A rapid wave of change is sweeping across the world disrupting every aspect of human existence, the Australian Dairy Conference in Melbourne was told last week. And the pace of that change is only going to increase.
Kaila Colbin, from Silicon Valley think-tank the Singularity University, told the conference that farmers - like everyone else - needed to be ready as technology, such as the development of bioengineered proteins, would fundamentally challenge what they did.
Ms Colbin provided three insights to explain why the changes the world faced now were unlike anything that had occurred in the past.
If necessity is the mother of invention, then irritation is its father
- Jason Clarke, Minds at Work
The first insight was the law of accelerating returns - that the price performance of computing doubled about every two years. This meant that the number of computerised instructions that could be generated for a certain amount of dollars doubled every two years.
“Today for $1000, you can buy roughly the same number of instructions per second as a mouse brain can process,” she said.
“By 2023 - in just five years from now - for $1000 you will be able to buy the number of instructions per second a human brain can process and by 2049 for $1000 you will be able to buy the instructions per second of all human brains on the planet combined.”
The second insight was that this did not only apply to computing but to anything that used this computing power and so was information enabled. Examples included artificial intelligence, robotics, biotechnology, nanotechnology, neuroscience and energy.
The third insight was that when these technologies converged, the rate of change accelerated even faster.
Ms Colbin said this rate of change meant the world would soon reach the point of technological singularity — the crucial moment when machines become smarter than humans.
This exponential rate of change was particularly difficult for humans to understand, as our brains had evolved to see things in linear patterns.
The initial slow rate of exponential change also meant most experts could not anticipate the rapid rate of change that would occur.
A systematic, disciplined approach was needed to respond to the change that was occurring.
It also meant that at a certain point, the change would suddenly seem to cascade uncontrollably - leading to disruption.
Ms Colbin said these changes would provide a huge opportunity to solve education, environmental, health, energy and other issues - and this was already happening. Extreme poverty was now at the lowest level it had ever been at in the world, while new developments in medicine were making a huge difference.
But it would impact on most jobs. Up to 40 per cent of current jobs would be under threat from technology by 2023
Artificial intelligence was now so good that the “thinking jobs” that were once the exclusive domain of humans were under threat.
Ms Colbin said the change was so fundamental that it meant people now needed to question what was the purpose of being human.
The idea of a universal basic income was emerging, allowing people more time to do things other than work. But the challenge was that people still defined themselves by their job.
For agriculture, Ms Colbin said the changes would hit in three key areas.
The first was the continued emergence of technologies that automated things that were already done on the farm, including self-driving tractors or drones that used to check crops.
The second was where the rapid development of technology in another industry would impact agriculture. An example was LED lighting, the cost performance of which had improved by 95 per cent. This now meant indoor farming was price competitive with traditional farming and could disrupt it.
The third was the development of bioengineered products, such as bioengineered milk and meat. The exponential rate of change meant the cost of these products was falling rapidly.
The challenge for dairy would be to differentiate itself from these bioengineered products and “go hard” in the opposite direction, connecting consumers directly to the farm or cow that produced the milk.
Founder of innovation practitioner Minds at Work Jason Clarke told the conference how people reacted to change was the key to managing it. Change could be “exciting and frightening at the same time”.
People need to be curious and open to the challenge but those at the top found this difficult. Companies in the number one position had traditions and respect, but they often did not have the time to think about alternatives, lacked the freedom to experiment, had no motivation to disrupt and had little appetite for failure.
Mr Clarke said every great idea had a use-by date, using the ice-cutting industry as an example of one that was ultimately disrupted by the invention of refrigeration. But none of the businesses involved in ice-cutting had moved into refrigeration.
Mr Clarke said people needed to think like innovators. Innovators saw the future need first - they were able to predict what people were going to need.
If life was easy, people wouldn't be so good at invention. Look for the things that annoyed. “If necessity is the mother of invention, then irritation is its father”.
And look for the possibilities in mistakes. Champagne was the classic example of something that had gone wrong and created something better.