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Overcomplicated
Book

Overcomplicated

Technology at the Limits of Comprehension

Current, 2016 Mehr

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8

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  • Overview
  • Insider's Take

Recommendation

The exploding nonlinear complexity of today’s interconnected tech is quickly growing beyond the human mind’s comprehension. Some observers are afraid of this progression, while others hail its seemingly “magical” implications. Complexity scientist Samuel Arbesman reports that neither reaction is appropriate to today’s “overcomplicated,” fascinating reality: a world of “almost organic” tech thriving in ecosystems increasingly beyond human ken. Arbesman says that people can prosper amid the uncertainties of the 21st century’s “Age of Entanglement” (a term coined by computer scientist Danny Hillis) if they think about advancing technology with the right attitude. He suggests starting with humility and leaving both fear and awe behind. With accessible insight, Arbesman lays out the current state of technology and explains some central operating concepts, including “bugs, kluges” and the difference between “complex” and “complicated.” His concise, reality-based overview of the convoluted present throws a welcome anchor to receptive thinkers, students, strategists, investors and leaders. getAbstract thinks it gives you useful advice on how to handle the ever-growing complexity of your digital life.

Summary

“Overcomplication”

Experts often cite glitchy software as the prime suspect in such incidents as air-traffic system outages and stock market crashes. Complex modern systems – urban infrastructures, website databases, supply chains, and more – have multiple potential “failure modes.” Their complexity often outstrips their own designers’ abilities to understand them completely. Vast, deeply embedded interconnection has given rise to so much overcomplication that the complexity of technology has reached a tipping point. Contemporary computer systems’ “radical novelty” makes them more complex and more difficult to understand than earlier systems. Nobody completely understands the trajectory or destination of today’s technological achievements. Elegant, comprehensible systems are giving way to “ecosystems” of technology. Like circulatory systems, their interconnections are too fast, uncertain and complex to fathom.

Overcomplication looms larger every day, and observers tend to react with either “fear” or “reverence.” Many people either fear killer robots and runaway artificial intelligence (AI), or they dislike the trend toward automation. Many rail against flaky tech ...

About the Author

Complexity scientist Samuel Arbesman is scientist in residence at Lux Capital and a research fellow at the Long Now Foundation. He studies the nature of scientific and technological change. He wrote The Half-Life of Facts: Why Everything We Know Has an Expiration Date.


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