Article 233NV 2007, not 2016, is the year the world turned upside down | John Naughton

2007, not 2016, is the year the world turned upside down | John Naughton

by
John Naughton
from Technology | The Guardian on (#233NV)

While we're undoubtedly living through dark times, the storm we're in now started with a rush of rapid technological change

It's interesting how particular years acquire historical significance: 1789 (the French Revolution); 1914 (outbreak of the first world war); 1917 (the Russian revolution); 1929 (the Wall Street crash); 1983 (switching on of the internet); 1993 (the Mosaic Web browser, which started the metamorphosis of the internet from geek sandpit to the nervous system of the planet). And of course 2016, the year of Brexit and Trump, the implications of which are, as yet, unknown.

But what about 2007? That was the year when Slovenia adopted the euro, Bulgaria and Romania joined the EU, Kurt Vonnegut died, smoking in enclosed public places was banned in the UK, a student shot 32 people dead and wounded 17 others at Virginia Tech, Luciano Pavarotti died and Benazir Bhutto was assassinated. Oh - and it was also the year that Steve Jobs launched the Apple iPhone.

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