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Strategies & Market Trends : VOLTAIRE'S PORCH-MODERATED -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mannie who wrote (30358)2/1/2001 9:55:02 PM
From: lurqer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
if change proceeds at the same rate

And we all know it will continue to accelerate.

lurqer



To: Mannie who wrote (30358)2/2/2001 8:41:49 AM
From: altair19  Respond to of 65232
 
Scott...if you draw a time line from the Dark Ages to the present, the rate of change since the turn of the 20th century is logarithmic. I'm amazed to think what's in store for my children's children.....

Altair19



To: Mannie who wrote (30358)2/2/2001 9:31:04 AM
From: J. C. Dithers  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 65232
 
Scott, here is one oddity I have noticed concerning the rate of change...

I like to watch old movies as well as new. I watch a lot of classics from the 40's or 50's, such as Casablanca, All About Eve, and so forth. Although these films are 50 or 60 years old, It occurs to me in watching them that nothing looks all that much different from today. The clothes, the manner of speech, the houses, the furniture, the look of kitchens, the whole life-style depicted, transportation, and on and on. Yes, there are superficial changes evident, as in the look of cars. But then I think -- if in 1950 I were watching a film made in 1900, all the aspects I am mentioning would have looked far more radically different. There wouldn't even be any cars! Indeed, the technology of the film itself would have changed far more drastically in the first half of the century than in the second half. Even the plots of any movies made at the turn of the last century would have seemed completely alien and inappropriate to life in the 1950's, far more so than comparing 1950 to 2000.

I have no idea what point I am making (!) ... other than that it strikes me as a curiosity when we speak of how the rate of change in society is always accelerating.

J.C.