100 Million Hours of Thought
Seth Godin's blog just
directed me to a great posting by Clay Shirky, "Gin,
Television, and Social Surplus".
I had the pleasure of seeing Clay speak at the Ideas Festival in Aspen this
summer and many agreed that he was the most dynamic and interesting speaker that
week.
In the post, Clay shares his
calculation that Wikipedia represents 100 million hours of human thought and
hypothesizes that much of this time would have otherwise been spent watching TV
(Americans watch 200 billion hours of TV per year). He describes this as a
social surplus. At the close of the piece, he asks how else we might deploy our
social or cognitive surplus doing something more productive than watching
TV.
Clay focuses on technology. That is
his gig and he is hopeful that much of this surplus will find productive outlets
online.
As a social entrepreneur, I see this
200 billion hour surplus and it gives me a great deal of optimism about our
ability to harness human capital to improve the human condition through
service. We need to make it easy for American professionals to spend an hour or
two a day using their talents to invest in society.
The average American watches four
hours of TV a day.
If we could cut that down to three hours per day and have that other hour dedicated to service, imagine the changes we would see in
society.
Hello!
Very Interesting post! Thank you for such interesting resource!
PS: Sorry for my bad english, I'v just started to learn this language ;)
See you!
Your, Raiul Baztepo