latest posts
Revisiting Peak Oil – Part One
March 23rd, 2007
Peak oil is loosely defined at the point in time when half of all the oil reserves in the earth have been extracted and burned. This means that we are half way through the oil consumption cycle and move into extracting the remaining 50%. Some of the most respected experts and oil geologists have long suggested that peak oil would occur in the early part of this century, that in the decade 2000-2010 we would move through it. The expected symptoms would be a dramatic increase in price, followed by price volatility, with a long term ever upward pressure …
New and Threatening Becomes Acceptable and Mainstream
February 20th, 2007
Recently I have been thinking about the cultural process whereby something that initially is perceived as dangerous to society ultimately becomes a part of the cultural mainstream. New is often perceived as threatening. Its newness is not understood, so if it can’t be understood and fit into the status quo then it must be bad.
This thinking was triggered several weeks ago when reading an editorial in The Economist about the need for an age-rating for video games similar to the age ratings of the motion picture industry. The thrust of the article was that something new is not necessarily bad …
A Man Who Wants to Change the World
February 16th, 2007
It was great to meet with a number of the top executives at GM prior to the Chicago Auto Show to learn about the Chevrolet Volt, the company commitment to developing battery technology and to really find out how committed this company is and will be in the area of cleaner automobiles. However there is one interview that truly stands out that needs to be shared.
Larry Burns is GM’s Vice President, Research & Development and Strategic Planning. Simply put, this means he is THE person responsible for leading GM into the future of clean transportation. It is Larry’s job to …
A Cell Phone Milestone
January 30th, 2007
In an earlier post, I wrote that the cell phone was a transformative technology. The cell phone, the personal computer, and the Internet are the three most transformative technologies of the last twenty years, as they have altered the fundamental concepts of time and space as it relates to human communication.
The interesting current phenomenon is that the growth rates of cell phone usage in developing countries is now rivaling the growth rates experienced in developed countries during the 1990s. As I mentioned in the earlier post there are 6 million new subscribers a month in India and 5.25 million …