Dari mulai ditemukannya suatu penemuan di laboratorium sampai ke tangan masyarakat 
memakan waktu puluhan tahun, bahkan ada yang 100 tahun.  

Suksesnya dipasarkan/dikomersialkannya suatu penemuan, bukannya suatu yang ilmiah 
melainkan lebih tergantung dari pada melihat suatu prospek atau ide yang bagus.  Dalam 
hal ini ia memakai perkataan prospecting, yaitu orang2 yang mencari emas, atau bahan 
tambang yang lain, dimana ketajaman mata, luck, menentukan keberhasilannya.

Jadi apa yang akan populer di hari2 mendatang, ilmunya sudah ada sekarang ini.  Jadi 
netters, lihat2 di sekeliling anda, siapa tahu ada yang bisa di komersilkan.

Moga2 pemerintahan presiden yang baru akan memudahkan  entrepreneurship. 




http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101041011/nextessay.html


Time
 
Forward into the Past 
 
   
 Here's a safe bet: the next big thing is already here  
   
 By BILL BUXTON  
   
  
Posted Sunday, October 3, 2004
As a young man, I was never any good at waiting for the future. Back in 1970, I 
composed and synthesized a film sound track using a device few people could then have 
imagined: a mouse-driven computer attached to a piano-like keyboard. The computer (the 
size of about nine refrigerators lined up side by side) even displayed the musical 
notes on a color screen, and when I altered a note, I could replay it instantly. 

Decades before AOL came on the scene, I had an e-mail account (I still use virtually 
the same e-mail address I had in 1975), and in 1980 I wired my home terminal to the 
Internet (at 300 baud) by shoving my phone receiver into something that looked like 
twin toilet plungers. I hooked up full-motion desktop videoconferencing and video mail 
in 1988 and, four years later, started using a pen-based electronic whiteboard and 
drafting table. 

I certainly wasn't alone in this. Many of my contemporaries at Xerox's Palo Alto 
Research Center (PARC) and M.I.T.'s Lincoln Laboratory in the '70s and '80s can tell 
similar stories. My point is not to boast about our exploits but to point out that 
most of what passes for new at any given time has in fact been around for quite a 
while. Or, to steal a line from the science-fiction writer William Gibson, "The future 
is already here. It is just not uniformly distributed." 

Consider the LCDs on our watches, cell phones, pdas, laptops and, increasingly, TVs. 
Liquid crystals were discovered in 1888 by Friedrich Reinitzer, an Austrian botanist, 
and named a year later by Otto Lehman, a German physicist. Since then, they have taken 
a leisurely route to our homes. The first prototype display emerged from RCA's Sarnoff 
Research Center in 1968. Two years later, Optel began producing the first watches with 
an lcd. I first got a computer with an lcd (an Apple Portable) 15 years ago. The road 
from discovery to mass market took about 116 years. 

The now ubiquitous computer mouse also took a poky path to market. The first model was 
built in 1964 by Doug Engelbart and William English, of the Stanford Research 
Institute in Menlo Park, Calif. By the early 1970s, many of us at Xerox PARC had 
become point-and-click fans, using state-of-the-art Alto computers. But beyond that 
little world, few people were aware of the device until Steve Jobs unveiled the Apple 
Macintosh in 1984. It took Microsoft's Windows 95 to take the mouse mainstream�some 30 
years after its invention. 

The commercialization of research, in other words, is far more about prospecting than 
alchemy. The U.S. National Academy of Sciences last year published a report prepared 
by the National Research Council's Computer Science and Telecommunications Board. It 
tracked the evolution of computer and telecommunications technologies from conception 
in the lab to the point where they had become $1 billion industries. In almost every 
case, the development took about 20 years. And that trend does not apply only to 
computers. Disk brakes, which we take for granted, were introduced by British inventor 
Frederick William Lanchester in 1901. They didn't appear in North American cars until 
Chrysler introduced them in the early 1950s, and they became standard only in the 
1980s. Likewise, the Golden Age of television arrived some 20 years after TV was 
invented, around 1935. 

All this suggests that the technologies that will significantly affect our lives over 
the next 10 years have been around for a decade. The future is with us (or at least 
some of us). The trick is learning how to spot it. 

So, what's next? Here's one emerging innovation: take a look at the plasma panels that 
are replacing signs and posters at cinemas and airports. If these devices are being 
used now, when they cost about $10,000 apiece, imagine what we'll see when 
technologies like light-emitting polymers and e-Ink allow us to make even larger, 
thinner and higher-quality displays for perhaps as little as $100. In the mid-1800s, 
the introduction of the blackboard revolutionized classroom education. These displays 
could have a similar impact, not only in classrooms (in the form of electronic 
whiteboards) but also for signs, home entertainment and even interior wallpaper. 

At the same time, we are seeing the emergence of smaller, brighter and cheaper data 
projectors. The technology in supermarket bar-code scanners is being transformed to 
create miniature high-resolution color laser projectors the size of a fingertip. 
Within a couple of years you will see them integrated into your cell phone and pda; if 
you want to view data that won't fit on such small screens or if you want to look at 
the information with someone else, you can use those devices to project it onto any 
wall, tabletop or other surface so it appears as large as you'd like, always in focus. 
That means we aging geeks will be able to read the future! 





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