DRosencraft
Distinguished
southernshark :
Think how I feel at 40............
But yes I agree with you. There are too many people scared of new tech who are holding us back. Look at this website........ 1/2 the posts on here are people lamenting newer/better/faster.
The good enough crowd....
And this is a tech website. Imagine the mentality of the general public.
But yes I agree with you. There are too many people scared of new tech who are holding us back. Look at this website........ 1/2 the posts on here are people lamenting newer/better/faster.
The good enough crowd....
And this is a tech website. Imagine the mentality of the general public.
While the general public may be apathetic to change, I don't think there is a problem in tech right now of not enough change/improvement. I think it's quite the opposite - we've gotten too used to everything happening so fast we're already looking for the next thing before the last one is finished developed. Just a decade ago much of the stuff we have in tech today was fantasy.
There's nothing wrong with better and faster, but newer for the sake of being newer doesn't cut it. I can look at this story and be happy that someone is researching this whether or not it translates to a consumer product. Why? This tech would likely translate to a type of storage drive like an SSD. With the exception of very high volume data users directly moving data between drives, performance is already near the point at which it is near instant relative to human reaction capability. In other words, there is so little time between when most apps and programs load that a 100x speed boost would be extreme overkill. It doesn't matter if graphics cards eventually attain the ability to render at 200fps because humans can't see anything at that speed. The purpose of technology is to improve or simplify the way people do things. An SSD with Read/Write times at 550,000 MB/s sounds fantastic, but it's about as useful as a race car in Midtown Manhattan. We should be inteligent with the way we go about pursuing progress, rather than wasting time and effort on things that have little benefit or use. Not saying that's neccessarily the case here, but it's a distinction to make between "proof of concept" research and "practical" research.