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By David Houle | February 4th 2007 03:44 PM | 4 comments | Print | E-mail | Track Comments
About David

David Houle is a future thinker, speaker and strategist who advises organizations about dynamic trends. He is the author of The Shift Age...

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It can be argued that the three most transformative technologies of the last twenty years


are the personal computer, the Internet and the cell phone.  I have written often in Evolution Shift about the first two, but not of the third, until now. 


 

As is often the case, a look into the future first entails a look back to the past.  In 1984 there were 25,000 cell phones sold in the U.S.  In 1990 that number had grown to1,888,000 units sold, and in the year 2000 52,600,00 units were sold – a million phones a week!  That number has continued to go up.  Today, in a country of 300 million people – including infants, young children, and the aged – there are over 210 million active cell phone accounts.  We all have them.  A number of people, like me, have two. So, the cell phone is truly ubiquitous in the U.S. This of course means that the phones are a commodity; in fact a great number of people get them free with a service plan.


 

 Twenty years ago, most of us had two phones, one at work, one at home, both connected to the wall.  Our phone conversations were therefore placed based, and if we were out and about, there was always the pay phone.  Remember using those? Back then, no one ever called you up and said “Where are you?” which is now one of the most frequently asked questions when the phone is answered. I don’t need to talk about all the aspects of cell phones that have been written about ad nauseam, but I do want to stress that we are all now operate with a level of connectedness that has never existed before in history.  This connectedness changes behavior, speeds up communications, and contributes to the accelerated speed of change in our society.


 

The explosive growth in the U.S. that the above numbers describe has, of course, been equaled if not exceeded in every developed country of the world.  What is really interesting is that this growth model is now occurring in developing and third world countries. The current growth curves in Africa and Asia are very similar to those of the 1990s in developed countries.  There are now 6 million new subscribers a month in India and 5.25 million new subscribers a month in China.  When these growth rates get projected out to 2010 and 2015 it is almost certain that the vast majority of nations in the world, including sub-Saharan countries will have a majority of their citizens using cell phones.  This is nothing less than transformative.  Some of the countries that will have a 50% plus penetration of cell phones to people are the same ones that a couple of decades ago have less than 10-20 regular phones per 100 people.  Think about how much our lives in the U.S. have changed with cell phones.  Now image it from a base where only 1 in 5 people had land line phones and you can begin to see transformation at work, and play.


 

When more than 50% of the world can call each other no matter where they are, a shift begins to occur.  Compare today’s reality of being able to reach a potential 1 billion people on their cell phones in a matter of seconds with the reality of 175 years ago when the speed of communication was the speed of the Pony Express, the fastest means of communication then available.  That was horse speed, point to point.  Now we have a billion plus points immediately connectable to each other.  This is why I believe that we are approaching a coming shift in our evolutionary journey in the next 20 to 30 years.


 

Several ancient societies, of which the Mayan civilization is most notable had very well articulated prophesies that the world as we know it would end in the year 2012.  These prophesies were not about death and destruction, the biblical proportion catastrophes from the Bible.  They were that the world ‘as we know it’ would end.  When these prophesies were made centuries ago, human communication was completely contained by time and distance and the fastest speed was that of a horse.  The aha moment for me came, when doing research for the book I am writing, I realized that the trend lines for cell phones, computers, Internet usage and live satellite television were such that the vast majority of humanity would, in the years between 2010 and 2015, have access to one, if not several of these technological innovations, thereby essentially eliminating time and distance from human communication. Would it actually be 2012?  It looks like it could be.


 

 The world, as known by the Mayans, will have changed. Time and distance will have ceased to exist in the realm of human communication. They could not have conceived of the cell phone, but they did predict what the cell phone, in part was going to help usher into the world.


 

The cell phone, that gadget in your hand and ear that is so indispensable to you, is one of the agents of change that is moving us toward an evolution shift in the decades ahead. 


    

Comments

Hank's picture
Hi David,

Welcome to Scientific Blogging! I have a question, maybe it's because of the term 'evolution', but first I'll lay out if we're thinking in the same terms. Evolution is usually considered slow, somewhat gradual and, at first, imperceptible.

A societal inflection point, like the PC, is a dramatic lurch in a new direction.

In history, a steel sword rather than a bronze one is evolution. A stirrup, on the other hand, was an inflection point because it changed what you could do on a horse - and horses were transportation. By sea, a three-master opened up the world in a way the carrack could not but it was still micro-evolutionary.

In that context, do you think a cell phone will really be transformative? Because a sub-Saharan man can talk to a resident of Japan doesn't mean he will, or that he will even recognize the magnitude, since he could do it before, he just couldn't afford it.

David Houle's picture

Hank-


I am glad to join the 'family'.  The answer to your question is basically the book I am writing.  A shorter version is a speech that I give.  Basically, i see the real possibility that humanity has reached the end of it's evolutionary path as individuals and that the next step - or shift - is one that move us to more of a global awareness, conscience and consciousness.


One of the prime factors that will enable this possibility is the connectedness of humanity.  Think about the 'Dubai ports deal'.  In a matter of hours into days the reaction of "What!  You have to be kidding!" became so powerful through electronic and wireless communications that by the third day not only were there demonstations, but all the politicians were scrambling to catch up with what was going on in the 'Neurosphere'.  The speed of that reaction was largely dependent on cell phones, email, and communication satellites.


As I said the true answer to your question is the length of a book, But hopefully this is a start.


 


Thanks again for inviting me to join the group.


David


 


se7en's picture

I think I see what you're driving at, instant communication is becoming a method by which we can transcend time and space, not unlike using a futuristic sci-fi "transporter" but instead of transporting our physical selves, we transport communications. Virtually the same thing. But when you look at it in that context, the invention of "smoke signals" did pretty much the same thing, just on a smaller scale.


Or am I missing the point? It's certainly something to think about.


David Houle's picture

Se7en-


You hit on it, it is the scale.  Think of smoke signals that the whole world could see at once rather than a communication that is from point to point to point to point.  Our communication is now at the speed of light with no physical limitation.  That reality did not exist a few decades ago.


David


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