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9780887309106

The Dilbert Future

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780887309106

  • ISBN10:

    0887309100

  • Edition: Reprint
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2010-04-21
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publications

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Summary

Step aside, Bill Gates! Here comes today's real technology guru and his totally original, laughoutloud New York Times bestseller that looks at the approaching new millennium and boldly predicts: more stupidity ahead. In The Dilbert Principle and Dogbert's Top Secret Management Handbook, Scott Adams skewered the absurdities of the corporate world. Now he takes the next logical step, turning his keen analytical focus on how human greed, stupidity and horniness will shape the future. Featuring the same irresistible amalgam of essays and cartoons that made Adams??revious works so singularly entertaining, this uproariously funny, deadontarget tome offers halftruthful, halffarcical predictions that push all of today's hot buttons from business and technology to society and government. a?? Children they are our future, so wea?Y pretty much hosed. Tip: Grab what you can while theya?Y still too little to stop us. a?? Human Potential we'll finally learn to use the 90 percent of the brain we don't use today, and find out that there wasn't anything in that part. Computers Technology and homeliness will combine to form a powerful type of birth control. In The Dilbert Principle and Dogbert's Top Secret Management Handbook, Scott Adams skewered the absurdities of the corporate world. Now he takes the next logical step, turning his keen analytical focus on how human greed, stupidity and horniness will shape the future. Featuring the same irresistible amalgam of essays and cartoons that made Adams??revious works so singularly entertaining, this uproariously

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

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Excerpts

How to Predict the Future

Some people try to predict the future by assuming current trends will continue. This is a bad method. For example, if you applied that forecasting method to a puppy, you'd predict that the puppy would continue growing larger and larger until one day-in a fit of uncontrolled happiness-its wagging tail would destroy a major metropolitan area. But that rarely happens, thanks to the National Guard.

The future never follows trends, because of three rules I have named after myself in order to puff up my importance.

Adam's Rule of the Unexpected

Something unexpected always happens to wreck any good trend. Here are some examples to prove my point:

Good Trend Unexpected Bad Thing

Computers allow us to work Computers generate 300

100 percent faster percent more work.

Women get more political power.Women are as dumb as men.

Popular music continues to get better.I get old.

Adam's Rule of Self-Defeating Prophecies

Whenever humans notice a bad trend, they try to change it. The prediction of doom causes people to do things differently and avoid the doom. Any doom that can be predicted won't happen.

Here are some examples of dooms that people predicted and how the indomitable human spirit rose to the challenge and thwarted the prediction:

Prediction of Doom Human Response

Population will grow faster than Scientists realize you can callfood supply.just about anything a "meat patty."

Petroleum reserves will be Scientists discover oil in their depleted in twenty years.own hair.

Communism will spread to the All Communists become

rest of the world.ballerinas and defect.

I might have some of the details wrong; I'm working from memory here. But the point is that none of those predictions came true once we started worrying about them. That's the way it always works.

Adam's Rule of Logical Limits

All trends have logical limits. For example, computers continue to shrink in size, but that trend will stop as soon as you hear this report on CNN:

This just in. A computer systems administrator sneezed, and his spray destroyed the entire military computing hardware of North America, leading to the conquest of the United States by Haitian bellhops. More on that later, but first our report on the healing powers of herbal tea.

At that point, we'll say, "Hey, maybe those computers were too small." That will be the end of the shrinking computer trend.

If all trends end, what can we look at to predict the future? There are some things in life so consistent that they are like immutable laws of human nature. You can predict most of the future by looking at these immutable laws and applying logic.

Immutable Laws of Human Nature

Stupidity

Selfishness

Horniness

Those are the things that will never change, no matter what else does. People don't change their basic nature, they just accumulate more stuff upon which they can apply their stupidity, selfishness, and horniness. From this perspective, the future isn't hard to predict.

I realize that by telling you my secrets I'm not only opening my kimono, but I'm also doing jumping jacks in front of your picture window, if you catch my visual gist. But I'm not worried about you learning my secrets, because I'll always be one step ahead of you.

Prediction Two

In the future, you will wish I had never put the image in your head of me doing jumping jacks in an open kimono.

(Continues...)

Excerpted from The Dilbert Future by Scott Adams Copyright © 2003 by Scott Adams
Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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