It seems a bit ahistorical to suggest that "Rome" could have industrialized by "skipping the Dark Ages" for a couple of reasons.
The list of things the Romans didn't have is almost entirely composed of "Dark Age" inventions.
And, although the city of Rome fell, the imperial capital had already moved to Constantinople. The Roman empire continued to develop new technology for many centuries. (Although for peculiar historical reasons we start calling the Roman empire "Byzantium" at that point.)
Consider reading "Cathedral, Forge, and Waterwheel" by Frances Gies and Joseph Gies for a more realistic view of progress in the period after the Roman empire moved its capital to Constantinople.
It seems a bit ahistorical to suggest that "Rome" could have industrialized by "skipping the Dark Ages" for a couple of reasons.
The list of things the Romans didn't have is almost entirely composed of "Dark Age" inventions.
And, although the city of Rome fell, the imperial capital had already moved to Constantinople. The Roman empire continued to develop new technology for many centuries. (Although for peculiar historical reasons we start calling the Roman empire "Byzantium" at that point.)
Consider reading "Cathedral, Forge, and Waterwheel" by Frances Gies and Joseph Gies for a more realistic view of progress in the period after the Roman empire moved its capital to Constantinople.