Issue 47: A Bulletin for Big Ideas and Better Business
Practices vs principles. The Tortoise Observer. Writers get a shot. And Nihon Hidankyo.
ISSUE 47 /
A BULLETIN FOR
BIG IDEAS AND
BETTER BUSINESS.
OPINION / TECHNOLOGY
Practices change:
principles remain
đŹ Sir John Hegarty
âThe world is at a moment of unprecedented technological change.â Almost every conference keynote and white-paper seems to start with this phrase, or some variation of it. While AI and associated digital tools will alter the world in unimaginable ways, none of it is as out of the ordinary as the hype would have us believe. In fact, I would venture that the coming wave of disruption isnât that unprecedented at all. A short history lesson shows exactly how precedented it all is.
The first information revolution happened long before digital. Johannes Gutenberg was a German inventor and craftsman living in Strasbourg from around 1434. He invented the worldâs first movable type printing press â a means of spreading knowledge via affordable books and manuscripts. Gutenbergâs efforts fundamentally altered the society and helped give way to The Renaissance.
Every keynote and whitepaper seems to start with: âThe world is at a moment of unprecedented technological changeâ
The story shows a curious number of parallels to how modern tech start-ups operate. First, Gutenberg needed the confidence of a small number of wealthy investors to bankroll his development phase. Then he built in total secrecy (today thatâs called âstealthâ). The first crowning achievement of âartificial writing â was the â42-Line Bibleâ. As well as this, the story includes debt defaults, lawsuits, co-founder spats, and â eventually â Gutenberg was ousted from the company he built.
So far, so familiar. Then public reception to the invention mirrors the anxiety we see about AI today, too. Scribes concerned for their livelihoods banded together and vandalised printing presses. The church proclaimed that the innovation was devilry, and Pope Alexander VI vowed to excommunicate anyone who printed without permission. Monks also pointed to poor spelling in print.
Those who view technology with suspicion in the present should examine its effect on the past. The fundamental goal of creativity doesnât change. Great communication speaks to the human spirit, creates culture, and fights ignorance. The way in which we make these things happen shifts radically. But while practices change: principles remain.
THE AGENDA
âď¸ Pencil it in: your agenda for the coming week
1.
Legendary Milanese theatre La Scalaâs new season opens with a contemporary adaptation of Verdiâs La Forza del Destino, the story of star-crossed lovers whose lives are fatefully torn apart by war.
10th December
2.
Beating Taylor Swift to lead the nominations at this yearâs Billboard Music Awards is country singer Zach Bryan, a Navy veteran whose rise has been meteoric in the US but remains little-known abroad.
13th December
3.
World Human Rights Day is celebrated today, commemorating the date the UN General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.
10th December
4.
Timeâs âPerson of the Yearâ will be announced on Thursday. Defined as a figure who has âdone the most to influence the events of the yearâ, the 2024 shortlist includes the likes of Donald Trump and Elon Musk.
12th December
5.
Reutersâ NEXT 2024 Conference takes place in New York, bringing together world-leading figures such as IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva and OpenAIâs CFO Sarah Friar to discuss the greatest challenges facing society, business, and the world more broadly.
10th â 11th December
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UK / MEDIA
Breaking news
Contributor: UrbanImages / Alamy Stock Photo
Newspaper staff
worry merger is
wrong angle
Can a plucky start-up breathe new life into the worldâs oldest Sunday newspaper? Those behind the sale of The Observer to Tortoise Media will be hoping so. Staff at the paper are rallying against the decision, however. Over a hundred journalists have signed a letter complaining that the deal abandons the principles of the Scott Trust, which owns the legacy title. Critics point to the fact that Tortoise itself is a loss-making outfit. But the combined resources of the two brands might prove a winning combination. While daily print publications have slumped, weekly titles are faring better. So Tortoiseâs talent for long form storytelling could be applied to revitalise the title. Theyâll have to act quickly: with revolting staff and spiralling costs, there is little opportunity to be slow, nor steady.
ON CREATIVITY /
US / ENTERTAINMENT
Born from The Black List
Contributor: Cinematic / Alamy Stock Photo
The Black List
goes off script
Breaking Hollywood is among the most ambitious goals for an aspiring screenwriter. Inevitably, many great stories are passed over in the machinery of the entertainment industry. For two decades, The Black List has helped overlooked writers get attention from studios and producers. Published on the second Friday of December, it began as an annual survey of unproduced scripts, but has since evolved into an online match-making platform for creatives and executives. The formula works. More than 400 screenplays have been turned into productions â including Academy Award-winners such as Slumdog Millionaire and The Kingâs Speech (pictured). This year offers an evolution: The Black List now includes novel manuscripts. Itâs a smart way to democratise a system where traditionally, nepotism has carried more clout than talent.
NORWAY / DIPLOMACY
Nobel Peace Center in Oslo
Credit: Steffen Trumpf/dpa/Alamy Live News
Contributor: dpa picture alliance / Alamy Stock Photo
Peace is the
highest goal
for creativity
A ceremony will be held in Oslo today to award the Nobel Peace Prize. The winner this year is Nihon Hidankyo, a Japanese group founded by survivors of the US attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The organisation has promoted the rights of all those who survived the tragedies, and campaigned against nuclear weapons ever being used again. With more conflicts igniting, itâs a fitting moment to recognise Nihon Hidankyoâs efforts, and underline its mission. Through witness testimony, it has awakened the international community to the realities of nuclear war. Itâs a reminder of how personal experiences are an effective vehicle for change, and how storytelling is a way to make some sense of the inconceivable.
Ideas are like fish. If you want to catch little fish, you can stay in the shallow water. But if you want to catch the big fish, youâve got to go deeper.
Unlock your creativity.
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