In the previous four segments of this series, we looked at what a singularity is and as part of evidence for the possibility of a technology singularity, we studied the frequency and impact of five scientific revolutions and cataloged the modern intersubjective realities (ISRs) that have co-evolved with the ever faster scientific revolutions and pushed
By Guest Author Frank H. Levinson In the previous three segments of this series, we looked at what a singularity is and as part of evidence for the possibility of a technology singularity, we studied the frequency and impact of five scientific revolutions. Let us now catalog the modern intersubjective realities (ISRs) that have co-evolved with
By Guest Author Frank H. Levinson In the previous two segments, we looked at what a Singularity was and as part of evidence for the possibility of a technology singularity, we studied the frequency of five scientific revolutions. Let us now analyze the impact of these revolutions. It is perhaps hard for us to realize that
By Guest Author Frank H. Levinson In the first segment of this series, we saw what a singularity was and were looking at the evidence for the possibility of a technology singularity. So, let’s now fill in the revolutionary landscape (remember that the agricultural revolution which started about 10,000 BCE was the first one!). The next
By Guest Author Frank H. Levinson Ray Kurzweil began writing more than 25 years ago about the possibility of a technology singularity occurring sometime in the late 20th century. He defines “Singularity” as “a future period during which the pace of technological change will be so rapid, its impact so deep, that human life will be irreversibly transformed.”
On September 8, optical component manufacturer Finisar (FNSR) reported strong first quarter results that beat market expectations. It also reported preliminary fourth quarter results for optical subsystems designer and manufacturer Optium, with which it closed its merger on August 29.
Last year, when I interviewed Jerry Rawls, CEO of Finisar, he shared with me Finisar’s strategy going forward: “The biggest new thing for us is our exposure in the telecommunications market. In the early days we did not want to enter that market because it was dominated by AT&T, Lucent, Nortel, but none of those
My new Forbes column Bootstrap Yourself highlights Silicon Valley’s hottest new trend, Bootstrapping. Great bootstrapping case studies I have covered are Sridhar Vembu, Frank Levinson and Jerry Rawls, Cree Lawson, and Beatrice Tarka. Sridhar, Frank and Jerry did it almost without any outside money, while Cree and Beatrice have done it with very small rounds