The
Internet has made location redundant. Has it really?
In 1997, the Book “Death
of Distance” by Frances Cairncross popularized the concept that The Web made
distance redundant. Twenty years is a long time for the internet to have
established its dominance and made all of us servile to the web.
While
there is no doubt that our lives have come to be dominated by it’s almost omnipresence,
but if you peep into any shopping area or a bank or eatery, there seems to be
overwhelmed by a rush of people to buy their products or services.
Business.com
in a 2017 report claims that for e-commerce sales as percentage of total retail
sales, China has the highest share at 15.9% followed by United States of
America at 7.5%.
We
also have witnessed a surge in retail real estate prices in most growing economies
in the world.
So
why is it that in spite of our growing addiction and dependence on the ubiquitous
mobile phone and a plethora of other such gadgets, commerce is still dependent
on the traditional methods of exchange and interaction?
The
possible reasons for this could be many:
In
a recently published essay “How Geography
Shapes—and is Shaped By—the Internet,” written by Chris Forman, Avi
Goldfarb, and Shane Greenstein, the authors attempt to answer the question,
“What consequences did the spread of the internet have for geographical
location of economic activity?”
In
an interview
with Sean
Silverthorne of Harvard Business School, Shane Greenstein states that “though internet technology ostensibly diffused
everywhere, it did not get experienced as the same technology in each location”.
Moving
away from the business side, many of us would rather hear a living human voice no
matter how human & intelligent ‘Alex’ may sound. The Voice Assistant Market
is right now on fire but could be a novelty factor or a fad driving it. Human
beings need appropriate responses from other human beings to perpetuate their
own self-worth. Machines are years away, if at, in providing us that same sense
of wellbeing.

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