Kevin Lepton

Mar 272011
 

This week’s top 5 future technology stories feature a couple of articles about breakthrough medical technology, one breakthrough in computer technology, one about space tech, and a fifth story about a recent discovery that will bring down the price of hydrogen fuel cell cars of the future.

Some of the discoveries involve using GPS systems inside the human body to signal the exact location of cancer cells, combining neurons and computer wires, speeding up computers by replacing copper wires, NASA new mission that is not the moon and cheaper fuel cells for hydrogen cars.

Doctors Use New GPS System and Radiation to Zap Tumors

Like a car navigating a city street, a global positioning system guided a radiation beam directly to Gene Scallon’s prostate. Once there, radiation zapped the cancer cells into smithereens. And Scallon didn’t feel a thing … That’s important because breathing or coughing causes organs to move — and the prostate gland can move unpredictably on its own.

New Technology Mixes Neurons and Computer Wires

Graduate students at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, led by Minrui Yu and Yu Huang, have published an ACS Nano paper, “Semiconductor Nanomembrane Tubes: Three-Dimensional Confinement for Controlled Neurite Outgrowth,” in which they show that they have been able to successfully coax nerve cell tendrils to grow through tiny tubes made of the semi-conductor materials silicon and germanium.

Researchers Speed Up Computer Using Advanced Thermal Material

Scientists in GE’s Global Research Center have demonstrated an advanced thermal material system that could pave the way to faster computing and higher performing electronic systems. Leveraging technologies developed under GE’s Nanotechnology Advanced Technology Program, they have fabricated a prototype substrate that can cool electronic devices such as a laptop computer twice as well as copper.

NASA Plans Mission to Near Earth Asteroid

NASA’s current goal of sending astronauts on an asteroid-bound mission by 2025 is one of the core ideas in the space exploration vision laid out by President Barack Obama last year. It represents a major shift from NASA’s earlier plan, which was aimed at returning astronauts to the moon.

Platinum Less Fuel Cell Expected to Drive Down Costs

Catalysts made of carbon nanotubes dipped in a polymer solution equal the energy output and otherwise outperform platinum catalysts in fuel cells, a team of Case Western Reserve University engineers has found.

 

Face Transplants and Future Repercussions

 Future Medical Technology  Comments Off on Face Transplants and Future Repercussions
Mar 232011
 

Last week the first full face transplant in the U. S. occurred at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Once again, science fiction has become science fact, due to the miracles of modern medicine. But, besides the awesomeness of this successful experiment that can only be compared to the one time I dreamed about the bipolar nature of ninja zombies, one other thing struck me.

This face transplant (and four future face transplants) was funded by no other than the U. S. Department of Defense. Now, at first glance this sounds fine if you think that soldiers on the battlefield who have been blown up may one day come home to a fresh face and a new life.

Future Face Transplants

Future face transplants will be based upon current, emerging technology.

But, the conspiracy theorist in me says different. Why would first line soldiers who have trouble getting a new foot from the VA be getting a new million dollar face? My vivid imagination says that this future medical  technology may be reserved for high level spies and even heads of state in hiding.

According to The Beatles, Eleanor Rigby, “Waits at the window, wearing a face that she keeps in a jar by the door. Who is it for?” This may just be a metaphor, but we all know how medical science can be hijacked and used for less than puritanical purposes. LSD experiments on soldiers, anyone? Who is that for?

Google recently filed a facial recognition patent so that basically a person can take your picture in public, then make the link to your Facebook profile and find out all sorts of details about you. So much for being anonymous to strangers in public.

Anonymity is important to many people. This is what has driven the Internet for year and why uses of avatars and personas are so prevalent. Future face transplants may fulfill this need for anonymity.

But, this is not what I personally fear. What I fear is the future butt recognition software that is now being developed in the deep recesses of the Microsoft labs. You see once a year I like to hop on my motorcycle and drive out the Burning Man wearing my ass-less chaps. What I seek is a certain amount of anonymity and no tell-tail connections to my Facebook page.

And also, the next time I happen to be sitting on the office photocopy machine making copies of my butt I don’t want to be recognized by some crack head with a cell phone. Is this too much to ask?

Mar 172011
 

So, is that supposed to be a future generation iPad in the Movie Avatar? I’ve got the movie Avatar and fall asleep to it practically every night (don’t ask me why I’ve fallen into this habit).

And each night when I see the movie, I notice Sigourney Weaver putting Jake Sully into the capsule for his first outing as an Avatar. Afterwards Weaver’s cohort Dr. Patel says, “That’s a gorgeous brain. Nice activity,” as he is viewing what could be an X generation Apple iPad.

Of course by the time the movie is supposed to take place in 2154 all computers could be touchscreen transparent like this one showing in-depth brain activity. This got me to thinking though if future iPads will evolve for different professions such as a specialty model for the medical field, particularly those who do future brain scans and what we today will call X-rays, CAT scans, PET scans and MRIs?

And if this were the case wouldn’t be ironic if this kind of medical iPad was created, but not in time to save Steve Jobs’ life? Then again, this kind of future medical technology would, I think save thousands if not millions of other people’s lives.

The future iPad, (that is near future), is sure to amaze and thrill us. But what if the power of the IBM Watson and the iPad joined forces? This is a scenario that I hope I stay alive long enough to see.

Or perhaps I could even build and app for that. In fact, it would be a rap app for that. Yo yo dog. Yo yo cat. Yo Yo Ma. Well, enough of that crap. 🙁