What stands in the way of disruptive innovation isn’t the technology but our relentless and irrational grip on the past.

4 Predictions for the Most Disruptive Innovations of the Next 20 Years, What stands in the way of disruptive innovation isn’t the technology, A friend recently reminded me of Y2K and the dot-com implosion. It’s hard to believe that was just two decades ago. It made me wonder what the next twenty years will look like.

4 Predictions for the Most Disruptive Innovations of the Next 20 Years
4 Predictions for the Most Disruptive Innovations of the Next 20 Years

Predicting the future is always suspect but what fascinates me most are predictions about foundational innovations which have already been technologically proven.

What stands in their way are the cultural impediments that block every disruptive innovation. We adamantly hold onto mental models of what’s familiar.

I’ve picked these four because as you read through them your gut reaction will be to reject them by thinking, “Oh, sure I know about that prediction,” my questions to you is, what are you doing about it? If it’s just wait and see then what I can tell you, with little to no uncertainty, is that these four disrupters will create incredible opportunity for new businesses smart enough to latch onto them early.  

Here are four of those long-term foundational 20-year megatrends that will shape nearly every aspect of global society; if we can just let go of the past.

#1 Within 20 years the overwhelming majority of vehicles will drive themselves.

We already have cars and trucks that can drive themselves under certain well-defined circumstances. Last year Delphi, the Boston-based think tank I lead published an extensive report that looked at the advent of electric and autonomous vehicles, AVs. (Get the full report here).

By 2034 the number of automobiles in the U.S. will peak at roughly about 500 million, from about 250 million today. It’s what comes after 2034 that surprises almost everyone who has seen the research; the total number of cars will decline rapidly to less than 50 million by 2050.

That’s because AV’s will drive 20+ hours a day rather than the 2 hour average for owned cars. In fact, cars will likely own themselves through blockchain technology.

Cities will reclaim 25 percent of the real estate used for parking today. 1,300,000 lives will be saved each year.  Insurance companies will no longer insure human driven automobiles at rates that make it affordable for the vast majority of people.

#2 Within 20 years quantum computers will be as widely used as classical computers.

Quantum computing is progressing at a rate that is surprising even those who are building it. Google engineers recently talked about how they have already reached “quantum supremacy”–the point at which quantum computers can exceed the ability of any classical computer. IBM projects three years at most for that same achievement.

Quantum computers will not replace all classical computers, but they will become an indispensable part of how we use computers and artificial intelligence in our lives.

This will be one of the most radical shifts in the history of science, enabling us to take on problems that classical computers are simply unable to deal with.

Quantum computers come as close possible to mimicking the biological world, allowing us to simulate everything from cellular organisms, to human biology, to pharmaceuticals, to the inner workings of the universe. 

#3 Within 20 years every human being will have an immutable identity.

Half of the 7.5 billion people on the planet today have no documented identity. They are unable to own property, open bank accounts, or obtain formal credit. They are at the mercy of unscrupulous actors who prey on their economic vulnerability.

It may seem outlandish to suggest that this is a technology problem, but in large part it is. Blockchain will enable the disenfranchised to enter the economic mainstream, to transact, and, most importantly, to obtain identities.

The basis of all free markets, and democratic systems, is the immutability of ownership. Without identity there is no ownership. Making identity immutable is perhaps the single greatest step we can take towards creating a world where everyone has the opportunity to extract value from their efforts and contributions.

Read more: https://www.inc.com/thomas-koulopoulos/4-predictions-for-most-disruptive-innovations-of-next-20-years.html?icid=readmoretext_ab