Quotes
Peter H. Diamandis
The most-loved lines from Peter H. Diamandis, drawn from 1 book in the library.
“The most important technologies of the next decade will not advance in isolation. They will collide.”
Diamandis and Kotler's central move is convergence: AI, networks, sensors, robotics, biotech, and materials science become far more powerful when each feeds the others.
“Exponential progress is deceptive because it looks flat until it suddenly looks inevitable.”
The book asks readers to watch compounding curves before they become obvious headlines. The quiet years are where the strategic advantage forms.
“Abundance is not luxury for the few. It is the cost collapse that makes capability available to the many.”
The optimistic thesis is not just shinier gadgets. It is cheaper energy, health, learning, mobility, and creation as tools dematerialize and demonetize.
“The future arrives as a stack: computation, connection, sensing, automation, and capital layered together.”
A single breakthrough rarely changes daily life alone. The shock comes when infrastructure, interfaces, funding, and behavior all mature at once.
“Every industry should ask which part of its business becomes information first.”
Once something is digitized, it can be copied, searched, improved, personalized, and distributed at software speed. That is where disruption begins.
“The practical response to acceleration is not prediction. It is curiosity disciplined into early experiments.”
You do not need to forecast the whole decade. You need to notice weak signals, combine tools, and build small proofs before consensus catches up.