Showing posts with label Future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Future. Show all posts

4.10.08

World Tech Update



Seen on: YouTube
News from CEATEC 2008 and reports on technology being displayed at the show.

8.5.08

So, how is life in 2020?



Seen on: YouTube
Europe will see a Silver Century and 3 boosters for new wealth and innovation: the transparent, the intelligent and the virtual world. These boosters will lead us into a new Golden Century — provided we grab the opportunities.

18.2.08

The Future of Man

Following the predictions of Ray-Kurzweil is always interesting. This is the man who correctly forecast in the late 1980s that communications technologies such as mobile phones would greatly undermine the grip of authoritarian governments.

His other forecasts over the past few decades have included the reliance by advanced military powers on "intelligent" weaponry, and the pooling of home computers to perform super-computing tasks, as seen with the SETI@home project.

He also predicted that computers would beat the best human players at chess, something that was achieved in 1997 by IBM's Deep Blue.


Kurzweil, an American inventor who holds patents for a wide range of appliances including speech recognition and optical character recognition software, certainly makes a lot of predictions about the future and you could argue that, like a keen gambler, if you place enough bets you'll always end up with some stand-out winners.

But there's one prediction, above all others, is certainly one to watch.

"We're already a human machine civilisation; we use our technology to expand our physical and mental horizons and this will be a further extension of that.

" Eventually, he added, man and machine will merge: "We'll have intelligent nanobots go into our brains through the capillaries and interact directly with our biological neurons.

Via Guardian Unlimited

A Passionate Life

Ben-Dunlap tells the story of Sandor-Teszler, a man he met at Wofford College.

In telling Teszler's dramatic life story, which arcs from the Holocaust to the American Deep South of the 1950s, Dunlap shares some deep and, ultimately, moving lessons about justice -- and the power of lifelong learning.