Top 10 Technology Trends:
- Deep-Learning
- Wearables/IOT
- Digital Payments
- Video Gaming Hardware Mods
- Quantified Self-Connected Car Integration
- Consumer MedGadgets
- Smarthome, Smartcity
- Personal Robotics
- Cognitive Computing
- Blockchain Technology
Ideas from Philosopher, Economic Theorist, Blockchain Scholar, DIYbio Innovator, and Startup Founder Melanie Swan regarding the potentiality of our future
Posted by LaBlogga at 8:32 PM View Comments
Labels: 2015, AI, Bitcoin, blockchain, cognition, connected car, deep learning, digital payments, gaming, hardware, iot, medgadget, quantified self, robotics, smartcity, smarthome, technology, trends, wearables
Posted by LaBlogga at 11:26 AM View Comments
Labels: 2013, big data, biohacking, crowdfunding, crowdsourcing, ehealth, elearning, fracking, information visualization, mobile, quantified self, technology trends, top 10, trends, video, wearable computing
1. Mobile is the platform: smartphone apps & device proliferation
2. Cloud computing: big data era, hadoop, noSQL, machine learning
3. Gamification of behavior and content generation
4. Mobile payments and incentives (e.g.; Amex meets FourSquare)
5. Life by Siri, Skyvi, etc. intelligent software assistants
6. Happiness 2.0 and social intelligence: mindfulness, calming tech, and empathy building
7. Social graph prominence in search (e,g.; music, games, news, shopping)
8. Mobile health and quantified self-tracking devices: towards a continuous personal information climate
9. Analytics, data mining, algorithms, automation, robotics
10. Cloud culture: life imitates computing (e.g.; Occupy, Arab Spring)
Further out - Gesture-based computing, Home automation IF sensors, WiFi thermostat, Enterprise social networks
Is it ever coming? - Cure for the common cold, Driverless cars
Looking back at Predictions for 2011: right or wrong?
Posted by LaBlogga at 11:10 AM View Comments
Labels: 2012, apps, blippy, computing, connected media, device, LBS, microlabor, mobile, prediction, sentiment engine, sentiment prediction, social shopping, supercomputing, technology, top 10, trends
1. Mobile is the platform; mobile payment ubiquity could be next
2. Device proliferation continues; tablets, e-book readers, etc.
3. Connected media and on-demand streaming video, IPTV, live event interaction
4. Social shopping: grouppurchasing, commenting, recommendation, LBS
5. Sentiment engines (ex: Pulse of the Nation, We Feel Fine) are ripe for being applied much more broadly to other keyword domains; sentiment prediction
6. Big data era explosion: machine learning, cloud computing, clusters, supercomputing
7. Labor-as-a-service: microlabor, on-demand labor, global task fulfillment
8. Quantified self tracking gadgets and apps (ex: WiThings scale, myZeo, BodyMetRx, medication reminder, nutrition intake, workout coordination, DIYgenomics, etc.)
9. Personal manufacturing, digital fabrication, 3D printing ("atoms are the new bits"); slow but important niche growth
10. Real-time economics: blippy, crowdsourced forecasting, stock market prediction
(Review predictions for 2010)
Posted by LaBlogga at 7:20 AM View Comments
Labels: 2011, app, blippy, computing, connected media, device, LBS, microlabor, mobile, prediction, sentiment engine, sentiment prediction, social shopping, supercomputing, technology, trends
Some of the freshest ideas in 2009 were botnet futures (Daemon, Daniel Suarez), a variety of neuro scanning applications (The Neuro Revolution, Zack Lynch), a systems approach to Earth (Whole Earth Discipline, Stewart Brand), accelerating economic development through charter cities (Charter Cities, Paul Romer), automatic markets for fungible resource allocation (Broader Perspective, Melanie Swan), and the notion that the next-generation of technology needed to solve intractable problems could be non-human understandable and come from sampling the computational universe of all possible technologies (Conversation on the Singularity, Stephen Wolfram).
Heading into a brand new decade, there are several exciting technology areas to watch. Many are on exponential improvement curves, although from any viewpoint on an exponential curve, things may look flat. Most of this blog’s big predictions for 2009 came true. Here’s what could happen in the next year or so:
1. Closer to $100 whole human genome
Third-generation DNA sequencer Pacific Biosciences estimates that they are still on track for a late 2010 release of single-molecule real-time sequencing technology that could eventually lead to less than $100 whole human genome sequencing.
2. Mobile continues to be the platform
There will likely be a greater launch and adoption of addictive location-based services (LBS) like FourSquare, Gowalla and Loopt, together with social networking, gaming, and video applications for the mobile platform. Continued trajectory of smartphone purchases (one in four in the U.S.). iPhone and Android app downloads double again. Gaming expands on mobiles and on the console platform with Avatar and maybe other 3-D console games. Internet-delivered content continues across all platforms.
3. 22nm computing node confirmed for 2011
Intel possibly confirming and providing more details about the 22nm Ivy Bridge chip planned for commercial release the second half of 2011. The September 2010 Intel Developer’s Forum may feature other interesting tidbits regarding the plans for 3-D architectures and programmable matter that could keep computing on Moore’s Law curves.
4. Supercomputers reach 15% human capacity
Supercomputing capacity doublings have been occurring each few years and could likely continue. As of November 2009, the world’s fastest supercomputer was the Cray Jaguar, running at 1.8 petaflops (1.8 x 1015 flops), approximately 10% of the estimated compute capacity of a human.
5. Confirmation of synthetic biology fuel launch for 2011
Pilot plants are running and the commercial launch of the first killer app of synthetic biology, synthetic fuel, could be confirmed for 2011. Sapphire Energy and Synthetic Genomics are generating petroleum from algal fuel; LS9, petroleum from microbes; Amyris Biotechnologies, ethanol, and Gevo, biobutenol.
6. Smart grid and smart meter deployment
In energy, more utilities moving to deploy internal smartgrid network management infrastructure and starting to replace consumer premises equipment (CPE) with advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) for automated utility reading and customer data access. Dozens of efforts are underway in the U.S. (Figure 1).
Posted by LaBlogga at 10:01 AM View Comments
Labels: 2010, botnet, computing, Genomics, predictions, supercomputing, technology, trends