CONCEPT
The Revolution Unfinished
The Hopper volume's organizing thesis — that the computing revolution Hopper started in 1952 is <em>not complete</em> and the language-interface moment of 2025 is a dramatic advance within the revolution rather than its conclusion — identifying four obstacles (infrastructure, literacy, governance, human adaptation) that remain between the current state and the destination Hopper pointed toward.
The revolution Hopper started was not about making machines faster. It was about widening the interface between human intention and machine capability until every mind that could use computation could reach computation. By that measure, 2025's natural-language AI tools are an extraordinary advance but not the finish line. Approximately 2.6 billion people still lack internet access. Effective use of AI tools requires a new literacy the educational systems have not yet developed. Governance frameworks adequate to powerful general-purpose AI do not exist. The human adaptation — the relocation of professional identity to higher cognitive floors — is painful, uneven, and institutionally under-supported. The Hopper volume frames these as the unfinished work of the same revolution, identifiable by the same method Hopper used to identify the work of 1952: look at where the door is open but the road to the door
Keep reading with YOU ON AI
Unlock the full book, 10,000+ field-guide entries, and a 1000+ thinker library. If you have a book code, register now — it takes a minute.