🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:00 🎤 Introduction to the Topic of Disruptions - Introduction and setting the context for discussing seven significant disruptions. - Emphasis on embracing unexpected disruptions. 02:16 🌍 Defining Disruption - Clarification of what constitutes a disruption versus mere change. - Historical examples to illustrate the concept of disruption. 04:35 🚀 Overview of Seven Disruptions - Preview of the seven disruptions to be discussed. - Mention of generative AI as a notable disruptive technology. 06:27 🧠 Generative AI's Unique Impact - Exploration of how generative AI differs from previous innovations. - Discussion on the transformative impact of generative AI. 08:03 🌞 Geomagnetic Storms and Internet Disruption - Potential impact of geomagnetic storms on internet infrastructure. - Historical instances and future risks of such disruptions. 13:07 💻 AI-Driven Legacy Modernization - Role of AI in modernizing legacy systems. - Benefits of AI in understanding and refactoring legacy code. 17:29 ⚖️ Regulated AI - The necessity of regulating AI technologies. - Impact of regulations on the pace of AI adoption and innovation. 20:53 👵 Golden Age of Silver Workers - The increasing productivity and value of older workers. - Utilizing generative AI to enhance the capabilities of older employees. 25:46 🛒 Laggard Companies and Startup Acquisitions - Opportunity for conservative companies to leapfrog through acquiring startups. - The emerging trend of established businesses buying innovative startups. 30:09 🏗️ Rapid Engineering Innovation - The acceleration of innovation in engineering and technology sectors. - Companies adopting faster failure and learning cycles for rapid advancement. 33:23 🌌 New Space Race and Geopolitical Competition - The resurgence of the space race driven by technological advancements. - Impact of space technology on global geopolitical dynamics. Made with HARPA AI
That list is actually three things. Four of which are AI. I got 15 different technologies that will disrupt and only account AI as one and FullnSelf Driving as another, solar, advances in 3d printing, humanoid robotics at scale, solar, batteries, electric planes, permanent remote work, age reversal and mRNA, vertical agriculture, automated intensive rotational grazing, massive parallel robotic agriculture... this guy is at a fraction... SMH
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation: 00:35 🔄 *The importance of adapting to unexpected disruptions and the challenges they present.* 01:18 🌐 *Presentation of seven imminent disruptions that might be overlooked or underestimated in their impact.* 01:33 🔍 *Introduction of the Gartner Futures Lab, focusing on predicting and preparing for future disruptions.* 02:29 ⚖️ *Differentiation between simple changes and disruptions that fundamentally alter systems or behaviors.* 03:28 📊 *Use of a digital disruption scale to measure the intensity of various disruptions.* 04:50 🤖 *Discussion on generative AI's transformative potential and its projected revolutionary impact in the next 5 years.* 05:31 🚗 *Analogy of market enhancements to illustrate the scale of technological disruptions.* 06:12 🧠 *Exploration of generative AI's unique characteristics, including its potential to redefine human capabilities and competitiveness.* 07:10 🚀 *Emphasis on understanding the applications and risks of generative AI to maintain competitiveness.* 08:03 🌌 *Hypothetical scenario of geomagnetic storms disrupting internet access and its far-reaching impacts.* 09:25 ☀️ *Historical context of solar flares and their potential catastrophic effects on modern infrastructure.* 10:48 🛰️ *Prediction of increased solar flare activity and its implications for Earth's technology systems.* 13:07 💻 *AI-driven modernization of legacy systems, enhancing efficiency and reducing reliance on outdated technologies.* 14:28 🧑💻 *Generative AI's role in streamlining development processes and reducing the gap between user needs and application functionality.* 17:29 ⚙️ *The need for regulated AI in industries and government to manage ethical, legal, and operational risks.* 20:41 👵 *The 'Golden Age of Silver Workers': Valuing older workers' contributions in the workforce enhanced by generative AI.* 22:55 🛠️ *Reconceptualization of work models to better utilize the experience and knowledge of elder workers.* 25:46 🚀 *Conservative companies leveraging the acquisition of startups to innovate and leapfrog industry leaders.* 28:05 🌐 *The potential of conservative companies to transform industries by embracing startup technologies and innovations.* 30:09 🏗️ *The increased pace of engineering innovation, accepting and learning from failures to accelerate development.* 32:26 🌍 *A resurgence in the space race, driven by advancements in AI and lower costs, leading to new geopolitical and economic dynamics.* 35:43 🌟 *The future potential for space technology to revolutionize industries and establish new territories and resources.* Made with HARPA AI
Yes, indeed, he said nothing about that because ultimately he wants to keep the status quo ... which writes Gartner's checks. What can I tell you!? Controlled (regulated), JUST-for-the-RICH "disruption". Embrace only the vision they give you, that way you will never have one of your own and will continue to work into your 80's as a glorified Silver Surfer (ah ... WORKER, not even CEO :) ).
The silver worker discrimination is a real issue. Part of the problem is that there is a real loss in some experience overtime that does need accounted for, but there is also still viable experience and the potential for new valuable skills that shouldn't be ignored. The reality is though many silver workers need to start again to a certain degree, they need to move down again in decision maker matrix, and focus on learning again.
In any technical field "start again" is a normal and continuous process. Otherwise the job becomes boring real fast. Boomers know this, but I am not sure that Z'ers have the same values.
@@skyrangerbob Agreed! I know plenty of boomers that really have gone through that transition throughout life. I'm not sure on the Gen Z piece, I feel like more expect to have to work all their lives and to change jobs more frequently.
No mention of "electrify everything" and new renewable energy and their impact on the geopolitics of oil and gas, nor of ecological devastation coming home to roost, nor of the fertility crash and its geopolitical and business implications? Generative AI may have moderate impact but it will take generations for its effects to be fully seen. Just like with fridges, tube TVs, and fax machines.
I have a feeling AGI will have a much larger effect in a much shorter timeframe than you think. We're more likely to have to worry about the effects of millions of jobs going away permanently and the lower wages and benefit cuts that will be caused when those people are competing for fewer jobs, than we are going about lower fertility rates.
16:23 so he really didn’t build pong in 69 seconds though, did he? It took time thinking about and write the correct prompt to get the correct output. It probably took time to setup the IDE and the code framework for the pong code to sit within. I’m not saying LLMs aren’t transformative. I’m saying you have to be realistic with all the time it takes to generate a useful product, not just cherry pick the optimisation. The other aspect is, there are plenty of examples of Pong code to copy from. I wonder how well the LLM does for novel solutions.
The target audience seem to be buisness owners. He tries to present concepts in an understandable, whereby i am not sure he did himself first. When AGI hits the shelves, his job i would assume, will be one of the first to go ^^.
22:58 that’s a dangerous thought process. One way you could people in the workforce longer is to take away their ability to reach financial independence. That would be terrible for individual sovereignty.
25:20 there! He said it! “Orient compensation over a longer lifecycle of work”. In other words: Spread out what you pay them over a longer timeframe. In other other words, pay em less, pay em longer.
This view is very American and conservative on the timeline. ChatGPT was introduced only 11 months ago. And just look what have been accomplished in the Generative AI space in 11 months. This is a good sell speech to sell Gartner products and services so take it with a grain of salt
Especially the chips embedded in your skull. Cause you know Silver Workers are the most dangerous. They may actually have free time to create something for the common good and IGNORE the corporate "good" in the process.
I’m sorry but this is not “the future of computing” - in summary: Gartner look at Horizon 1,2,3 (now to +10 years out), they talk a bit about quantum and neuromorphic computing, talk about future use cases but that’s really “future computing platforms will analyse user intent,” and “we see different computing platforms running alongside one another.” (Duh - sorry but this is obvious.) When we talk about future computing architectures there’s nothing, when we look at alternative computing platforms like DNA, biological, liquid (ionic), generative compute, and so much more they discuss nothing. I love the topic but the content in this case was just so general and low brow it missed the mark.
education is always good. education is transformational . try having a conversation with a high-schooler, with a bachelor's holder, with a master's holder... great differences. huge differences.
@@prefixsuffix Just as a start, someone who completes a four year degree is exposed to landslides of information over eight or twelve semesters. That process is transformational. You take an average or better than average high schooler, and have a conversation with someone with a bachelors degree, in say geology, or geography, or psychology, or art history, or German, or anything, and they know worlds more than a high schooler, or even someone who went to HVAC or other trade schools. And the difference between someone with a bachelors and someone with a masters is just as striking. My masters was five years of night school (while I worked full time) and it was way more difficult than my undergraduate degree... I have an MS in Information Management, and the PhD programs I have investigated are an additional 80 to 100 credit hours of 700 level classes and above. We are not talking Psych 101 here. Plus the PhD candidates have to write a dissertation about something new, that they've discovered through their research, and defend it before a board of their professors. Even a high schooler who reads a lot, will never catch up. They missed out on the transformation, along with their peers, the bachelors program pushes them through.
Thank you for pointing out the benefits of the Silver Workers. I have learned so much and want to mentor and share and continue to learn. We challenge all "isms" - ageism is one as well.
Right, the problem with the user not getting the software they wanted is because the developer didn't listen, not because the user did not articulate what they wanted properly. I've been designing and developing software for over 25 years and I can tell you that the vast majority of the time the software that's delivered is not what the user wanted is because the user did not articulate what they wanted properly. AI is not going to fix that it's going to make it worse because developers will often say hey I don't think you meant this did you mean that and will interject a lot of corrections and they will also help users understand how to do things better and AI is just going to blindly give you what you asked for and you're going to be like holy crap what is this?!?!
We need a global regulation on satelites. He was right to point out how cheap and easy it has become to put a satelite in orbit. That actually is a danger for our ability to continue to go out further. Too much space debris! If every company is allowed just to put their shit up there, as so often every will have to pay for it.
At the rate SpaceX can launch Starlink satellites this would be a minor issue, based on the fact that there are so many in orbit, even if half of them were knocked out by this. They would simply get the remaining satellites to change orbit slightly to cover the losses until the next batch are launched in the next month or so. Today's word is "Redundancy" ;)
If a satellite gets knocked out and happens to bump into another, the Kessler syndrome will happen. It's a real risk that many scientists think is a matter of when, not if.
Just wow. The ONLY non technical disruption you could find is a Carrington Event (Geomagnetic Storms)? Really? We should all get down on our knees and pray that generative AI solves the massive energy imbalance caused by GHGs in our atmosphere in the next 5 years, or none of theses disruptions will even make the top ten.
A Solar storm could take out the cooling system's for nuclear power. The water powered engine could be that engineering disruption bigger than generative AI.
Can't make sense of much of the talk. Is it based on figments of imagination or reality? How do you use generative AI to evaluate patents? Need a person more proficient in AI to give this talk.
So did your think tank not consider the complete change of the world reserve currency and world monetary policy (long term) by shifting to a store of value with limited supply as not even rising to the level of world wide disruption? Or are you not paying attention to bitcoin? Kinda embarrassing to have such a huge miss. But not just monetary policy will change but blockchain will change many things from how we handle medical records to how we handle real estate titles. Disruptive change is coming. Not to mention the benefit bitcoin mining will have on balancing our energy grids (already providing value in texas to mitigate blackouts), lowering costs to consumers & electrifying areas of the planet not yet electrified for the first time in history. Bitcoin mining also helps by reducing global warming methane emissions by using flared gas & landfill methane outgassing as fuel. Just a lot of disruption you missed.
Hi I'm Ariful Islam leeton im software engineer and members of the international organization and investors public and private sector and co founder open A i
You guys gotta spend more time on research and less on presenting and trying to sell us barely analyzed stuff. And PLEASE! cut the 90s stand up style! And Coke and Captain Kirk!
Just a tip, if you want people to take you seriously don't tell them you got into pokimon go. Sadly the inability to identify and avoid bs hype is pretty common these days.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🎤 Introduction to the Topic of Disruptions
- Introduction and setting the context for discussing seven significant disruptions.
- Emphasis on embracing unexpected disruptions.
02:16 🌍 Defining Disruption
- Clarification of what constitutes a disruption versus mere change.
- Historical examples to illustrate the concept of disruption.
04:35 🚀 Overview of Seven Disruptions
- Preview of the seven disruptions to be discussed.
- Mention of generative AI as a notable disruptive technology.
06:27 🧠 Generative AI's Unique Impact
- Exploration of how generative AI differs from previous innovations.
- Discussion on the transformative impact of generative AI.
08:03 🌞 Geomagnetic Storms and Internet Disruption
- Potential impact of geomagnetic storms on internet infrastructure.
- Historical instances and future risks of such disruptions.
13:07 💻 AI-Driven Legacy Modernization
- Role of AI in modernizing legacy systems.
- Benefits of AI in understanding and refactoring legacy code.
17:29 ⚖️ Regulated AI
- The necessity of regulating AI technologies.
- Impact of regulations on the pace of AI adoption and innovation.
20:53 👵 Golden Age of Silver Workers
- The increasing productivity and value of older workers.
- Utilizing generative AI to enhance the capabilities of older employees.
25:46 🛒 Laggard Companies and Startup Acquisitions
- Opportunity for conservative companies to leapfrog through acquiring startups.
- The emerging trend of established businesses buying innovative startups.
30:09 🏗️ Rapid Engineering Innovation
- The acceleration of innovation in engineering and technology sectors.
- Companies adopting faster failure and learning cycles for rapid advancement.
33:23 🌌 New Space Race and Geopolitical Competition
- The resurgence of the space race driven by technological advancements.
- Impact of space technology on global geopolitical dynamics.
Made with HARPA AI
That list is actually three things. Four of which are AI. I got 15 different technologies that will disrupt and only account AI as one and FullnSelf Driving as another, solar, advances in 3d printing, humanoid robotics at scale, solar, batteries, electric planes, permanent remote work, age reversal and mRNA, vertical agriculture, automated intensive rotational grazing, massive parallel robotic agriculture... this guy is at a fraction... SMH
Thankyou for respecting my time good sir
Thank you for saving my time
Thank you saved me a half hour
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:35 🔄 *The importance of adapting to unexpected disruptions and the challenges they present.*
01:18 🌐 *Presentation of seven imminent disruptions that might be overlooked or underestimated in their impact.*
01:33 🔍 *Introduction of the Gartner Futures Lab, focusing on predicting and preparing for future disruptions.*
02:29 ⚖️ *Differentiation between simple changes and disruptions that fundamentally alter systems or behaviors.*
03:28 📊 *Use of a digital disruption scale to measure the intensity of various disruptions.*
04:50 🤖 *Discussion on generative AI's transformative potential and its projected revolutionary impact in the next 5 years.*
05:31 🚗 *Analogy of market enhancements to illustrate the scale of technological disruptions.*
06:12 🧠 *Exploration of generative AI's unique characteristics, including its potential to redefine human capabilities and competitiveness.*
07:10 🚀 *Emphasis on understanding the applications and risks of generative AI to maintain competitiveness.*
08:03 🌌 *Hypothetical scenario of geomagnetic storms disrupting internet access and its far-reaching impacts.*
09:25 ☀️ *Historical context of solar flares and their potential catastrophic effects on modern infrastructure.*
10:48 🛰️ *Prediction of increased solar flare activity and its implications for Earth's technology systems.*
13:07 💻 *AI-driven modernization of legacy systems, enhancing efficiency and reducing reliance on outdated technologies.*
14:28 🧑💻 *Generative AI's role in streamlining development processes and reducing the gap between user needs and application functionality.*
17:29 ⚙️ *The need for regulated AI in industries and government to manage ethical, legal, and operational risks.*
20:41 👵 *The 'Golden Age of Silver Workers': Valuing older workers' contributions in the workforce enhanced by generative AI.*
22:55 🛠️ *Reconceptualization of work models to better utilize the experience and knowledge of elder workers.*
25:46 🚀 *Conservative companies leveraging the acquisition of startups to innovate and leapfrog industry leaders.*
28:05 🌐 *The potential of conservative companies to transform industries by embracing startup technologies and innovations.*
30:09 🏗️ *The increased pace of engineering innovation, accepting and learning from failures to accelerate development.*
32:26 🌍 *A resurgence in the space race, driven by advancements in AI and lower costs, leading to new geopolitical and economic dynamics.*
35:43 🌟 *The future potential for space technology to revolutionize industries and establish new territories and resources.*
Made with HARPA AI
Politics & Democracy needs a major overdue Disruption
Yes, indeed, he said nothing about that because ultimately he wants to keep the status quo ... which writes Gartner's checks. What can I tell you!? Controlled (regulated), JUST-for-the-RICH "disruption". Embrace only the vision they give you, that way you will never have one of your own and will continue to work into your 80's as a glorified Silver Surfer (ah ... WORKER, not even CEO :) ).
You are missing the loss of biodiversity, which may be hitting humanity harder than anything on the list.
The silver worker discrimination is a real issue. Part of the problem is that there is a real loss in some experience overtime that does need accounted for, but there is also still viable experience and the potential for new valuable skills that shouldn't be ignored.
The reality is though many silver workers need to start again to a certain degree, they need to move down again in decision maker matrix, and focus on learning again.
In any technical field "start again" is a normal and continuous process. Otherwise the job becomes boring real fast. Boomers know this, but I am not sure that Z'ers have the same values.
@@skyrangerbob Agreed! I know plenty of boomers that really have gone through that transition throughout life.
I'm not sure on the Gen Z piece, I feel like more expect to have to work all their lives and to change jobs more frequently.
No mention of "electrify everything" and new renewable energy and their impact on the geopolitics of oil and gas, nor of ecological devastation coming home to roost, nor of the fertility crash and its geopolitical and business implications? Generative AI may have moderate impact but it will take generations for its effects to be fully seen. Just like with fridges, tube TVs, and fax machines.
I have a feeling AGI will have a much larger effect in a much shorter timeframe than you think.
We're more likely to have to worry about the effects of millions of jobs going away permanently and the lower wages and benefit cuts that will be caused when those people are competing for fewer jobs, than we are going about lower fertility rates.
16:23 so he really didn’t build pong in 69 seconds though, did he? It took time thinking about and write the correct prompt to get the correct output. It probably took time to setup the IDE and the code framework for the pong code to sit within. I’m not saying LLMs aren’t transformative. I’m saying you have to be realistic with all the time it takes to generate a useful product, not just cherry pick the optimisation. The other aspect is, there are plenty of examples of Pong code to copy from. I wonder how well the LLM does for novel solutions.
The target audience seem to be buisness owners. He tries to present concepts in an understandable, whereby i am not sure he did himself first. When AGI hits the shelves, his job i would assume, will be one of the first to go ^^.
OMG. The problem with legacy systems is NOT THE CODE. 🥺
That was very insightful thank you
If I may ask, what particular insight did you take from this? Thanks!
i do wish the speaker was shown. Very engaging.
"Here's a scenario that could disrupt all our systems". Advice to CIOs: "Create a list of critical systems". Ah so glad we solved that one! 😀
That " instead of jet packs we get Twitter" is a Peter Thiel quote.
22:58 that’s a dangerous thought process. One way you could people in the workforce longer is to take away their ability to reach financial independence. That would be terrible for individual sovereignty.
25:20 there! He said it! “Orient compensation over a longer lifecycle of work”. In other words: Spread out what you pay them over a longer timeframe. In other other words, pay em less, pay em longer.
Is the presentation available for dowload?
Superb presentation thanks
Thank you for the insightful presentation.
This view is very American and conservative on the timeline. ChatGPT was introduced only 11 months ago. And just look what have been accomplished in the Generative AI space in 11 months.
This is a good sell speech to sell Gartner products and services so take it with a grain of salt
Especially the chips embedded in your skull. Cause you know Silver Workers are the most dangerous. They may actually have free time to create something for the common good and IGNORE the corporate "good" in the process.
Fun Fact with Gartner he is the same way who says GenAi is the peak of hype in another presentation and here says GenAi is the answer for future
He may have had a qualifier like hype in the short term and future in the long term (like Internet was in 1999-2000, which you may have missed.
감사합니다. 통찰력있는 강연.
Thank you very much
I’m sorry but this is not “the future of computing” - in summary: Gartner look at Horizon 1,2,3 (now to +10 years out), they talk a bit about quantum and neuromorphic computing, talk about future use cases but that’s really “future computing platforms will analyse user intent,” and “we see different computing platforms running alongside one another.” (Duh - sorry but this is obvious.) When we talk about future computing architectures there’s nothing, when we look at alternative computing platforms like DNA, biological, liquid (ionic), generative compute, and so much more they discuss nothing. I love the topic but the content in this case was just so general and low brow it missed the mark.
education is always good. education is transformational . try having a conversation with a high-schooler, with a bachelor's holder, with a master's holder... great differences. huge differences.
Please elaborate. Would love to know differences you saw.
@@prefixsuffix Just as a start, someone who completes a four year degree is exposed to landslides of information over eight or twelve semesters. That process is transformational. You take an average or better than average high schooler, and have a conversation with someone with a bachelors degree, in say geology, or geography, or psychology, or art history, or German, or anything, and they know worlds more than a high schooler, or even someone who went to HVAC or other trade schools. And the difference between someone with a bachelors and someone with a masters is just as striking. My masters was five years of night school (while I worked full time) and it was way more difficult than my undergraduate degree... I have an MS in Information Management, and the PhD programs I have investigated are an additional 80 to 100 credit hours of 700 level classes and above. We are not talking Psych 101 here. Plus the PhD candidates have to write a dissertation about something new, that they've discovered through their research, and defend it before a board of their professors. Even a high schooler who reads a lot, will never catch up. They missed out on the transformation, along with their peers, the bachelors program pushes them through.
Is my reply hidden?
@@chuckmyntti did you reply ? Is it the one on high schooler, bachelor and a master's ?
@@prefixsuffix I did a lengthy reply. Not sure what happened to it. I will retype it on my laptop and paste it in here.
Yes it's important to regulate AI but we need to regulate the Internet and social media first
A great communicator
Thank you for pointing out the benefits of the Silver Workers. I have learned so much and want to mentor and share and continue to learn. We challenge all "isms" - ageism is one as well.
Right, the problem with the user not getting the software they wanted is because the developer didn't listen, not because the user did not articulate what they wanted properly. I've been designing and developing software for over 25 years and I can tell you that the vast majority of the time the software that's delivered is not what the user wanted is because the user did not articulate what they wanted properly. AI is not going to fix that it's going to make it worse because developers will often say hey I don't think you meant this did you mean that and will interject a lot of corrections and they will also help users understand how to do things better and AI is just going to blindly give you what you asked for and you're going to be like holy crap what is this?!?!
I’m a silver worker yet but can’t help but be fascinated and playing in AI. I will use my mind u til the day I die!
Great talk.. though petered out a bit towards the end.
We need a global regulation on satelites. He was right to point out how cheap and easy it has become to put a satelite in orbit. That actually is a danger for our ability to continue to go out further. Too much space debris! If every company is allowed just to put their shit up there, as so often every will have to pay for it.
At the rate SpaceX can launch Starlink satellites this would be a minor issue, based on the fact that there are so many in orbit, even if half of them were knocked out by this. They would simply get the remaining satellites to change orbit slightly to cover the losses until the next batch are launched in the next month or so. Today's word is "Redundancy" ;)
If a satellite gets knocked out and happens to bump into another, the Kessler syndrome will happen. It's a real risk that many scientists think is a matter of when, not if.
Just wow. The ONLY non technical disruption you could find is a Carrington Event (Geomagnetic Storms)? Really? We should all get down on our knees and pray that generative AI solves the massive energy imbalance caused by GHGs in our atmosphere in the next 5 years, or none of theses disruptions will even make the top ten.
A Solar storm could take out the cooling system's for nuclear power. The water powered engine could be that engineering disruption bigger than generative AI.
Not a problem anymore for Germany.
very nice
hi dear how are you.
disruption 8: AGI autonomous superintelligence. game over
Can't make sense of much of the talk. Is it based on figments of imagination or reality? How do you use generative AI to evaluate patents? Need a person more proficient in AI to give this talk.
IBM was the first company to upgrade its legacy systems with AI.
Notice... nothing about religion.
There are HUGE shifts in religious observation in the US. This will change society.
So did your think tank not consider the complete change of the world reserve currency and world monetary policy (long term) by shifting to a store of value with limited supply as not even rising to the level of world wide disruption? Or are you not paying attention to bitcoin? Kinda embarrassing to have such a huge miss. But not just monetary policy will change but blockchain will change many things from how we handle medical records to how we handle real estate titles. Disruptive change is coming.
Not to mention the benefit bitcoin mining will have on balancing our energy grids (already providing value in texas to mitigate blackouts), lowering costs to consumers & electrifying areas of the planet not yet electrified for the first time in history.
Bitcoin mining also helps by reducing global warming methane emissions by using flared gas & landfill methane outgassing as fuel. Just a lot of disruption you missed.
The his was good!
The AIs will review the market and device that the best currency they can use among each other is Bitcoin
I don't see BLOCKCHAIN technology here.
That's just hogwash.
Hi I'm Ariful Islam leeton im software engineer and members of the international organization and investors public and private sector and co founder open A i
I have no interest or knowledge in this topic, but I like listening to this lecturer😂
⚡️🧑💻🦺⚙️
You guys gotta spend more time on research and less on presenting and trying to sell us barely analyzed stuff. And PLEASE! cut the 90s stand up style! And Coke and Captain Kirk!
Why do you hate fun
Because truth is the opposite
Can you share examples of something that’s best in class?
Each to their own buddy. I wanted a jet pack too.
Oh… offended..no wonder you don’t like the 90s style…
So much waffle.
Just a tip, if you want people to take you seriously don't tell them you got into pokimon go. Sadly the inability to identify and avoid bs hype is pretty common these days.
As a human, you can have whatever hobby you like. Maybe you do not understand what hobby is.
@@djpete2009 Where did I say that he couldn't?
Where you said "If you want people to take you seriously, don't tell them you got into pekemon go" There.@@edbop