Digital economics

Definition
DIGINOMICS (dij’i-nom’iks), n. - acronym of two words: digital and economics. (1) the status of development toward an all-digital economy conducted electronically in all financial dealings between buyer and seller; a cashless society where all moneys (incl. cash, coins, checks and credit) and transactions involving the same are conducted electronically. (2) Societal trends in which the presence of and use of advanced electronic technology is both prevalent and predominant, creating lifestyles and social cultures that are technology driven.
Rationale
Main economic principle is growth gains. Do not misunderstand it as efficiency gains. Difference is between doing something every time better and doing different thing with better results. On big scale this is the most significant factor in economic growth.
The cogwheels for economic growth are macro and micro economics. Meantime ITC has made more than 30 years. It is already playing a huge role in global economy, but yet it has no clear name.
Everybody would agree that the Web we know today will change human habits forever. So we need to give a name to this new school in the frame of earth civilization economics knowledge.
A name has circulated in different readings and articles of visionary people. It has the title "Digital economics" and in the sane of this same phenomena, "Diginomics" as a short name.
Digital economy phenomena
First allocation of resources via digital principles were done by the ARPA net.
Diginomics principles
* Reuse
* Collectivity
* Mobility
Most popular examples
is best and most popular example of under what forms can be digital economics met. creates knowledge as a value for the whole society - at micro and macro level. Although, a great time span is necessary to be observed, implications are straightforward. Education was a expensive commodity through the whole human history. Now, with being an example, abundance of possibilities still lay ahead in expanding the sharing and collectivity model to different fields of socio-economic structure.
Peer-to-peer landing;
 
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