| > Interesting to compare the tech companies of last century with those of this era. The 'tech companies' (equivalent) of the past tended to deal with physical goods, and so needed physical means of scaling to become as large as they did. More recent tech companies are often software goods and services, where physical means of scaling may not be as important (though see perhaps with Moore and Dennard). Though those which deal with physical stuff do seem to have higher counts; see below. > The number of people benefiting from an enterprise has shrunk considerably, with the benefits accruing more tightly within an already wealthy class. Not sure if this is completely accurate. Kodak topped out at 145,000 employees in 1988: * https://rbj.net/2017/09/13/kodaks-decades-of-decline/ Apple has 164,000; Microsoft has 228,000; Amazon has 1,610,000. * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_largest_employers |