Kevin Lepton

Google X Secret Lab Predicts the Future of Tech

 Future Technology  Comments Off on Google X Secret Lab Predicts the Future of Tech
Nov 172011
 

Some people may think of Google X as the search bar that the Internet giant released on March 15, 2005and then rescinded a day later. And this was perhaps (or not) the first iteration of what has grown into a secret lab that is the modern day version of what Batman or perhaps even Maxwell Smart had at his disposal.

Forget the Smart Phone, Smart Car or Smart Home for a minute and think Smart Lab. According to the New York Times, “In a top-secret lab in an undisclosed Bay Area location where robots run free, the future is being imagined. It’s a place where your refrigerator could be connected to the Internet, so it could order groceries when they ran low. Your dinner plate could post to a social network what you’re eating. Your robot could go to the office while you stay home in your pajamas. And you could, perhaps, take an elevator to outer space.”

If you think this is far-fetched consider that earlier this year that Google came out with its own driverless car. The search giant is also the sponsor of the Google Lunar X-prize. Top scientists from Stanford and MIT are working on robotics, artificial intelligence and many other top secret projects that Google hopes will one day in the future pay off.

But, shareholders don’t like speculation and uncertainty. So Larry and Sergey are downplaying the secret lab by saying that this is only a very smart part of their business and that they spend most of their resources on their core search business. Exactly as one would expect. Wink, wink, nod, nod.

Oct 242011
 

Nick Bilton lives in the future and happens to be the lead writer and technology reporter for the New York Times Bits Blog. Mr. Bilton also used to work in the New York Times R&D lab figuring out new ways to enhance the newspaper’s online experience.

Bilton was criticized for an interview he gave with Wired.com online magazine saying that he had cancelled his subscription to the New York Times print newspaper, but instead got his news online (including the NYT).

The book, I Live in the Future and Here’s How It Works takes the reader through the beginnings of the Internet for the common user with adult entertainment leading the charge into this new media. Bilton talks also about how music and movies have changed in a digital world, how people’s brains have changed with the advent of digital information overload from gaming, cell phones, texting, social media, email, reading online, videos online, news and other stimulus that personalizes our worlds in a way never before possible.

Mr. Bilton also speaks about winners and losers in technology and how the companies that stick around will be the one’s creating the most useful digital tools and experiences. He also makes a few future predictions using the movie “Minority Report” starring Tom Cruise- as a possible glimpse into the future of interactive technology.

This future not only includes how retailers will use in-depth information about us to sell more products and services to us, but also one-device-fits-all technology for reading, cell phone, GPS, social media, entertainment and other digitally interactive media.

Bilton predicts that over the next 5 years mobile phone development will outpace the development of laptop or desktop computers. He believes that the interactivity among these devices and TV will also create a virtual world that no one could have predicted 5 years ago.

Mr. Bilton, makes many excellent points and predictions. I don’t want to be a spoiler and recount everything in this review. As an old newspaper guy who has transitioned into the future world myself, I give this book two very high digital thumbs up. Or in other online vernacular, I LIKE.

The Kindle edition of this book is offered at Amazon (without any affiliate links – I don’t make a dime off your purchase).

Sep 222011
 

The website Mashable.com has a must read article called, “8 Current Technologies That Will Shape Our Future”. Some of the topics covered include personal mobile computers (PMC) which is the future generation of smart phones, home wireless hotspots to augment 4G cell phone networks, cloud computing goes mobile, information glasses meet PMC’s, social networking will be more integrated with the business world where you’ll be able to pre-meet people before the actual business meeting, custom 3D CAD software that lets consumers design personalized products and autonomous cars with driver control as an option.

Besides the photos and videos of current products that may turn into future products and trends, what I like is the mental leap the writer Rick Chin takes in this article. The technological assumptions are perfectly plausible and logical.

Another aspect that I give a thumbs-up to in this article and believe myself to be true is that in the future we will be more mobile than ever before (if we choose to be). We will have access to people, information, applications no matter where we are physically located at a given moment in time. This is both intriguing now and will be empowering then.