• The changes that information processing technology is bringing to society

    • Change, of course, includes technological advances brought about by information processing technology (like Mr. Ochiaiā€™s computer nature).
    • On the other hand, information processing technology enables diverse ways of working and actually generates diverse ways of working, leading to changes in organizational forms and management methodologies
      • Parallel work in the context of changing forms of work
        • Parallel work creates a pipeline between different organizations and is a kick-start for open innovation.
        • Diversity increases the speed of search.
        • On the flip side, diversity increases communication costs.
        • As forms of communication change and supporting software evolves, discontinuous change can occur
  • Advances in Machine Learning Technology+.

    • Examples of functions that could not be acquired by humans through language-based thinking, but can be acquired through numerical-based optimization
    • Computational acquisition of language meaning as seen in word2vec
    • natural language processing
    • Changing forms of communication between people
  • Language Support

    • Support for formalization and internalization
    • The Future of Groupware
  • Evolutionary History of Programming Languages

    • Programming is verbalized by an artificial language
    • Language evolution has increased the efficiency of verbalization.
    • On the flip side, there has been an increased demand for the acquisition of concepts outside of the language. Object-oriented, for example.
  • unexplored

    • Mechanisms for Innovation
    • This is the effect of ā€œselection by unfixed scaleā€ as mentioned in Mr. Ochiaiā€™s column the other day
    • Unexplored as a network generator

This page is auto-translated from /nishio/2018ē ”ē©¶č؈ē”» using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. Iā€™m very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.