|
IBM Scientists: How life is different in tech world 2050 - TechAmok
IBM Scientists: How life is different in tech world 2050 - [technology] 04:54 AM EDT - May,03 2008 - post a comment At a kickoff event for collaboration between IBM and the University of
Southern California to explore the intersection of creative arts and science and
technology,
five IBM scientists offered their best guesses on how life would be different in
2050. In keeping with the Hollywood theme, the moderator of the panel, Bill
Pulleyblank, noted that the Mini Cooper automobile has more computing power than
Apollo 13--the space capsule that "almost got Tom Hanks killed," he said,
referring to the 1995 movie of that name. Pulleybank led the development of
IBM's Blue Gene systems, which account for 4 of the world's top 10 most powerful
supercomputers. By 2050, he predicted, the capabilities housed in those giant
supercomputers will be available in the palm of your hand. Here's a taster:
Harnessing photosynthesis - Sharon Nunes, who leads IBM's green-research
initiatives, launched IBM's Computational Biology Center. She predicted that by
2050, clean water and energy would be available to the entire planet. Nunes is
looking to synthetic biology and systems biology to help solve the critical
problems the planet faces. "We have to try to learn from nature and the 4-plus
billion years of knowledge," she said. She gave an example of applying an
understanding of the chemical and biological processes of photosynthesis to
building solar cells and converting algae into environmentally friendly fuels.
"We have to learn how to scale (these developments) and make them affordable,"
she said.
Life extension and parallel human processing - Don Eigler was the IBM
scientist who, in 1989, took a small number of xenon atoms and spelled out "IBM"
using a liquid helium temperature-scanning tunneling microscope that he had
constructed. In his 2050 predictions, Eigler focused on embedded and nanoscale
technologies that could lead to life extension. "In the labs today, people are
discovering how to fabricate new nanometer-scale structures for regenerative
medicine," he said. Eigler believes that this technology could blossom over the
next 10 to 15 years and that it eventually will result in pharmacies built into
the human body that automatically administer medicines based on readings from
internal sensors. He also discussed parallel human processing. The idea is that
a person could think about two problems at once consciously. This capability
could be realized through training or symbiant embedded devices. "This kind of
human augmentation raises some immediate concerns, but it is a trend we are
living with," Eigler said, pointing to pacemakers, cochlear implants, and even
Bluetooth ear pieces. "It's a personal responsibility to use technology wisely.
The challenge comes when we, as a society, struggle with what technology to
outlaw or keep." Eigler also said that by 2050, we would have a laptop with
100,000 times more horsepower than the state-of-the-art machine today. "What
would you do with it?" he asked the audience, and he answered his own question.
"We'll find new ways to use the computer. I just can't think of that today."
Personal genomes and regenerative medicine - Ajay Royyuru leads the
Computational Biology Center at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center,
researching topics such as bioinformatics, functional genomics, and systems
biology. He predicted that before 2050, everyone will have personal genome. "We
will figure out everything that can be told from the genome, but still struggle
with the basis of disease," he said. People will have access to a steady stream
of genetic data, and they will use that information to make choices of what to
eat, for example. "We will teach ourselves when not to touch the 'trigger,'" he
said. "Today, we don't know how the machinery works. The genome is a parts list.
We will get to a point where we can re-create things so we understand how it
works or fails." The result will be a personalized, predictive model of
behaviors based on an individual's genome. Stem cells and synthetic biology
(design and fabrication of biological components) will cure diseases in specific
places rather than tolerate the absence of an organ or other tissue, Royyuru
predicted.
Collective intelligence - Jeff Jonas, an IBM Distinguished Engineer, is
chief scientist of the Entity Analytic Solutions Software Group. He works on
projects such as data correlation, using irreversible cryptographic hashes.
Jonas predicted that by 2050, a 14-year-old will make $10 billion working in his
bedroom in a day. It took Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg three years to be worth $1
billion. More pertinent to his research, Jonas said "collective intelligence
will be in the cloud and available to all." He described collective intelligence
as lots of piles of data, much gleaned from a ubiquity of sensors that have to
be stitched together and put in context. In 2050, collective intelligence is
your personal digital agent, locating and telling you what you need, he said.
Jonas gave the following example of this advanced collective intelligence. There
is a pile of data about the current status of an individual. There are also
piles about the current migratory status of birds and the weather. The three
piles are correlated, resulting in the individual being told to "jump to the
right" to avoid being hit by a descending pile of bird excrement. "Collective
intelligence is great when it serves you and your doctor, but you hate it when
the police are looking at you," Jonas said. Jonas also expects that people will
be spending more time in virtual worlds in 2050. "It's a way to escape the
trails you create by popping into an avatar."
|
|
Short overview of recent news articles |
How to Enter BIOS from Windows Using CMD | Easiest Method (No Key (Aug,10 2025 ) Battlefield 6 Open Beta Benchmark: 9800X3D vs. 9700X vs. 265K (Aug,09 2025 ) WhatsApp finally adds a useful photo feature for Android users (Aug,09 2025 ) OpenAI announces ChatGPT changes following user feedback (Aug,09 2025 ) Corsair MAKR75 Review - Ultimate DIY Keyboard Kit (Aug,06 2025 ) 1176 Hardware vs Plugin - Is There Really a Difference? (Aug,06 2025 ) Do this NOW: Use Disposable Windows for Maximum Security! (Aug,06 2025 ) CPU/GPU Scaling: Ryzen 7 5800X3D (RTX 5090, 5080, RX 9070 & 9060 XT) (Aug,06 2025 ) XRP To $1000 By 2030... Know What You Hold BUT SELL YOUR XRP HERE: ? (Aug,05 2025 ) NURBURGRING HEAVY RAINSTORM! MANY Fails, Spins & Slippery Action! (Aug,03 2025 ) 2025 Bentley Continental GTC SPEED // REVIEW on AUTOBAHN (Aug,03 2025 ) F1: Qualifying Highlights | 2025 Hungarian Grand Prix (Aug,03 2025 ) TikTok Adds Community Notes (Aug,03 2025 ) Apple Responds to US Antitrust Lawsuit (Aug,03 2025 ) Nvidia Denies Backdoor, but I thought that's what their logo was (Aug,03 2025 ) Threadripper 64 Core MONSTER - Holy S#!T! (Jul,31 2025 ) HW News - Gigabyte's Motherboard Mess, Linux Gains Market Share, (Jul,28 2025 ) Samsung Z Fold 7 Durability Test - The End is Near (Jul,27 2025 ) Silent Night, Deadly Night - Exclusive Trailer (Jul,27 2025 ) I Bought a Giant Video Wall on Craigslist! (Jul,27 2025 ) My Turn: Lamborghini Revuelto // Nurburgring (Jul,26 2025 ) F1: Qualifying Highlights | 2025 Belgian Grand Prix (Jul,26 2025 ) F1: Sprint Qualifying Highlights | 2025 Belgian Grand Prix (Jul,26 2025 ) I am biased against this laptop - Razer Blade 18 (Jul,26 2025 ) PRISONER OF WAR - Official Trailer | Starring Scott Adkins | In (Jul,26 2025 ) Battlefield 6 reveal trailer (Jul,24 2025 ) Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 - Two Week Review (Jul,22 2025 ) Killer 4K 240Hz QD-OLED for just £750: MSI MPG 272URX (Jul,21 2025 ) LAMBORGHINI URUS *STAGE 1* // REVIEW on AUTOBAHN (Jul,20 2025 ) THE BEST VW GOLF GTI I've Driven! Proper ClubSport (Jul,20 2025 ) Intel Core Ultra 9 275HX vs AMD Ryzen 9 9955HX - Which CPU is Best? (Jul,19 2025 ) LAMBORGHINI REVUELTO V12 // 370KMH REVIEW on UNLIMITED AUTOBAHN! (Jul,18 2025 ) Mortal Kombat II - Official Trailer (Jul,18 2025 ) Stranger Things 5 - Official Teaser (Jul,17 2025 ) Google Is Selling Fake Products - WAN Show July 11, 2025 (Jul,14 2025 ) Hacked by playing Call of Duty WW2 on Gamepass? (Jul,12 2025 ) 2025 VW Golf GTE // TOP SPEED REVIEW on AUTOBAHN (Jul,12 2025 ) NEW Audi RS3 v cheapest used RS3: DRAG RACE (Jul,11 2025 ) A critical security vulnerability in Microsoft Remote Desktop Client (Jul,10 2025 ) Samsung Z Fold/Flip 7 Impressions: Major Upgrades! (Jul,10 2025 ) Gmail's latest feature helps you get rid of those pesky emails from (Jul,08 2025 ) I'm an idiot and still made top 5... here's how (Jul,06 2025 ) The Fantastic Four: First Steps - Official 'Lift Off' Teaser (Jul,05 2025 ) Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 - Hands on Look (Jul,04 2025 ) RTX 5070 Ti vs RTX 5080 - Is 5080 Gaming Laptop Worth More $$$? (Jul,04 2025 ) FIRST DRIVE: Praga Bohema - Crazy Hypercar Driven! (Jul,04 2025 ) Ballerina - Exclusive John Wick Deleted Scene (2025) Keanu Reeves, (Jul,03 2025 ) Call of Duty: WWII - Remote Code Execution Warning (PC Game Pass) (Jul,03 2025 ) 1014HP Lamborghini REVUELTO 369KMH TOP SPEED POV on AUTOBAHN (Jul,02 2025 ) Nvidia Drivers (V 576.80 vs V 576.88) - Test In 12 Games - RTX 4060 (Jul,01 2025 )
>> News Archive <<
| |
|