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	<title>Leslie Rohde &#187; science</title>
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		<title>Is the World Really Getting Smaller?</title>
		<link>http://www.leslierohde.com/2008/07/13/is_the_world_really_getting_smaller/</link>
		<comments>http://www.leslierohde.com/2008/07/13/is_the_world_really_getting_smaller/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jul 2008 04:59:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Leslie</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://beta.leslierohde.com/?p=158</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A pretty widely regarded &#34;truth&#34; is that modern communications technology has reduced, and continues to reduce, the size of the world.&#160; The &#34;Small World Experiment&#34;&#160; , incorrectly attributed as the source of &#34;six degrees of separation&#34;, arguably measures this. But wait, does reducing the path length between people make the world smaller?&#160; It makes the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>A pretty widely regarded &quot;truth&quot; is that modern communications technology has reduced, and continues to reduce, the size of the world.&nbsp; The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_world_phenomenon">&quot;Small World Experiment&quot;&nbsp; </a>, incorrectly attributed as the source of &quot;six degrees of separation&quot;, arguably measures this.<br />
But wait, does reducing the path length between people make the world smaller?&nbsp; It makes the path length smaller &#8212; a tautology &#8212; but is that a useful measure of size?<br />
No.<br />
How big was the world for early humans?&nbsp; Sure, the world was really huge in terms of communications and travel, but damn small in terms of the percentage of the world these early people were aware of.<br />
For example, the peoples of Europe didn&#8217;t even know about North America 500 years ago.&nbsp; Today our economies and politics are nearly welded at the hips.&nbsp; Awareness?&nbsp; Hell, concern!<br />
The &quot;right&quot; way to talk about the &quot;size of the world&quot; is not geographic or even person-to-person path length but in <strong>information theoretic terms</strong>.<br />
With each advance in communications and travel technology, points progressively further away from your physical location become increasingly meaningful and accessible.&nbsp; This does not increase the total information in the universe &#8212; North America did not get created by the Europeans discovering it &#8212; but <strong>it does dramatically increase the data that is in meaningful relation to own lives</strong>.<br />
From time to time I grab my laptop, drop on the couch and browse for bands visiting Atlanta.&nbsp; Finding one I like, I buy a ticket from half-way across the country from someone I&#8217;ve never met and schedule a trip downtown for 3 hours of fun &#8212; a trip that would require a two day ride by horse just 5 generations ago.<br />
Or the personal vignette that spurred this post &#8230;<br />
In updating my <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/leslierohde">LinkedIn</a> network &#8212; by itself a sign of an <strong>expanded information world</strong> &#8212; I found an ex-client from 2 years ago;&nbsp; I invited him; I checked his connections and this marketing contact did NLP training with one of my own teachers &#8212; a person I have not had contact with since 1994.<br />
<strong>Technology compresses both time and space &#8212; into the space between our ears &#8212; because that is where our image of the universe actually lives.&nbsp; As the world &quot;gets smaller&quot;, our heads get correspondingly bigger.</strong><br />
Smaller world?&nbsp; No way.&nbsp; The world grows geometrically larger as Moore&#8217;s law continues to be realized.</p>
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