Digimurros oli jo 80-luvun alussa:

http://grohn.puheenvuoro.uusisuomi.fi/214583-suomen-digitalisoinnin-hist…

Toisaalta

"Northwesternin yliopiston professori Robert Gordon uskoo, että tietotekniikan vallankumous on jo nähty: se alkoi 1960-luvulla ja saavutti huippunsa vuosituhannen vaihteen it-kuplan tienoilla. 2000-luvulla innovaatiot ovat Gordonin mukaan lähinnä liittyneet viihteeseen ja tehneet laitteista pienempiä. Koko talouden tuottavuus ei ole kuitenkaan enää juuri kasvanut." http://www.hs.fi/talous/a1450497408533

Robert J. Gordon's, a Northwestern University economist whose 2000 paper

“Does the ‘New Economy’ Measure Up to the Great Inventions of the Past?”

included a damning comparison of the flood of inventions that occurred a century ago with the seeming trickle that we see today. Consider the new products invented in just the ten years between 1876 and 1886:

internal combustion engine, electric lightbulb, electric transformer, steam turbine, electric railroad, automobile, telephone, movie camera, phonograph, linotype, roll film (for cameras), dictaphone, cash register, vaccines, reinforced concrete, flush toilets. The typewriter had arrived a few years earlier and the punch-card tabulator would appear a few years later.

And then, in short order, came airplanes, radio, air conditioning, the vacuum tube, jet aircraft, television, refrigerators and a raft of other home appliances, as well as revolutionary advances in manufacturing processes. (And let’s not forget The Bomb.) The conditions of life changed utterly between 1890 and 1950, observed Gordon. Between 1950 and today? Not so much.

http://www.roughtype.com/?p=1603