The main reason plugs last so long these days has nothing to do with the ignition systems, EFI, PFI, etc.... The reason they last so long is that the fuel does not have lead in it anymore. Lead deposits are what caused the fouling and short plug life. Even the best dual platinum or iridium plugs would foul quickly with leaded fuel. Until lead was eliminated from fuel there was really no need or incentive to develop anything more than the garden variety spark plug since they were replaced so often....and long before they became worn and rounded like the one in Rad's picture. Then again.....you have to be of a certain age to remember leaded fuel.....LOL.
BTW....unleaded fuel is also what makes "reading" the plugs so difficult. An OEM engine running unleaded fuel will have almost perfectly white porceleans even after thousands of miles. And that is running at 14.7:1 which is slightly "rich" at cruise compared to what many are used to with leaded fuel engines of the past.
Certainly the sharp edges are important and a well rounded, worn plug like the one in Rad's picture would not perform nearly as well as a new, sharp, iridium plug. I just cannot imagine a plug, any plug, looking like the one in that picture in only 10,000 miles, though.
I have personally seen countless dual platinum plugs from various manufacturers (including AC, Nippondenso, NGK among others) go 100,000 miles without the first hint of a problem. And that was on an automotive ignition system that DID use the "waste spark" system. In fact, many vehicles on the road do use the waste spark type system that fires the plug every revolution whether it needs to fire or not. Generally, any direct fire system with a plug lead directly from the coil to the spark plug and two plug wires per coil is a direct fire type system that uses waste spark. Practically speaking, on an engine running unleaded fuel, I would expect a dual platinum plug to run virtually forever.
The iridium plugs also show excellent life in automotive testing that I have seen . Without the platinum pad on the ground electrode, however, the gap will wear with time compared to the dual platinum plugs but the wear is still minor and the plugs are capable of 100,000 mile service....in automotive applications.
Bikes typically run about double the RPM at cruise speeds compared to car engines so even cutting the automotive comparisons in half (for double the firing events) the plugs would still go near 50,000 I would expect.