This video explores the changes in the way we find, store, create, critique, and share information. This video was created as a conversation starter, and works especially well when brainstorming w...
This video explores the changes in the way we find, store, create, critique, and share information. This video was created as a conversation starter, and works especially well when brainstorming with people about the near future and the skills needed in order to harness, evaluate, and create information effectively.
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If information has changed this much in the last 30 years alone, imagine what changes it will go through in the next 30. Michio Kaku said the within 30 years, Moore's Law will collapse, and silicon tech will be at the very limit. He thinks that by then though we will have computers (Quantum Computers) that compute at the speed of human thought. 500 trillion bytes p/s. That's over 454 Terabytes per second.
This is very interesting. But as information evolves into a more digital age, what happens to the value of it? Information is valued by the way we read and the way we process it. The more we have, the less we know. Little value is placed on information by students that have infinite access to it. What has happened is the creative restructuring of information is gone. It's all about the copy and paste. Is there a way to combine them? Hopefully! Wonderful work! I'm a big fan!
Well, I think the information will not have value in a future as these days... What will have value is HOW WE manage that information, how we can exploit it, so we can: build, change and take decitions.
The better way to exploit information is not by a single person... it's by groups of persons (e.g. Wikipedia).
Autoshare makes certain YouTube activities public on the services you choose. Select only the services you are comfortable with - like Facebook, Twitter, or Google Reader - to let your friends know what you like on YouTube. You can turn Autoshare off at any time.
Well, knowledge is always good. Even if it's irrelevant to your field of study.
Your videos open my mind always! =]
cheers from Mexico city!
"What happens to the value of it?"
Well, I think the information will not have value in a future as these days... What will have value is HOW WE manage that information, how we can exploit it, so we can: build, change and take decitions.
The better way to exploit information is not by a single person... it's by groups of persons (e.g. Wikipedia).
Sorry my bad english! I tried my best hehehe!