Friday, July 09, 2010

Cognitive Surplus


What did you do before the web? How was it possible to find a restaurant in those days? During breaks - what did you discuss?

The world used to be disconnected and communication was one-way - from producer to consumer (unless it was from Aunt Annie - then it was totally wasted ;-)). We consumed what others were producing - clothes, food, houses, TV, radio, music, etc. Today we still consume what others produce - with the big difference of us being able to search for what we would like to consume - gone are the days of mass-market consumption. Using Chris Anderson's words - The Long Tail becomes the new Mass-market. We still consume - but not the same stuff. And that's why we have so few common things to discuss.
The even bigger difference that emerges is that we nowadays not only consume - we produce - and for free!

Instead of just passively consume what others produce - we now turn our time and energy into producing. The time previously spent on TV alone represent 1000h/year. That passive time is now slowly being turned into creativity - especially among younger people. Contributing to blogs, wiki's, Twitter, Linux, Facebook, etc are the new time-killer - and this time we fill it with thoughts, creativity and true dialogue. Spare-time previously spent on TV is now being redirected into creativity.

In the future each of us have some 1000h/year to spend on creativity. Shall we continue to watch TV and passively consume what other produce or start contributing ourselves? This extra spare time is what researchers call the Cognitive Surplus - the current passive time possible to turn into creativity. All Wikipedia entries represents some 100 million hours compared to 500 billion hours of TV in Europe and US - there is a large pool of time potential out there. Combined with our drive to do things that are engaging, interesting and because they're the right things to do. Spare-time, sharing technology and motivation of interest will enable us to become more creative - creating new topics to discuss during breaks (not because we have to - just because we want and we can).

Which Wikipedia article will you contribute to tonight?

Instead of TV why not read any of the following for more inspiration:

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