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Jeff Haynie's ramblings about business and technology is home at http://blog.jeffhaynie.us/.
Technology predictions from 20 years ago
Posted by:
Jeff Haynie on
October 26, 2008 at
3:51AM EST
We recently moved from Atlanta, Georgia to Mountain View, California and during the move I had a chance to go through some old boxes I’ve had for years — twenty years to be exact. Tonight, I decided to open up some of the boxes and try and see if I could find some old pictures after seeing some of my high school friend’s pictures on Facebook. I came across a Newsweek magazine in almost perfect shape from almost 20 years ago to the date: October 24, 1988. Spooky? And on the cover, today’s hero was the wonder kid 20 years ago: Steve Jobs. Yep, that’s right, the man on top of Apple (once again) and by far, one of the world’s most influential technology snobs. The title: “Mr. Chips”. The subtitle: “Steve Jobs puts the ‘wow’ back in computers.” How apropos for then, and today. As an aside, another big box read: “Why Bush is winning: The GOP’s Campaign Machine”. Yeah, that was Bush senior. 20 years later and we’re still talking about a Bush in the white house. But, that’s another story. Flipping through this issue was literally going back in time. A number of computers advertisements, several cigerrate ads and an article on how “more consumers are ducking the price of perpetual interest by paying off bank cards in full”. This was the IBM 280 PC. It ran DOS, had VGA graphics, 4MB of memory on the system board, proprietary PS/2 devices and could be configured to run IBM’s OS/2. You don’t see cigarette ads anymore. This article predicted: “Heads you win. Tails you win.” However, fearing thousands of separate, costly lawsuits from customers with smoke-related health problems, the major U.S. tobacco companies and 46 states signed the Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) on Nov. 23, 1998. The MSA placed restrictions on future tobacco advertising and cigarette sales practices and also provided for a $250 Billion settlement. The Epson PC? This one was the Equity ET with the tagline: “I don’t need a laptop computer. I need a desktop computer that fits on my lap.” Great vision, terrible execution. Walmart was on the leading edge of technology stores with this tagline: “Name brand electronics. Always at lower prices: The switch is on to Wal-mart electronics”. Let’s first start with the cover article on Mr. Jobs - the whiz kid, 33 years old back then. The article is mainly about Steve Jobs’ comeback after Apple Computer with the NeXT computer. “Love him or hate him, people in the computer world couldn’t wait to see what Jobs had secretly worked on for three years in his Palo Alto headquarters.” The price tag for the initial model (with a university discount): $6,500. Even Esther Dyson, back then the publisher of the Release 1.0 newsletter, said: “It’s a neat, neat box.” And Steve Jobs was aimed “where the smart money is going”: the workstation market was $2.5 Billion and broken into the following market leaders: 25.5% - Sun Microsystems Notice anybody missing? IBM, Toshiba, Sony, Dell, Apple? Notice some that are gone? Apollo, DEC ? I would imagine Sun and SGI together probably own less than 3.9% of the workstation market these days. The article also had a very familiar name in the article, Bill Gates, with an awesome photo. Back then, Gates was only 32. The article states that Gates is “a virtuoso software engineer with virtually zero charisma, he is the ultimate entreprenerd.” According to the article, Jobs invited Gates to contribute software to the NeXT, but Gates declined, saying there wasn’t enough money in the narrow market Jobs was pursuing. It also has Gates saying: “Steve always yells at me.” Well, NeXT didn’t exactly take over the computer world, but Steve Jobs did and he did regain control of Apple (along with a number of key people and technologies from NeXT) after Apple bought NeXT only 8 years later for $429 million. Jobs returned as CEO in 2000 and NeXTSTEP was the foundation for the next generation of Apple operating system, OS X. In this same issue, they outlined some interesting predictions for the future of technology. Let’s see how we did 20 years later. EducationGrade school Language Libraries Programming BusinessDesign Secretarial work Networking Travel ScienceMedicine Technology Meteorology Criminology The ArtsGraphics Music Video Games Alan Kay of Xerox’s PARC fame predicted that “portable computers will require built-in cellular-telephone connections - so you can tap into big data banks while sitting under the apple tree.” (The “apple” keyword has a particular significance today as the Apple iPhone takes a predicted 25% of the smart phone market share after only one year on the scene). Mitch Kapor of Lotus fame said: “We need to build a national infrastructure that will be the information equivalent of the national highway-building of the ’50s and ’60s”. The World Wide Web was invented by English scientist Tim Berners-Lee one year later in 1989. Wayne Rosig, at the time at Sun Microsystems, predicted: “It’s a waste to have hundreds of computers in a building that share nothing but AC power.” The article predicted that “Groupware will permit an officeful of people to collaborate on, for example, a magazine advertisement, with artists, copywriters and salespeople all contributing, via computer, to the project. When a writer changes a line of copy, it will instantly show up in the layout on the designer’s computer screen.” Today, we have applications like Google Docs and Zoho that have similar capabilities. John Seely Brown of Xerox’s PARC fame, envisioned “meetings at which every participant has a computer - and the meeting’s progress appears on a ‘decision spreadsheet’ projected on one wall, on which the pros and cons of the argument are analyzed for all to see.” In most meetings today, it’s not uncommon for everyone to have a laptop and mobile device during a meeting. Today, virtual meetings are commonly held online using services like WebEx. My favorite prediction was from Lawrence Tesler, then the VP of advanced technology at Apple and now at Yahoo: “Sooner or later, more people will carry their computers around than keep them fixed to a desk.” With more than several billion mobile computer devices worldwide in use today, this was probably the one prediction that was difficult to understand in its impact. In some countries like Japan, there are more mobile devices than personal computers. And, with the price of computer chips, storage and memory continuing to fall and with the advent of modern nano technology, we’re seeing more and more miniaturized computers in all sorts of products. And, as a final bonus, the political carton section from this issue: Even then, Donald Trump ruled the world. After a rise, and fall, and rise again, he’s back on top just like Steve Jobs. Funny how much things have changed, and in some ways, they’re still the same. What will the next 20 years bring us? Any predictions for the next 20 years you’d like to share? |