Modern Portrait of an Inventor: Genius in a Sweater and SneakersIf you still picture an inventor as a white-haired, bearded man in a lab coat, conjuring over test tubes in the dim light of a workshop, it's time to urgently revise your stereotypes. The 21st century has radically changed the face of those who create the new. Today's inventor is a young man (or woman) with a laptop, often in a sweater and sneakers, working in a co-working space or at a kitchen table, but connected to dozens of specialists around the world. His tools are not just a screwdriver and a soldering iron, but also cloud platforms, digital twins, artificial intelligence, and global crowdfunding networks. What is the modern creator of the future like? How does he differ from his predecessors and what remains unchanged in his character and mission?Portrait in Numbers: Who Is He TodayThe modern inventor is not a lone wolf. According to WIPO and other organizations, more than 80% of patents today belong to corporations, but behind each patent are teams, and within teams — engineers, designers, marketers, lawyers. The average age of an inventor in high-tech fields is 28–35 years, and he is constantly learning. Most inventors have higher education, but not necessarily engineering — more and more often, these are people with an interdisciplinary background, combining physics with design, biology with programming, chemistry with economics.Geography has also changed. If before the centers of invention were concentrated in the USA, Europe, and Japan, then today China, India, Israel, South Korea, and even startup ecosystems in Africa and Latin America produce hundreds of thousands of patents annually. The inventor is now a global citizen. He can live in Berlin, work for a Singaporean company, order parts from China, and attract investments from Silicon Valley.Toolbox of the 21st Century: Numbers, AI, BiotechThe main difference between the modern inventor and his predecessor is access to information. Today ...
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