I don't think the point is that the breakthrough idea of today is within the means of some real fourteen-year-old. The breakthrough idea of today is something that today's concepts, economics, and best practices are NOT well-suited to handle; otherwise it wouldn't be much of a breakthrough. The amazing thing is how quickly something has gone from the realm of obsessed genius to the realm of the mundane. It goes back to Whitehead's observation that, "Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking of them."
"Without thinking" is an exaggeration for some of the items in the post, but consider the problem of storing 200GB of data. "Um... on a hard drive?" "And how will you finance that?" "Gee, maybe with the money in my wallet right now? When do these questions get hard?" Shucks, hardware sure is cheap these days! Problems simply disappear from being challenges to not requiring any thought at all. The exponential increase in the power of affordable hardware may not be surprising, but to me it seems worth thinking about even though it's been normal and predictable my whole life.
"Without thinking" is an exaggeration for some of the items in the post, but consider the problem of storing 200GB of data. "Um... on a hard drive?" "And how will you finance that?" "Gee, maybe with the money in my wallet right now? When do these questions get hard?" Shucks, hardware sure is cheap these days! Problems simply disappear from being challenges to not requiring any thought at all. The exponential increase in the power of affordable hardware may not be surprising, but to me it seems worth thinking about even though it's been normal and predictable my whole life.