Predicting the Next Disruptive Innovation

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Uploaded by on Nov 5, 2009

http://www.markproffitt.com/ You can predict the next big innovation. Predictive Innovation Method reveals all innovations and helps you uncover which one will be the next big thing.

If you are an investor, entrepreneur, business person, inventor, or policy maker being able to know what is coming next is highly valuable. The speed of innovation today means you must be planning for two step ahead to avoid being left behind.

Links:
http://markproffitt.com/2011/01/26/prediction-moviereshape-makes-hyper-custom...

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  • ...privacy is becomming redundant with a more blatant and oversubscribe use of social networking. this has reached such an extent that parents are on the internet with their children and people are exposed to each other in a more extended way. forget the 1960's liberal revolutions, this will have the most profound effect on society in the coming decades. I still think the next big leap is the implimentation of advanced artifical intelligence using the internet for reasearch.

  • @MuonRay Artificial Intelligence is a Continuous type so it is likely part of the next big step. At this moment I am trying to find someone to develop software to automate part of Predictive Innovation. That will radically change how technology develops.

  • @MarkProffitt you mean like a program which can predict the positions of open spaces in that hypercube you speak of given mutually exclusive variables. You could probably do that on Matlab, its a pretty standard programming language for dynamics such as this. I mean programming should be as simple as possible in the beginning stage; I mean this matrix element is really apart of a sort of metric object right? you could probably make non-mutually exclusive variables aswell.

  • @MuonRay The hard part is actually not hard programming. There needs to be a user interface to guide people into setting up the variable correctly. The non-mutually exclusive (meaning combinations) is where the numbers blow up. You go from 735 types to 4.25e+57 for one user alternative. That is an unusable number but since it is structured into the 7x7x(3x5) hypercube the distance between each type is less than 12.

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  • infrastructure exists for the technological leap from simply personalised webcam to full scale face-to-face communication; however it will require an entirely new social stigma on the concept of privacy. people who go on the internet were, orignially, largely professional and at times outsiders and loners in what was once considered the normal social structure. the whole meaning of a forum of information has changed from a library visit to a Google search. privacy is also becoming redundant...

  • @MarkProffitt Hmmm. Sounds like a job for excel or better, some version of C. Do you have code?

  • @MarkProffitt I also say hypercube because the 3+1 dimensions listed do not include the other 3+1 dimensions that describe the purpose, and the customers and innovators. This video is focusing on one part of the hyperspace that relates to users. Other areas of the hyperspace address deciders, payers, makers, designer, etc.

  • @kokopelli314 You got that backwards. "A generalization of the cube to dimensions greater than three is called a "hypercube", "n-cube" or "measure polytope". The tesseract is the four-dimensional hypercube, or 4-cube." Notice that I say each box is a "type" that means there can be multiples of each type so that is an extra dimension which is not easy to visually display and related it to common thoughts of space. So I am showing a tesseract, however that 4th dimension is sparse, not uniform.

  • A hypercube is a tesseract.

  • good job mate, nicely put!!

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