The authors suggest that the "second" machine age is inherently different from the first. They describe the last 200 hundred years as the first machine age; one that was dominated by a few key technology innovations. Included among those would be the steam engine, the internal combustion engine, electricity, and indoor plumbing.
Many economists make the analysis of past history to be the template for future innovation and economic growth. In this picture there are a few great technical advances that spawn numerous tweaks and applications, but eventually this advance slows to a crawl as new uses become of marginal importance. Supporters of this view believe we are in need of another "big thing" if economic growth is to take off again. The authors quote the economist Bob Gordon on the topic:
Note that in this view computers are not recognized as a "Great Invention" in terms of economic importance.
Brynjolfsson and McAfee prefer an alternate view of innovation which is referred to as "new growth theory." Inventions do not arise from nothing. The Latin base for the word means to come upon or to find. In this view, if innovation is stagnant then we are not discovering new ways of using existing knowledge either because we are not looking hard enough or are not looking effectively. The authors quote the economist Paul Romer as a supporter of this perspective:
Brynjolfsson and McAfee see computers and digitized data and the possibilities for individuals to network and exchange thoughts as the engines which will allow increased invention. In fact, new ways will be devised to foster this collaboration and make it more efficient. These new approaches are referred to as meta-ideas. Again quoting Romer:
Digitization and the internet have provided anyone who wishes it access to incredible amounts of knowledge. The authors refer to the act of deriving a new concept from this mass of information as "recombinant" innovation. What are needed are meta-ideas for how to extract useful information from this assemblage of knowledge.
The authors provide a few examples that illustrate where innovation is headed. The first involves a problem that NASA was trying to deal with: the forecasting of solar eruptions or solar particle events (SPEs). NASA concluded that within their expertise and resources they were not able to provide useful predictions, so they posted the problem as a challenge to the world by placing it on the website of Innocentive, "an online clearinghouse for scientific problems."
"As it turned out, the person with the insight and expertise needed to improve SPE prediction was not part of any recognizable astrophysics community. He was Bruce Cragin, a retired radio frequency engineer living in a small town in New Hampshire. Cragin said that ‘Though I hadn’t worked in the area of solar physics as such, I had thought a lot about the theory of magnetic reconnection.’….His recombination of theory and data earned him a thirty-thousand-dollar reward from the space agency."
Other organizations have followed NASA’s example and dumped unsolvable problems on Innocentive. Scholars who have studied the efficacy of this approach note success rates of up to thirty percent.
The authors also describe another online enterprise called Kaggle that addresses non-scientific problems.
"Another interesting fact is that the majority of Kaggle contests are won by people who are marginal to the domain of the challenge….and so would not have been consulted as part of any traditional search for solutions."
Another example provided by the authors is Quirky, an online enterprise that attempts to both generate new ideas for products and decide the best way to bring them to market.
These types of approaches fall under the generic categories of "crowdsourcing" or "open innovation." The examples the authors present are impressive, and the approaches to innovation are themselves innovative. We are living in exciting economic times and it will be interesting to see how this plays out.
Unfortunately, we have problems much bigger than coming up with the next gadget. If we are going to survive climate change associated with global warming, and going to learn enough about our own biology to repair the damages that keep appearing, we are going to need some big developments based on a lot of innovation. It is not clear that crowdsourcing or open innovation is an effective approach for these types of problems. However, if one can derive a new meta-idea on how to enhance innovation in these areas, that person would be greatly appreciated—and richly rewarded.
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