
A farmer, a CEO, and a Harvard dorm room reveal how tech adoption rides a curve.
The Internet reached 50% adoption in 1995, while browsers like Netscape were just 1% of traffic, shocking growth leap.
Smartphone adoption surpassed desktop everywhere before Windows XP era ended, redefining computing as mobile-first overnight.
The majority of AI adopters are not tech firms but traditional industries, yet they achieve faster ROI than digital-native competitors.
Most 'late adopters' gravitate to products with hype cycles that collapse, driving massive early-adopter churn and rapid mainstream uplift.

A farmer, a CEO, and a Harvard dorm room reveal how tech adoption rides a curve.
The Internet reached 50% adoption in 1995, while browsers like Netscape were just 1% of traffic, shocking growth leap.
Smartphone adoption surpassed desktop everywhere before Windows XP era ended, redefining computing as mobile-first overnight.
The majority of AI adopters are not tech firms but traditional industries, yet they achieve faster ROI than digital-native competitors.
Most 'late adopters' gravitate to products with hype cycles that collapse, driving massive early-adopter churn and rapid mainstream uplift.
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