capital, but has become the ability
to use readily available knowledge intelligently and entrepreneurially. Changing national politics
For a region's people to succeed in the Telecommuting Age there are
four main requirements - satisfied in places as far apart ad Guam and Queensland and Cape Province and California and Penang
and Scotland. First , as the prophet John Naisbitt said in 1982, 'the languages needed for the immediate future are computer
and English'. Second, the area has to be a nice one in which to live. Third, it is important that all income earners should
adapt happily to a 'cafeteria of compensation' schemes. These allow the individual employee to decide what mix (s)he wants
of salary, job objectives, career aims, flexitime, job sharing, long or short holidays, fringe benefits or fringe nuisances.
Fourth, there needs to be a competitive and quickly changing telecommunications system. The TC age is making understanding
of these requirements increasingly transparent among human beings worldwide. Governments at first tried to impede or
regulate much of this, but an early discovery of the Telecommutung age was that we could change the way we chose our governments.
Until the 1990s we had pretended to ourselves that we could alter our lifestyles by choosing on each Tuesday or Thursday every
four years whether Mr Reagan or Mr Carter , Mrs Thatcher or Mr Kinnock, was putting on the tribal demonstration which at that
particular moment annoyed us less. After the advent of the TC we found that the more sensible and direct way in which a free
man or woman could choose government was by voting with his or her feet. The individual could go to live in any area where
the government - which could from then on be a very local government - permitted the lifestyle, rules and customs which suited
that human being. Changing Economics
The introduction of the international Centrobank was the last great act of
government before government grew much less important. It was not a conception of policy-making governments at all, but emerged
from the first computerised town meeting of the world. By 2005 the gap in income and expectations between the rich and
poor nations was recognised to be man's most dangerous problem. Internet linked television channels in sixty-eight countries
invited their viewers to participate in a computerised conference about it, in the form of a series of weekly programmes.
Recommendations tapped in by viewers were tried out on a computer model of the world economy. If recommendations were shown
by the model to be likely to make the world economic situation worse, they were to be discarded. If recommendations were reported
by the model to make the economic situation in poor countries better, they were retained for 'ongoing computer analysis' in
the next programme. In 2024 it is easy to see this as a forerunner of the TC conferences which play so large a part
in our lives today, both as pastime and principal innovative device in business. But the truth of this 2005 breakthrough tends
to irk the highbrow. It succeeded because it was initially a rather downmarket network television programme. About 400 million
people watched the first programme, and 3 million individuals or groups tapped in suggestions. Around 99 per cent of these
were rejected by the computer as likely to increase the unhappiness of mankind. It became known that the rejects included
suggestions submitted by the World Council of Churches and by many other pressure groups. This still left 31,000 suggestions
that were accepted by the computer as worthy of ongoing analysis. As these were honed, and details were added to the most
interesting, an exciting consensus began to emerge. Later programmes were watched by nearly a billion people as it became
recognised that something important was being born. These audiences were swollen by successful telegimmicks. The presenter
of the first part of the first programme was a roly-poly professor who was that year's Nobel laureate in economics, and who
proved a natural television personality. He explained that economists now agreed that aid programmes could sometimes help
poor countries, but sometimes most definitely made their circumstances worse. When Mexico was inflating at over 80 per cent
a year in the early 1980s , the inflow to it of huge loanable funds made its inflation even faster and its crash more certain.
The professor set Mexico's 1979-1981 economy on the model, pumped in the loaned funds and showed how all the indicators (
higher inflation, lower real gross domestic product and so on) then flashed red, signaling an economy getting worse, rather
than green, signaling an economy getting better. ..The professor then put the model back to mirror the contemporary world
of 2005, and played into it various nostrums that had been recommended by politicians of left, right and centre, but mostly
left. The dials generally flashed red. Then the professor provided another set of recommendations , and asked viewers who
wished to play to tap in their own guesses on the consequent movement of key economics variables in the model. Those who got
their guesses right to within a set error were told they had qualified for a second round of a knock-out economic guesstimators'
world championship. Knockout competitions of this sort continued for viewers throughout the series of programmes. In
the second part of that first programme, the presenters dared to introduce two political decisions into the game. They said
that government-to-government aid programmes had been particularly popular among politicians during the age of over-government,
but there was growing agreement that government-to-government aid was the worst method of hand-out. The excessive role played
by governments in poor countries was one of the barriers to their economic advance, and a main destroyer of their people's
freedom. Could anyone have thought it would be wise to give aid to President Mbogo? In consequence, the most successful
economic aid programmes had been those operated through the International Monetary Fund, which imposed conditions on how borrowing
governments should operate. The professor showed that IMF-monitored operations in most years had brought more green flashes
from the model than red. But this involved IMF officials - often from the rich countries - in telling governments of poor
countries what to do; and one of the objectives of this town meeting of the world was to diminish such embarrassments. The
first questions to be asked in the next few programmes, said the compilers, were 1) which countries should qualify for aid?
; and having decided that, 2) up to what limits and conditions? ; and 3) through what mechanisms? They promised that later
programmes after the first half-dozen would examine how any scheme could be used to diminish the power of governments and
increase the power of free markets and free people. Changing employment
In a typical 21st C scene, obedience to consumer needs is shown by every
car plant in the world because of better and more customised information available on all our TCs. Most people buying a car
in 2024 will key into their special requirements into their TCs. The TC will reply: "You can get a customised car
which meets all of your specifications by putting personalised instructions on the software of the assembly line's robots
in one of these factories (choice of nine) requesting that the next car on the line be modified as you dictate. But that would
cost up to $40,000 (Click to factories for quotations and credit facilities). For a fifth of that price, you can meet most
of your requirements by the following standard computer programme at present scheduled for production in June at Nissan Kanpur;
or July at Ford Manila (and so on). Click to factories for precise specifications and prices. All of this has
become commonplace after 2000. How has it affected employment?
For a new industry of 2019-2024 let us
cite the intendedly short-lived example of the Clark-Schmidt Robot Gardener. Matthew Clark was a 53-year old on his third
university course (he had started the other two at the ages of nineteen and thirty-seven respectively) telecommuted through
the University of Southern California, although he took it while living in his native Australia , when, together with two
other student's telecommuting through USC's database, he devised a system for a robot-driven lawnmower which could also scan
soil and assess the possibilities for reseeding. It signaled the videos to be called up on your TC to show alternative uses
for the soil in your garden. If you picked one video display that particularly suited your taste, you keyed in its number
into the Robot Gardener and it signaled back, 'put such-and-such chemical into my tank and seeds 1234, 3456 (et cetera), plus
software program 29387 - both orderable through your TC - into my reseeder.' Clark and his two colleagues put their
tentative ideas for this device on the researchers' database monitored by the University of Southern California. The entry
numbers to the USC database were held by people who had promised to accept the computer's judgement of the value of any ideas
they might contribute to projects entered on it. In all, 1213 people - domiciled from Hanoi through Penang and Capri and Bermuda
back to Queensland in Australia itself - tapped in suggestions for improvements, of which 176 were accepted nby the computer
as worthwhile. The payments recommended by the computer ranged from $42 ( for a cosmetic improvement recommended by an eleven-year-old
schoolboy) to one tenth of the equity (eventually worth several million dollars) for a proposal by a research team from another
telecommuting university which proved important enough for Clark to feel slightly guilty about calling the Robot Gardener
after himself. When the improvements suggested by these 176 contributors had been incorporated by Clark into the appropriate
software program for making the Robot Gardener , it was advertised on USC's entrepreneur-browsing program available on any
TC. Entry numbers for the lowest echelons of this can be bought for a very few dollars, but the Robot Gardener was put on
a higher echelon because USC's computer had signaled this was a potential quick winner. One of those who had paid for
an expensive entry number into browsing among good 'proffered opportunity products' (POPs) was a Dutchman called Carl Schmidt.
He had become a successful 'arranging producer' in an earlier venture, and now occupied himself browsing through his TC looking
for a second bonanza. He made an offer to Clark to tale an option for launch in return for a fairly complicates programme
of profit sharing, which in practice (because arranging is nowadays a more skilled job than inventing) eventually gave Schmidt
more money than Clark. Clark accepted this and Schmidt produced a prototype within three days by reprogramming robots in an
experimental plant. A video of the prototype was put on consumers' TC channels worldwide the next week, and most of the 400
odd gardeners' TC channels round the world picked it out within days as a 'best buy'. Schmidt's video advertisement
said 'If you key in your order now with your credit number, you can get a Robot Gardener for a bargain price (applies to the
first 10,000 orders only). Tenders are also invited for part of the equity.' The advance orders and bids for equity made it
possible to finance assembly of the Robot Gardener for early-bid customers within a few weeks... Note that there was
never any intention that Robot Gardeners Inc should grow into a huge and long-lasting company. Clark and Schmidt are already
researching and browsing into other possibilities, on separate courses. About fifty of those who succeeded by early participation
in this venture hope to become the equivalent of Clark and Schmidt in other things. At no stage has this enormously
successful manufacturing venture employed more than 1000 people. It is therefore true that the loss of nine-tenths of manufacturing
jobs , which we saw has been highest in car-making in rich countries, has also been true there in manufacturing jobs as a
whole. Where these countries had 20-40 per cent of their workforces in manufacturing in 1974, they typically have 2-4 per
cent now. This is not an unprecedented rundown. In the 1890s around half of the workforce in countries like the United
States were in three occupations: agriculture, domestic service and jobs to do with horse transport. By the 1970s these three
were down to 4 per cent of the workforce. If this had been foretold in the 1890s, there would have been a wail. It would have
been said that half the population was fit only to be farmworkers, parlourmaids and sweepers-up of horse manure. Where would
this half find jobs? The answer was by the 1970s the majority of them were much more fully employed ( because more married
women joined the workforce) doing jobs that would have sounded double-Dutch in the 1890s: extracting oil instead of fish out
of the North Sea; working as computer programmers, or as television engineers, or as package-holiday tour operators chartering
jet aircraft. The move in jobs in the past fifty years in the rich countries has been out of manufacturing and into
telecommuting. Changing education There has been a sea-change in the traditional
ages on man. Compared with 1974 our children in 2024 generally go out to paid work (especially computer programming work)
much earlier, maybe starting at nine, maybe at twelve, and we do not exploit them. But young adults of twenty-three to forty-five
stay at home to play much more than in 1974; it is quite usual today for one parent (probably now generally the father, although
sometimes the mother) to stay at home during the period when young children are growing up. And today adults of forty-three
to ninety-three go back to school - via computerised learning - much more than they did in 1974. In most of the rich
countries in 2024 children are not allowed to leave school until they pass their Preliminary Exam. About 5 per cent of American
children passed their exam last year before their eight birthday, but the median age for passing it in 2024 is ten-and-a-half,
and remedial education is generally needed if a child has not passed it by the age of fifteen. A child who passes his
Prelim can decide whether to tale a job at once, and take up the remainder of his twelve years of free schooling later; or
he can pass on to secondary schooling forthwith, and start to study for his Higher Diploma. The mode of learning for
the under-twelves is nowadays generally computer-generated. The child sits at home or with a group of friends or (more rarely)
in an actual, traditional school building. She or he will be in touch with a computer program that has discovered , during
a preliminary assessment, her or his individual learning pattern. The computer will decide what next questions to ask or task
to set after each response from each child. A school teacher assessor, who may live half a world away, will generally
have been hired, via the voucher system by the family for each individual child. A good assessor will probably have vouchers
to monitor the progress of twenty-five individual children, although some parents prefer to employ groups of assessors - one
following the child's progress in emotional balance, one in mathematics, one in civilized living, and so on - and these groups
band together in telecommuting schools. Many communities and districts also have on-the-spot 'uncles' and 'aunts'. They
monitor childrens' educational performance by browsing through the TC and also run play groups where they meet and get to
know the children personally... Some of the parents who have temporarily opted out of employment to be a family educator
also put up material on the TC s for other parents to consult. Sometimes the advice is given for free, sometimes as a business.
It is a business for Joshua Ginsberg. He puts a parents advice newsletter on the TC , usually monthly. Over 300,000 people
subscribe to it, nowadays at a 25-cent fee per person, or less if you accept attached advertisements. Here's an entry from
the current newsletter: "Now that TCs are universal and can access libraries of books, 3-d video, computer programs,
you name it, it is clear that the tasks of both the Educator and the Communicator are far more stimulating that ten years
ago. One of my recent lessons with my ten-year-old daughter Julie was in art appreciation. In the standard art appreciation
course the TC shows replicas of famous artists' pictures, and a computer asks the pupil to match the artist to the picture.
Julie said to the computer that it would be fun to see Constable's Haywain as Picasso might have drawn it. The computer obliged
with its interpretation , and then ten more stylised haywains appeared together with the question 'who might have drawn these?'.
I believe we are the first to have prompted the TC along this road, but it may now become a standard question when the computer
recognises a child with similar learning patterns to Julie's. It is sometimes said that today's isolated sort of teaching
has robbed children of the capacity to play and interact with other children. This is nonsense. We ensure that Julie and her
four year old brother Pharon have lots of time to play with children in our neighbourhood . But in work we do prefer to interact
with children who are of mutual advantage to Julie and to each other. The computer is an ace teacher, but so are people. You
really learn things if you can teach them to someone else. Our computer has helped us to find a group of four including Julie
with common interests, who each have expertise in some particular areas to teach the others. The TC also makes it easier
to play games within the family. My parents used to play draughts, halma, then chess with me. They used to try to be nice
to me and let me win. This condescending kindness humiliated me, and I always worked frenetically to beat my younger brother
(who therefore always lost and dissolved into tears.) Today Julie, Pharon and I play halma together against the graded computer,
and Julie and I play it at chess. The computer knows Pharon's standard of play at halma and Julie's and mine at chess. Its
default setting is at that level where each of us can win but only if we play at our best. Thus Pharon sometimes wins his
halma game while Julie and I are simultaneously losing our chess game, and this rightly gives Pharon a feeling of achievement.
When Julie and I have lost at chess, we usually ask the computer to re-rerun the game, stopping at out nmistakes and giving
a commentary. As it is a friendly computer it does a marvelous job of consoling us. Last week it told Julie that the world
champion actually once made the same mistake as she had done - would she like to see that game? I intend to devote the
next two letters to the subjects I have discussed here , but retailing the best of your suggestions instead of droning on
with mine." While the computer's role in children's education is mainly that of instructor (discovering a child's
learning pattern and responding to it) and learning group matcher, its main role in higher education is as a store of knowledge.
Although a computer can only know what Man has taught it, it has this huge advantage. No individual man lives or studies long
enough to imbibe within himself all the skills and resources that are the product of the millennia of man's quest for knowledge,
all the riches and details from man's inheritance of learning passed on from generation to generation. But any computer today
can inherit and call up instantly any skill which exists anywhere in the form of a program. This is why automatically
updated databases are today the principal instruments of higher education and academic research. It is difficult for our generation
to conceive that only forty years ago our scientists acted as tortoise-like discoverers of knowledge, confined to small and
jealous cliques with random and restricted methods of communicating ideas. Down until the 1980s the world has several hundred
sepaate cancer research organisations with no central co-ordinating database. |
2025 report authors' prologue
chapter 6 fintech for the unbanked, media true to goal of end poverty
chapter 7 changing manufacturing employment
chapter 8 changing education
chapter 9 digital infrastructure revolution
chapter 10 -changing politicians
chapter 5
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