| You're right, but I would retort that not all innovations are created equal. Example: The French artisans, the middle class of their time, created wonderful toys for the gentry but almost none of their wonderfully intricate work had any impact on the Industrial Revolution in Britain, while a handful of illiterate working class types turned the Roman water wheel on its side and massively improved mechanical power production. Their work would have been seen as obscene by the artisans but it was fundamentally more important. There is a wonderful 1973 documentary by Jacob Bronowski on this topic: http://www.dailymotion.com/video/x206z0e_bbc-ascent-of-man-0... Anybody can be 'possessed' by an idea, but it is clear that Silicon Valley has too many smart and well educated people wasting their time on trifles, their choices significantly retard what ought to be natural advantages. Most important thing anyone can do is to choose their environment carefully e.g. having the right mentor, role models, choosing the right problem. |
Look, I like criticizing Silicon Valley for its ad-dollar silliness as much as anyone else, but that's fundamentally down to what VCs and angel investors are willing to fund. Everyone would work on Mars colonization, self-driving cars, and artificial intelligence if they could. Nobody pays you for that, though.