EPISODE · Jan 11, 2026 · 26 MIN
5.7 Conclusion — What the Information Age Left Us
from A brief history of AI from ancient times to the present day · host Kristy Anamoutou
What the Information Age Left Us: Conclusion and Opening Toward the Deep Learning RevolutionFrom the CSIRAC in Sydney to the WEIZAC in Rehovot. From the ruins of Berlin to Bletchley Park laboratories. From M-Pesa in Kenya to TSMC in Taiwan. From Dartmouth to ImageNet. Six continents. Sixty-five years. What does this crossing teach us?Four threads run through this period.The leap across the abyss. Africa jumped to mobile payments. India leaped toward software services. Taiwan invented an industrial model no one had imagined. Latecomers can become pioneers — if they invent their own path.The cycles of hope and disenchantment. AI experienced summers and winters. Unfulfilled promises triggered funding crises. But researchers who persisted during the winters prepared the following summers. Yann LeCun, Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio — the "godfathers of AI" — worked in the shadows when no one believed.Continued invisibilization. Betty Holberton and the ENIAC programmers. Rose Dieng-Kuntz and Timnit Gebru. The Argentine ComIC pioneers. Women, minorities, and contributors from the Global South remain underrepresented in the official history — and in the teams that build AI.The convergence of parallel paths. Nakashima and Shannon. India and Japan. Taiwan and Korea. Asia now manufactures the chips that run global artificial intelligence. Paths traced for half a century lead to the same horizon.This period leaves us a question: who inherits the digital revolution?In 2006, Geoffrey Hinton relaunched neural networks. In 2009, Fei-Fei Li published ImageNet. In 2012, AlexNet proved that deep learning worked. The summer that opened would be the longest in history.But this summer inherits everything that came before — leaps and falls, frugal innovations and extinguished forges, biases that perpetuate themselves, and questions that remain open.The journey continues.
What this episode covers
What the Information Age Left Us: Conclusion and Opening Toward the Deep Learning RevolutionFrom the CSIRAC in Sydney to the WEIZAC in Rehovot. From the ruins of Berlin to Bletchley Park laboratories. From M-Pesa in Kenya to TSMC in Taiwan. From Dartmouth to ImageNet. Six continents. Sixty-five years. What does this crossing teach us?Four threads run through this period.The leap across the abyss. Africa jumped to mobile payments. India leaped toward software services. Taiwan invented an industrial model no one had imagined. Latecomers can become pioneers — if they invent their own path.The cycles of hope and disenchantment. AI experienced summers and winters. Unfulfilled promises triggered funding crises. But researchers who persisted during the winters prepared the following summers. Yann LeCun, Geoffrey Hinton, Yoshua Bengio — the "godfathers of AI" — worked in the shadows when no one believed.Continued invisibilization. Betty Holberton and the ENIAC programmers. Rose Dieng-Kuntz and Timnit Gebru. The Argentine ComIC pioneers. Women, minorities, and contributors from the Global South remain underrepresented in the official history — and in the teams that build AI.The convergence of parallel paths. Nakashima and Shannon. India and Japan. Taiwan and Korea. Asia now manufactures the chips that run global artificial intelligence. Paths traced for half a century lead to the same horizon.This period leaves us a question: who inherits the digital revolution?In 2006, Geoffrey Hinton relaunched neural networks. In 2009, Fei-Fei Li published ImageNet. In 2012, AlexNet proved that deep learning worked. The summer that opened would be the longest in history.But this summer inherits everything that came before — leaps and falls, frugal innovations and extinguished forges, biases that perpetuate themselves, and questions that remain open.The journey continues.
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5.7 Conclusion — What the Information Age Left Us
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