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Session 16 Emerging Technologies: 15.561 Information Technology Essentials

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
18 views

Session 16 Emerging Technologies: 15.561 Information Technology Essentials

Uploaded by

Aisha Mughal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 15

15.

561
Information Technology Essentials

Session 16
Emerging Technologies

Copyright © 2005 Thomas Malone


Technology futures

• Communications

• Input/Output

• Computing
Communications

• Bandwidth will get much, much cheaper and more


available.
– More people will have more decision-making power in
organizations.
– Will videoconferencing be as good as being there?

• Wireless will be increasingly important.

• There will never be enough bandwidth.


– ...or will there?
Input / Output

• Human interfaces will improve, but less rapidly than some


expect.
– Speech
– Written natural language
– Tangible interfaces
– Electronic paper
– Neural interfaces

• Computers will be more capable of acting in the physical world.


– Vision
– Robotics / Motion
– Desktop fabs
– RFID
Computing

• Computers will be much, much faster and cheaper.


– Limits to current technologies?

» Quantum computing

» Nanotechnology

» DNA computing/ biological computing

• Computers will be everywhere.


– Ubiquitous computing
– Information appliances
– Wearables

• Computers will be smarter.


– Limits to artificial intelligence?
Kurzweil’s predictions - 2009

• $1K computer does 1 trillion calculations / second

• Computers embedded in clothes and jewelry.

• Most routine business transactions involve a human


and a virtual personality

• Translating telephones are common

• Human musicians routinely jam with cybernetic


musicians.
Kurzweil’s predictions - 2019

• $1K computer has approximately the computational


capacity of a human brain.

• Computers are invisible and embedded everywhere.

• 3D virtual reality displays in glasses are primary way


of communicating with people and accessing
computer-generated information.

• All-encompassing virtual environments allow


virtually any kind of interaction over any distance.

• Virtual personalities (e.g., teachers, lovers) are


common.
Kurzweil’s predictions - 2029

• $1K computer has approximately the computational


capacity of 1000 human brains.

• Neural interfaces to computers have been perfected,


and computational augmentation of human brains is
available.

• Computers have read all available human literature.

• There is growing discussion about the legal rights of


computers.
Kurzweil’s predictions - 2099

• The number of software-based humans vastly exceeds


the number of those using carbon-based neurons.

• Humans who do not use the enormous computational


augmentations available cannot meaningfully
participate in dialog with those who do.

• Life expectancy is no longer a viable term in relation


to intelligent beings.
Questions

• What do you think will happen?

• What do you think should happen?

• How will these things affect business?


Course wrap-up
Course outline

• Technology
– Fundamentals (Little Man Computer, computer architecture)
– Networks
– Databases
– Web technologies
– Computer security / cryptography

• Applications of technology
– Software development
– Enterprise systems
– Under the hood of a commercial web site
– Systems that span enterprises
– Business Intelligence (data mining, data warehousing)
– Emerging technologies
Lessons

1. The details of hardware, software, and networks will change


every year, but the fundamental concepts illustrated by the
Little Man Computer will be important for a very long time.

2. The Internet, and everything built upon it, depends on


multiple layers of “protocols” with the packet-switched
Internet Protocol layer playing a key role.

3. Relational databases are the most common means of


organizing and storing large amounts of data in organizations
today. They can also be a powerful tool for data modeling and
analysis in consulting, investment banking, etc.
Lessons (cont.)

4. Software development is a key enabler or failure point in


many organizations. Managing it well usually requires
getting requirements feedback iteratively and adding
appropriately-skilled staff early.

5. As digital transactions become more common, every


manager (and citizen) should understand their security risks
and available countermeasures.

6. The original Web model focused on presenting static


information to human viewers. One of the most important
trends in Web technologies today is the "semantic Web“,
which explicitly codes information about meaning as well as
appearance. This will enable better searching, b2b
integration, software agent applications, etc.
A final lesson…

7. Every few years, computers will be able to support (or


automate) more of the activities that go on in businesses.
Therefore, some of the most important technology
opportunities won’t involve making new technologies, but in
figuring out new ways to use technologies. Finding (and
exploiting) the most promising of these new opportunities
can give you significant advantages.

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