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  • So, my name is Charles Arthur I'm a technology journalist. I've been covering science, technology and, business for

  • something like 30 years. Most recently, I was technology editor at The Guardian; before that, I was technology editor at The Independent.

  • I was also for a period, Science and Technology editor. Before that, I was at New Scientist.

  • Before that, I was at a business magazine. Before that, I was at Computer Weekly. Tech science, and a little bit of health.

  • I mean ... The science thing crossed over into health when I did a lot about BSE and

  • Variant CJD which was an interesting time.

  • I think that we're in a period of what I call tech stasis, where we aren't seeing any great

  • changes in the technology environment around us.

  • If you think back to, say, 2007-2010, that sort of period,

  • there was enormous change going on in the world.

  • Apple introduced its iPhone, Google introduced Android,

  • Samsung and other big companies jumped onto the Android bandwagon.

  • Microsoft introduced Windows Phone to make up for Windows Mobile, which was falling behind then.

  • Blackberry was fighting to stay in existence, Palm was trying to come up with smart phones.

  • There was gigantic change happening. There were enormous sort of growth areas in all these spaces.

  • Now, speaking in 2018

  • We've got a point where Apple has 15% of the smartphone market and Android has 85% of it

  • And there's no sign of that changing except by one or two percentage points either way for the foreseeable [future].

  • We know where it is. We know what's happening.

  • Moore's Law, the dictum that processor power would increase by a factor of two every 18 months, has effectively stopped

  • Because they can't make processors any smaller.

  • So they add more cores, but as you have more cause you don't actually get that sort of increase in power.

  • So Moore's law has stopped. There's no more fighting in the smartphone space.

  • When you think what's the most dramatic new technology you've seen,

  • it's stuff like smart speakers where, you know, it sits in your kitchen and you set a timer for it,

  • or you ask it to play a piece of music, or you ask it a silly question or something. And that's about it.

  • You could do the same with your phone, as well, and there's no sort of big changes.

  • And the thing I think that certainly gets journalists' interests

  • but I think also gets people more generally interested is when there's big flux, when there's a lot of change happening.

  • And I'm just not seeing that at the moment and it's a bit hard to say. Why not?

  • I think it's partly because smartphones do so much that they've really captured

  • our ability to do so many things in this little black screen.

  • That means that you don't need anything else in your life. I mean Google tried with Google glass

  • Arguably it was too early, but also arguably they just didn't do enough.

  • You'd need glasses that would do everything.

  • Magic Leap has got a billion dollars in funding and they've come up with augmented reality glasses,

  • but people have tried them and they don't seem that impressed by them. Microsoft is trying the same with HoloLens

  • I've tried HoloLens and it's not going to take the world over.

  • Virtual reality doesn't seem to be going anywhere--that as a market is, you know, if anything shrinking.

  • So the question is: when's the next big change going to come? Where is it going to come from?

  • Some people might say blockchain, but I think not really. I think that that's just too energy-intensive, too full of scams,

  • There's just not enough happening there. It's got to be in second order effects.

  • So, rather as Uber was an application which was built on top of the smartphone,

  • I think the next things that are going to change how we think of technology have to be things that are built on

  • top of the existing platforms, but

  • For the moment, for the next few years, I think we're gonna have to just get used to what we have.

  • And it's... I don't know. It just feels like stasis. It's the longest period I can remember when very little changed.

  • At some point a piano was a new technology, right, and nowadays a piano is a piano, right?

  • Do you think the same's going to happen with mobiles, or tablets,

  • are they just gonna be a thing: you don't need to replace it, just does what it does? Do you think...?

  • I think that's already the case.

  • I mean, people [who] have a PC, a desktop PC, a laptop, now hang on to that for years.

  • Mine is 6 years old and I still don't see any need to change it.

  • People were hanging onto tablets for longer and longer so that market, you know, really flattened out.

  • With smartphones, people are just not as eager as they were to grab the the latest and greatest and that's affected Samsung

  • And that's affected Samsung, to some extent it's affecting Apple.

  • So yeah, I think people just get satisfied with what they have and then they're looking for something new but

  • Rather as for the desktop, you could tell that the desktop was over when people stopped developing apps for it

  • You know, it stopped being for the desktop first and that happened in 2010.

  • That was when the last big apps that happened first on the desktop happened.

  • And that was Dropbox and Spotify. They both happened in 2010. And the next big apps after that was Instagram.

  • That was only on the mobile phone. It was years before you could get anything to do with Instagram on the desktop.

  • And then after that you have things like WhatsApp and so on, and it all moved to mobile.

  • But now there's no other platform. Mobile is where everything happens

  • And I don't know. It just feels like we're...

  • We're having to sort of live with it, but it's almost as if this

  • The mine is sort of worked out. That there's nothing new. It's always very dangerous obviously to say that, to say

  • 'Oh, well, that's all, it's all been invented.' I think there was something back in 1996 or something

  • that said, 'Well, that's it. You know, that's it for the world.

  • We've invented everything.' But, I just feel that with everything in the stasis that it is,

  • that It's very difficult for something to break through dramatically, for a small company to come up with something here and the way that Google did

  • back in 1996 when they were brand new and they were able to

  • overturn the whole search engine world.

  • One doesn't get the feeling that there's the same weakness there, because the big companies are so big.

  • You know, the Apples and the Googles and the Microsofts of this world, and the Facebooks and the Twitters and the [inaudible],

  • I think they're all so big that if a small company starts to come up,

  • then they can swap what they're doing and they can get ahead of them

  • And I should caveat this by saying I'm going I'm going to be talking in general terms

  • each operating system with us: Windows, Linux, Mac OS,

  • iOS BSD

  • insert your favorite operating system here that you probably...

So, my name is Charles Arthur I'm a technology journalist. I've been covering science, technology and, business for

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議論、コンシューマ・テックの停滞?- コンピュータマニア (Discussion, Consumer Tech Stasis? - Computerphile)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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