ABSTRACT

The first three laws of twenty-first-century techonomics develop a philosophy of progressing organizational efficiency that is broadly applicable and personally observable. These three “laws” form the foundation of twenty-first-century techonomics, because these emerging technology trends are the most powerful economic drivers reshaping today’s organizations. The first three laws of techonomics are:

First Law — Moore’s

Law (Law of Ubiquitous Computing):

Named for Gordon Moore, a founder of Intel, this widely known and validated observation describes the diminishing cost of electronics due to technological advance. Loosely stated, Moore’s Law predicts that the cost of electronic computation is cut in half every 18 months.