On 15/11/22 15:18, Roger Clarke wrote:
> ... research firm Gartner expects that by 2026, 25% of people will spend at 
> least one hour a day in a metaverse for work, shopping, education, social 
> media and/or entertainment.
I'm sure it's bound to be _at least_ an hour a day if the metaverse has "AI".

However Gartner's reported prediction sounds to me as though they're talking it 
all up; how on earth can they make such a precise claim when the whole concept 
has no significant user base yet?  Unfortunately that quote comes from an ACS 
article written by "Marty Resnick, VP analyst at Gartner" who attempts to 
describe a "metaverse" this way:
> What is a metaverse?
>
> Technically, a metaverse is a collective virtual shared space, created by the 
> convergence of virtually enhanced physical and digital reality.
>
> For simplicity’s sake, think of a metaverse as the next iteration of the 
> internet, which started as individual bulletin boards and independent online 
> destinations.
>
> Eventually these destinations became sites on a virtual shared space — 
> similar to how a metaverse will develop.
>
> A metaverse is not device-independent, nor owned by a single vendor.
>
> It is an independent virtual economy, enabled by digital currencies and 
> non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
>
> As a combinatorial innovation, metaverses require multiple technologies and 
> trends to function.
>
> Contributing trends include virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), 
> flexible work styles, head-mounted displays (HMDs), an AR cloud, the Internet 
> of Things (IoT), 5G, artificial intelligence (AI) and spatial computing.

So according to Gartner (and presumably the ACS) 25% of "people" will have have 
access to "virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), flexible work styles, 
head-mounted displays (HMDs), an AR cloud, the Internet of Things (IoT), 5G, 
artificial intelligence (AI) and spatial computing" from their modest house in 
the burbs?

By 2026 I predict "people" will be fully occupied dealing with the results of 
greenhouse warming of the planet, for one thing.  It's worth checking out the 
Geoscience Australia interactive inundation map (if it still exists) to check 
out the effects of sea-level rise.

Surely the ACS has something more useful to do?

_David Lochrin_

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