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5 votes
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Dawn of a new era in Search: Balancing innovation, competition, and public good
23 votes -
Museum of Failure, a physical and digital exhibition of business ideas that failed
25 votes -
The race for next generation submarines - ageing fleets, innovation, and undersea dominance
16 votes -
As digital innovation reshapes the toy market, Lego's chief executive Niels B Christiansen discusses why playing around is good for children, adults and business
19 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
Iceland's startup scene is punching above its weight – dodging the venture capital doldrums, Frumtak Ventures lands $87M for its fourth fund
5 votes -
Students invent quieter leaf blower
41 votes -
Behold, the $400 red pineapple
20 votes -
Big Tech must be scared – bigger isn’t necessarily better when it comes to innovation
14 votes -
Embracing idiosyncrasies over optimization: The path to innovation in biotechnological design
3 votes -
The costs of not investing in American public infrastructure, research, and education
29 votes -
A journey into hip hop lore to discuss one of its forgotten '90s legends; Canibus. Why was he so hyped, why does nobody remember him, and why is his legacy so important?
15 votes -
Golden age of medicine
18 votes -
Are we stuck on a innovation plateau - and did startups burn through fifteen years of venture capital with nothing to show for?
The theses I would like to discuss goes as follows (and I'm paraphrasing): during the last 15 years, low interest rates made billions of dollars easily available to startups. Unfortunately, this...
The theses I would like to discuss goes as follows (and I'm paraphrasing): during the last 15 years, low interest rates made billions of dollars easily available to startups. Unfortunately, this huge influx of venture capital has led to no perceivable innovation.
Put cynically, the innovation startups have brought us across the last 15 years can be summarized as (paraphrasing again):
- An illegal hotel chain destroying our cities
- An illegal taxi company exploiting the poor
- Fake money for criminals
- A plagiarism machine/fancy auto-complete
Everything else is either derivative or has failed.
I personally think spaceX has made phenomenal progress and would have probably failed somewhere along the way without cheap loans. There's also some biotech startups (like the mRNA vaccines that won the race to market during covid) doing great things, but often that's just the fruits of 20 years of research coming to fruition.
Every other recent innovation I can think of came from a big player that would have invested in the tech regardless, and almost all of it is "just" incremental improvements on several decades old ideas (I know, that's what progress looks like most of the time).
What do you think? Do you have any counterexamples? Can you think of any big tech disruptions after quantitative easing made money almost free in 2008?
And if you, like me, feel like we're stuck on a plateau - why do you think that is?
83 votes -
Why Lego won – the competition looked identical, so how did they pull it off?
10 votes -
How two friends sparked LA’s sushi obsession — and changed the way America eats
4 votes -
The games I wish I never replayed
9 votes -
Why Sweden is (still) betting on the metaverse – we chatted to the experts on why Swedes are so keen on virtual worlds
3 votes -
How Helsinki became the mobile gaming capital of the world
4 votes -
Denmark's Noma, which has regularly topped the list of the world's best restaurants in its twenty-year history, will close at the end of 2024
8 votes -
The inside scoop on ice cream innovation – a Tetra Pak product development centre where future recipes and technology are tested out
6 votes -
Financial innovation is actually happening
6 votes -
On the small island of Heimaey, chef Matthías Auðunsson is at the helm of a food movement that honours Iceland's history while coaxing it into a new era of innovation
5 votes -
Why it's hard to innovate in construction
9 votes -
Tomorrow is the 75th anniversary of the first mobile phone call
6 votes -
The nonmachinables
3 votes -
An eight part series on venture capital and technological innovation
4 votes -
The paradox of progress
7 votes -
Against scale: Provocations and resistances to scale thinking
3 votes -
Bill Gates: Here are the innovations we need to reopen the economy
5 votes -
The golden quarter—Some of our greatest cultural and technological achievements took place between 1945 and 1971. Why has progress stalled?
12 votes -
Don Norman: Technology first, needs last
5 votes -
The real trouble with Silicon Valley: The toxicity of the web is peanuts compared with Big Tech’s failure to remake the physical world
9 votes -
Rock climbing and the economics of innovation
8 votes -
Stories of twenty-five people who are racing to save us
14 votes -
The computer gaming statistics technology innovators should know
4 votes -
Why big companies squander brilliant ideas
4 votes -
What if you could diagnose diseases with a tampon?
7 votes -
Eleven technologies that didn't survive into the sci-fi future
2 votes -
The 100 greatest innovations of 2018
6 votes -
Who’s winning the self-driving car race? A scorecard breaking down everyone from Alphabet’s Waymo to Zoox.
5 votes