Unabashedly optimistic, but a lot of this is likely - though probably closer to 
2040...



Eleven Reasons To Be Excited About The Future of Technology
https://medium.com/@cdixon/eleven-reasons-to-be-excited-about-the-future-of-technology-ef5f9b939cb2
(via Instapaper)

“The strongest force propelling human progress has been the swift advance and 
wide diffusion of technology.” — The Economist
In the year 1820, a person could expect to live less than 35 years, 94% of the 
global population lived in extreme poverty, and less that 20% of the population 
was literate. Today, human life expectancy is over 70 years, less that 10% of 
the global population lives in extreme poverty, and over 80% of people are 
literate. These improvements are due mainly to advances in technology, 
beginning in the industrial age and continuing today in the information age.

There are many exciting new technologies that will continue to transform the 
world and improve human welfare. Here are eleven of them.

1. Self-Driving Cars

Self-driving cars exist today that are safer than human-driven cars in most 
driving conditions. Over the next 3–5 years they‘ll get even safer, and will 
begin to go mainstream.


The World Health Organization estimates that 1.25 million people die from 
car-related injuries per year. Half of the deaths are pedestrians, bicyclists, 
and motorcyclists hit by cars. Cars are the leading cause of death for people 
ages 15–29 years old.


Just as cars reshaped the world in the 20th century, so will self-driving cars 
in the 21st century. In most cities, between 20–30% of usable space is taken up 
by parking spaces, and most cars are parked about 95% of the time. Self-driving 
cars will be in almost continuous use (most likely hailed from a smartphone 
app), thereby dramatically reducing the need for parking. Cars will communicate 
with one another to avoid accidents and traffic jams, and riders will be able 
to spend commuting time on other activities like work, education, and 
socializing.


Source: Tech Insider
2. Clean Energy

Attempts to fight climate change by reducing the demand for energy haven’t 
worked. Fortunately, scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs have been working 
hard on the supply side to make clean energy convenient and cost-effective.

Due to steady technological and manufacturing advances, the price of solar 
cells has dropped 99.5% since 1977. Solar will soon be more cost efficient than 
fossil fuels. The cost of wind energy has also dropped to an all-time low, and 
in the last decade represented about a third of newly installed US energy 
capacity.

Forward thinking organizations are taking advantage of this. For example, in 
India there is an initiative to convert airports to self-sustaining clean 
energy.


Airport in Kochi, India (source: Clean Technica)
Tesla is making high-performance, affordable electric cars, and installing 
electric charging stations worldwide.


Tesla Model 3 and US supercharger locations
There are hopeful signs that clean energy could soon be reaching a tipping 
point. For example, in Japan, there are now more electric charging stations 
than gas stations.


Source: The Guardian
And Germany produces so much renewable energy, it sometimes produces even more 
than it can use.


Source: Time Magazine
3. Virtual and Augmented Reality

Computer processors only recently became fast enough to power comfortable and 
convincing virtual and augmented reality experiences. Companies like Facebook, 
Google, Apple, and Microsoft are investing billions of dollars to make VR and 
AR more immersive, comfortable, and affordable.


Toybox demo from Oculus
People sometimes think VR and AR will be used only for gaming, but over time 
they will be used for all sorts of activities. For example, we’ll use them to 
manipulate 3-D objects:


Augmented reality computer interface (from Iron Man)
To meet with friends and colleagues from around the world:


Augmented reality teleconference (from The Kingsman)
And even for medical applications, like treating phobias or helping 
rehabilitate paralysis victims:


Source: New Scientist
VR and AR have been dreamed about by science fiction fans for decades. In the 
next few years, they’ll finally become a mainstream reality.

4. Drones and Flying Cars

“Roads? Where we’re going we don’t need… roads.” — Dr. Emmet Brown
GPS started out as a military technology but is now used to hail taxis, get 
mapping directions, and hunt Pokémon. Likewise, drones started out as a 
military technology, but are increasingly being used for a wide range of 
consumer and commercial applications.

For example, drones are being used to inspect critical infrastructure like 
bridges and power lines, to survey areas struck by natural disasters, and many 
other creative uses like fighting animal poaching.


Source: NBC News
Amazon and Google are building drones to deliver household items.


Amazon delivery drone
The startup Zipline uses drones to deliver medical supplies to remote villages 
that can’t be accessed by roads.


Source: The Verge
There is also a new wave of startups working on flying cars (including two 
funded by the cofounder of Google, Larry Page).


The Terrafugia TF-X flying car (source)
Flying cars use the same advanced technology used in drones but are large 
enough to carry people. Due to advances in materials, batteries, and software, 
flying cars will be significantly more affordable and convenient than today’s 
planes and helicopters.

5. Artificial Intelligence


‘’It may be a hundred years before a computer beats humans at Go — maybe even 
longer.” — New York Times, 1997
“Master of Go Board Game Is Walloped by Google Computer Program” — New York 
Times, 2016
Artificial intelligence has made rapid advances in the last decade, due to new 
algorithms and massive increases in data collection and computing power.

AI can be applied to almost any field. For example, in photography an AI 
technique called artistic style transfer transforms photographs into the style 
of a given painter:


Source
Google built an AI system that controls its datacenter power systems, saving 
hundreds of millions of dollars in energy costs.


Source: Bloomberg
The broad promise of AI is to liberate people from repetitive mental tasks the 
same way the industrial revolution liberated people from repetitive physical 
tasks.

“If AI can help humans become better chess players, it stands to reason that it 
can help us become better pilots, better doctors, better judges, better 
teachers.” — Kevin Kelly
Some people worry that AI will destroy jobs. History has shown that while new 
technology does indeed eliminate jobs, it also creates new and better jobs to 
replace them. For example, with advent of the personal computer, the number of 
typographer jobs dropped, but the increase in graphic designer jobs more than 
made up for it.


Source: Harvard Business Review
It is much easier to imagine jobs that will go away than new jobs that will be 
created. Today millions of people work as app developers, ride-sharing drivers, 
drone operators, and social media marketers— jobs that didn’t exist and would 
have been difficult to even imagine ten years ago.

6. Pocket Supercomputers for Everyone


By 2020, 80% of adults on earth an internet-connected smartphone. An iPhone 6 
has about 2 billion transistors, roughly 625 times more transistors than a 1995 
Intel Pentium computer. Today’s smartphones are what used to be considered 
supercomputers.


Visitors to the pope (source: Business Insider)
Internet-connected smartphones give ordinary people abilities that, just a 
short time ago, were only available to an elite few:

“Right now, a Masai warrior on a mobile phone in the middle of Kenya has better 
mobile communications than the president did 25 years ago. If he’s on a smart 
phone using Google, he has access to more information than the U.S. president 
did just 15 years ago.” — Peter Diamandis
7. Cryptocurrencies and Blockchains

“If you asked people in 1989 what they needed to make their life better, it was 
unlikely that they would have said a decentralized network of information nodes 
that are linked using hypertext.” — Farmer & Farmer
Protocols are the plumbing of the internet. Most of the protocols we use today 
were developed decades ago by academia and government. Since then, protocol 
development mostly stopped as energy shifted to developing proprietary systems 
like social networks and messaging apps.

Cryptocurrency and blockchain technologies are changing this by providing a new 
business model for internet protocols. This year alone, hundreds of millions of 
dollars were raised for a broad range of innovative blockchain-based protocols.

Protocols based on blockchains also have capabilities that previous protocols 
didn’t. For example, Ethereum is a new blockchain-based protocol that can be 
used to create smart contracts and trusted databases that are immune to 
corruption and censorship.

8. High-Quality Online Education

While college tuition skyrockets, anyone with a smartphone can study almost any 
topic online, accessing educational content that is mostly free and 
increasingly high-quality.

Encyclopedia Britannica used to cost $1,400. Now anyone with a smartphone can 
instantly access Wikipedia. You used to have to go to school or buy programming 
books to learn computer programming. Now you can learn from a community of over 
40 million programmers at Stack Overflow. YouTube has millions of hours of free 
tutorials and lectures, many of which are produced by top professors and 
universities.


UC Berkeley Physics on Youtube
The quality of online education is getting better all the time. For the last 15 
years, MIT has been recording lectures and compiling materials that cover over 
2000 courses.

“The idea is simple: to publish all of our course materials online and make 
them widely available to everyone.” — Dick K.P. Yue, Professor, MIT School of 
Engineering
As perhaps the greatest research university in the world, MIT has always been 
ahead of the trends. Over the next decade, expect many other schools to follow 
MIT’s lead.


Source: Futurism
9. Better Food through Science


Source: National Geographic
Earth is running out of farmable land and fresh water. This is partly because 
our food production systems are incredibly inefficient. It takes an astounding 
1799 gallons of water to produce 1 pound of beef.

Fortunately, a variety of new technologies are being developed to improve our 
food system.

For example, entrepreneurs are developing new food products that are tasty and 
nutritious substitutes for traditional foods but far more environmentally 
friendly. The startup Impossible Foods invented meat products that look and 
taste like the real thing but are actually made of plants.


Impossible Food’s plant-based burger (source: Tech Insider)
Their burger uses 95% less land, 74% less water, and produces 87% less 
greenhouse gas emissions than traditional burgers. Other startups are creating 
plant-based replacements for milk, eggs, and other common foods. Soylent is a 
healthy, inexpensive meal replacement that uses advanced engineered ingredients 
that are much friendlier to the environment than traditional ingredients.

Some of these products are developed using genetic modification, a powerful 
scientific technique that has been widely mischaracterized as dangerous. 
According to a study by the Pew Organization, 88% of scientists think 
genetically modified foods are safe.

Another exciting development in food production is automated indoor farming. 
Due to advances in solar energy, sensors, lighting, robotics, and artificial 
intelligence, indoor farms have become viable alternatives to traditional 
outdoor farms.


Aerofarms indoor farm (Source: New York Times)
Compared to traditional farms, automated indoor farms use roughly 10 times less 
water and land. Crops are harvested many more times per year, there is no 
dependency on weather, and no need to use pesticides.

10. Computerized Medicine

Until recently, computers have only been at the periphery of medicine, used 
primarily for research and record keeping. Today, the combination of computer 
science and medicine is leading to a variety of breakthroughs.


For example, just fifteen years ago, it cost $3B to sequence a human genome. 
Today, the cost is about a thousand dollars and continues to drop. Genetic 
sequencing will soon be a routine part of medicine.

Genetic sequencing generates massive amounts of data that can be analyzed using 
powerful data analysis software. One application is analyzing blood samples for 
early detection of cancer. Further genetic analysis can help determine the best 
course of treatment.

Another application of computers to medicine is in prosthetic limbs. Here a 
young girl is using prosthetic hands she controls using her upper-arm muscles:


Soon we’ll have the technology to control prothetic limbs with just our 
thoughts using brain-to-machine interfaces.

Computers are also becoming increasingly effective at diagnosing diseases. An 
artificial intelligence system recently diagnosed a rare disease that human 
doctors failed to diagnose by finding hidden patterns in 20 million cancer 
records.


Source: International Business Times
11. A New Space Age

Since the beginning of the space age in the 1950s, the vast majority of space 
funding has come from governments. But that funding has been in decline: for 
example, NASA’s budget dropped from about 4.5% of the federal budget in the 
1960s to about 0.5% of the federal budget today.


Source: Fortune
The good news is that private space companies have started filling the void. 
These companies provide a wide range of products and services, including rocket 
launches, scientific research, communications and imaging satellites, and 
emerging speculative business models like asteroid mining.

The most famous private space company is Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which successfully 
sent rockets into space that can return home to be reused.


SpaceX Falcon 9 landing on drone ship
Perhaps the most intriguing private space company is Planetary Resources, which 
is trying to pioneer a new industry: mining minerals from asteroids.


Asteroid mining
If successful, asteroid mining could lead to a new gold rush in outer space. 
Like previous gold rushes, this could lead to speculative excess, but also 
dramatically increased funding for new technologies and infrastructure.

These are just a few of the amazing technologies we’ll see developed in the 
coming decades. 2016 is just the beginning of a new age of wonders. As futurist 
Kevin Kelly says:

If we could climb into a time machine, journey 30 years into the future, and 
from that vantage look back to today, we’d realize that most of the greatest 
products running the lives of citizens in 2050 were not invented until after 
2016. People in the future will look at their holodecks and wearable virtual 
reality contact lenses and downloadable avatars and AI interfaces and say, “Oh, 
you didn’t really have the internet” — or whatever they’ll call it — “back 
then.”
So, the truth: Right now, today, in 2016 is the best time to start up. There 
has never been a better day in the whole history of the world to invent 
something. There has never been a better time with more opportunities, more 
openings, lower barriers, higher benefit/ risk ratios, better returns, greater 
upside than now. Right now, this minute. This is the moment that folks in the 
future will look back at and say, “Oh, to have been alive and well back then!”


Sent from my iPhone

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