Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Happy holidays, farewell noughties, and onward and upward in 2010

Well, as Santa packs his sleigh, one thing is painfully clear: I have been a bad blogger and will only be receiving lumps of coal this year. My New Year's resolution is to post and Tweet more frequently in 2010. It promises to be an interesting, if challenging, new decade, and I look forward to being involved in new projects and adventures.

Given that the past two years have brought me little besides serial frustrations and disappointments on both personal and professional fronts, I can't say that I am sad to see the end of this first decade of the millennium. However, that would be to overlook all the wondrous developments in our beloved telecom which make the world in December 2009 look almost unrecognisable to the time traveller from ten years ago: the inexorable global rise of mobile; ubiquitous WiFi; grid computing; Linux in the consumer sphere; the proliferation of consumer broadband; peer-to-peer architectures; social media, user-generated content, and mash-ups; online gaming and immersive worlds; access-independent voice; the iPhone and apps; the iPlayer/Hulu; YouTube; the Cloud phenomenon; Google Earth; search and recommendation engines which actually work...

I could go on, and no doubt I'm missing many and overselling others. However, those of you who remember 2000 will, if you're honest, recognize that this list represents some genuinely huge changes to the world we inhabited when we celebrated the Millennium, and also that many of them were unexpected, or have happened either faster or on a broader scale than many could have anticipated at the time. Yet, what underlies their development is the technical, regulatory, and commercial framework which allowed these developments to take shape. In other words, the investment in development, policy, infrastructure and business models which enabled the fairly humble and primitive platform quaintly called "The Information Superhighway" in 1999 was critical to engendering all of the innovation we have seen in the decade since.

Only the most visionary at the time could have had a genuinely clear idea of how things would look in 2009, but the steps were taken nevertheless, possibly in some cases as a blind stab in the dark at some sort of nebulous opportunity which might develop as a result. We now find ourselves at the threshold of a new decade and a new range of unforeseen possibilities to be facilitated through further investment, and my guess is that the degree of transformation we will acknowledge at this time in 2019 may make the past decade look tame by comparison. If you find this line of thinking interesting, and also find yourself overdosing on family togetherness over the holidays, you might like to sneak away into a quiet corner and have a read of this recently-published paper which I co-wrote with my man Taylor Reynolds of the OECD. I look forward to your feedback, and hopefully to discussing and debating in the new year. Meanwhile, I am off to the States to see family and friends and (gulp) play a live show...

Until then, thanks for reading, and I'd like to wish you all the best during the holidays and a fulfilling and prosperous new year.

2 comments:

Cybersavvy UK said...

It's quite interesting that many of the new developments eg ubiquitous wifi, Linux/Ubuntu etc have come from the edge. Many developments/initial momentun has been from visions which were less corporate and more grassroots. Long may it reign! Happy Festive season to all.

chris said...

Maybe because I was in a start-up in 2000, I'm continually amazed by how SLOWLY everything changes where incumbents hold market power - YouTube was perfectly feasible in 2000 for instance. Think how many innovations happened to route around market power - Google, WiFi, the iPod. And think how far (not) we've come since Napster and consumer VOIP kicked off in 1999...!