![]() ![]() Marc Andreessen’s “Why AI Will Save the World”: A Reductionist, Self-Serving Ode to Singularity.Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Human Work – Gerd Leonhard’s Keynote at Steering Education 2023 in Riga (complete video).Towards the Good Future: A powerful new podcast episode with Futurist Gerd Leonhard, for Singularity University.Announcing the launch of TheGerd.AI: Now you can ask Futurist Gerd Leonhard about his work and get instant answers using GerdBot.Futurist Gerd Leonhard’s latest newsletter (July 24, 2023): All out on AI, and the trailer for my new film: Look Up Now!. ![]() I hope your readers will urge you for a revised version 3 years hence when Quantum Computing 4D printing Neuralinks and Nanobots are the next wave of disruptions to future proof ourselves against. I’d even suggest this book is aimed at those in corporate roles a little bit distant from the cutting edge of new product development.ĭid I learn much? Not really but I still enjoyed how they presented practical advice on things that to some are far far away technologies. This book will give some people a head start on catching up. ![]() I come across a lot of HR professionals a bit overwhelmed by things they hear about but don’t quite understand, because such things (blockchain and AI) are not influencing their practice – yet. It’s not all digital but there’s a lot of digital in here. Through areas like the Cloud, Blockchain, 3D Printing and Cyber Security. If you’re only just a little aware of Don Tapscott, Robert Ford, Bettina Warburg, Gerd Leonhard and Nathalie Nahai, then this book will bring a lot of things they share and talk about into a digestible sprint. If you are thinking “So, is this book for me?” and you already read Lanier and/or Kurzweil, I’d say not. This book feels like it’s being helpful to “clients” who happen to be readers. When so many of these concepts in the book are in-development, emerging technologies of the digital and analogue sense (like collaborative economies and platform based, algorithm-led learning apps), such consultants have to get to grips with to help their clients. My guess is that this has come from the author’s experience in consulting and advising – it feels like a consultant’s book. Practical advice is included in the form of a suggestion or a prompting question. Thirdly, the book is really trying to be your field guide for the next 2 years or so. If you’ve been to SXSW, it’s my guess that you won’t need this book. If you don’t know what SXSW is, then this book might be a great gap filler for you. Secondly, this felt like every useful article I’ve ever read on LinkedIn about any of this stuff had been curated, edited and set out for me to read on one plane journey to SXSW in Texas. Philosophical quotes to open each chapter is used by many authors, but in this book they serve as a very relevant intro to what’s to come in the 21st century words of the authors. Simpler language, not jargon-fuelled acronym fests of overly excitable futurology. So does this book do what it says? Mostly, yes it does.įirst of all, I found it more practical than I expected. Whatever that may be.Ī digital branding and strategy consultant with an AI consultant as co-authors, feels like this could be one of those journeys perhaps overly obsessed with Silicon Valley’s ways and predicting all sorts of technologically induced utopia or dystopia depending on whether you’re a Kurzweil or Lanier fan. It’s the term used to headline this book – Future Proof – on how to get your business ready for the next disruption. Disruption is an oft-used term for that fact that we can rent out someone’s spare room online or order a restaurant’s food to take away and someone on a pushbike delivers it to us all using an app on our phone.ĭisruptive Business Models and Disruptive Innovation have been with us for a surprising long 23 years.
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