No. It does not. Moore's law is specific to integrated circuits. Show me an equivalent in another core technology, like transportation or agriculture. I know of none. It is also why I feel that the great age of technical innovation has contracted down to what we're doing now with computers.
But you're skipping over my main point. To achieve true VR we need to attach the machine to self, and we don't even have a way of detecting that with our best instruments. It's not an engineering problem but a basic one of the two natures: human and material, and the absence of a converter or buffer. cn
Transportation: Walking for tens of thousands of years, houses for a few thousand, Gas cars for 100, airplanes for 70, electric cars for 10. Things will continue to change wildly. Hell, compare a 2012 car to a 1970s car to a 1940s car. Then compare a 1940's car to the steam engine cars of the 1800's.
Agriculture: Nothing for tens of thousands of years, figured out some farming basics for thousands of years, irrigation ect, you haven't noticed production speeding up in the last few hundred years?
World wheat production. Yield and production go up, land use stays the same. Tripled in 40 years. You can't say that isn't due to technology of some sort. The increase has been faster in the last century than any time before in almost every technology.