This fascinating article just showed up in my email without attribution. Scary? Exciting? A bit of each? Although many others are taking credit for it, looks like Udo Gollub is the author, but not sure. Here is a Link. https://www.facebook.com/udo.gollub/posts/10207978845381135
Here is a bit more about Udo Gollub and a reprint of this article: http://thecoverage.my/lifestyle/will-amazed-guy-speaks-changing-times-technology-society/
Thanks, okcforgottenman for trying to run down the author for me. This should prompt some interesting discussion in comments, I hope! Thanks, Marilyn, for starting the ball rolling.
The Future Is Here!
In 1998, Kodak had 170,000 employees and sold 85% of all photo paper worldwide. Within just a few years, their business model disappeared and they went bankrupt.What happened to Kodak will happen in a lot of industries in the next 10 year – and most people don’t see it coming. Did you think in 1998 that 3 years later you would never take pictures on paper film again?Yet digital cameras were invented in 1975. The first ones only had 10,000 pixels, but followed Moore’s law. So as with all exponential technologies, it was a disappointment for a long time, before it became way superior and got mainstream in only a few short years. It will now happen with Artificial Intelligence, health, autonomous and electric cars, education, 3D printing, agriculture and jobs. Welcome to the 4th Industrial Revolution. Welcome to the Exponential Age.Software will disrupt most traditional industries in the next 5-10 years.Uber is just a software tool, they don’t own any cars, and are now the biggest taxi company in the world. Airbnb is now the biggest hotel company in the world, although they don’t own any properties.Artificial Intelligence:Computers become exponentially better in understanding the world. This year, a computer beat the best Go player in the world, 10 years earlier than expected. In the US, young lawyers already don’t get jobs. Because of IBM Watson, you can get legal advice (so far for more or less basic stuff) within seconds, with 90% accuracy compared with 70% accuracy when done by humans. So if you study law, stop immediately. There will be 90% less lawyers in the future, only specialists will remain. Watson already helps nurses diagnosing cancer, 4 time more accurate than human nurses. Facebook now has a pattern recognition software that can recognize faces better than humans. In 2030, computers will become more intelligent than humans.Autonomous cars: In 2018 the first self driving cars will appear for the public. Around 2020, the complete industry will start to be disrupted. You don’t want to own a car anymore. You will call a car with your phone, it will show up at your location and drive you to your destination. You will not need to park it, you only pay for the driven distance and can be productive while driving. Our kids will never get a driver’s licence and will never own a car. It will change the cities, because we will need 90-95% less cars for that. We can transform former parking space into parks. 1.2 million people die each year in car accidents worldwide. We now have one accident every 100,000 km, with autonomous driving that will drop to one accident in 10 million km. That will save a million lives each year.Most car companies might become bankrupt. Traditional car companies try the evolutionary approach and just build a better car, while tech companies (Tesla, Apple, Google) will do the revolutionary approach and build a computer on wheels. I spoke to a lot of engineers from Volkswagen and Audi; they are completely terrified of Tesla.Insurance companies will have massive trouble because without accidents, the insurance will become 100x cheaper. Their car insurance business model will disappear.Real estate will change. Because if you can work while you commute, people will move further away to live in a more beautiful neighborhood.Electric cars will become mainstream until 2020. Cities will be less noisy because all cars will run on electric. Electricity will become incredibly cheap and clean: Solar production has been on an exponential curve for 30 years, but you can only now see the impact. Last year, more solar energy was installed worldwide than fossil. The price for solar will drop so much that all coal companies will be out of business by 2025.With cheap electricity comes cheap and abundant water. Desalination now only needs 2kWh per cubic meter. We don’t have scarce water in most places, we only have scarce drinking water. Imagine what will be possible if anyone can have as much clean water as he wants, for nearly no cost.Health: The Tricorder X price will be announced this year. There will be companies who will build a medical device (called the “Tricorder” from Star Trek) that works with your phone, which takes your retina scan, your blood sample and you breath into it. It then analyses 54 biomarkers that will identify nearly any disease. It will be cheap, so in a few years everyone on this planet will have access to world class medicine, nearly for free.3D printing: The price of the cheapest 3D printer came down from $18,000 to $400 within 10 years. In the same time, it became 100 times faster. All major shoe companies started 3D printing shoes. Spare airplane parts are already 3D printed in remote airports. The space station now has a printer that eliminates the need for the large amount of spare parts they used to have in the past.At the end of this year, new smart phones will have 3D scanning possibilities. You can then 3D scan your feet and print your perfect shoe at home. In China, they already 3D printed a complete 6-storey office building. By 2027, 10% of everything that’s being produced will be 3D printed.Business opportunities: If you think of a niche you want to go in, ask yourself: “in the future, do you think we will have that?” and if the answer is yes, how can you make that happen sooner? If it doesn’t work with your phone, forget the idea. And any idea designed for success in the 20th century is doomed in to failure in the 21st century.Work: 70-80% of jobs will disappear in the next 20 years. There will be a lot of new jobs, but it is not clear if there will be enough new jobs in such a small time.Agriculture: There will be a $100 agricultural robot in the future. Farmers in 3rd world countries can then become managers of their field instead of working all days on their fields. Aeroponics will need much less water. The first Petri dish produced veal is now available and will be cheaper than cow produced veal in 2018. Right now, 30% of all agricultural surfaces is used for cows. Imagine if we don’t need that space anymore. There are several startups who will bring insect protein to the market shortly. It contains more protein than meat. It will be labeled as “alternative protein source” (because most people still reject the idea of eating insects).There is an app called “moodies” which can already tell in which mood you are. Until 2020 there will be apps that can tell by your facial expressions if you are lying. Imagine a political debate where it’s being displayed when they are telling the truth and when not.Bitcoin will become mainstream this year and might even become the default reserve currency.Longevity: Right now, the average life span increases by 3 months per year. Four years ago, the life span used to be 79 years, now it’s 80 years. The increase itself is increasing and by 2036, there will be more that one year increase per year. So we all might live for a long long time, probably way more than 100.Education: The cheapest smart phones are already at $10 in Africa and Asia. Until 2020, 70% of all humans will own a smart phone. That means, everyone has the same access to world class education. Every child can use Khan academy for everything a child learns at school in First World countries. We have already released software in Indonesia and will release it in Arabic, Suaheli and Chinese this Summer, because of the enormous potential. We will give the English app for free, so that children in Africa can become fluent in English within half a year.
Yes, a bit of each — scary and exciting.
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You know, I’ve read SO many of these articles predicting the end of … you name it. Things evolve and markets change, but they don’t just vanish without a trace. You can STILL buy new vinyl recordings AND turntables … despite their “death” decades ago. Economics not that simplistic. I hate doomcasters. They are the rumor mongers of the technical world. They score points by oversimplifying and omitting critical information … or lying. Their facts are not facts.
Kodak didn’t disappear. Yes, they filed chapter 11 and sold off many of their assets, but they still exist in a variety. See — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ for a an overview of what’s going on.
Film is still manufactured, as is photographic paper AND non-digital cameras. Government agencies use a lot of film and make a lot of prints. There will always be some form of prints because you can’t hang digital images on your wall. Unless you want to assume that art is going to vanish, I think prints are safe. Expensive, but safe. I have prints all over my house, on paper, canvas, and aluminum. The cheesy prints from the drug store are mostly gone, but art lives.
Bitcoin is used almost exclusively by criminals to launder money. It ain’t gonna replace ANYONE’s real money, not in this or the next lifetime.
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Costco will now “develop” digital prints on metal and wood!
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And you should see how stunning some of your pictures would be on a different medium. I have canvas prints and a few on aluminum. No wood, yet. We don’t have Costco around here, but the place I get my prints is online and they do everything. It’s just expensive. And I haven’t an inch of wall space that isn’t already occupied. If I ever own another house, I want more wall space to hang art!
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Doors! I have art hung on both sides of most of them.
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I don’t dare start printing up my photos..Had never even thought of it, actually.
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By Udo Gollub at Messe Berlin, Germany The Future Is Here!
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Thanks–okcforgottenman had provided his name earlier and I put it on the blog. Thanks so much for responding.
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Oh, and in America, you can’t even get two different hospitals to share records in one format that both understand. I think the tricorder is a very long way from anything we will see in general use. First, we need to be able to get my test results from Beth Israel to Uxbridge. That would be a great start.
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Gonna’ go google 3D printing. How the heck does that work?
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I think they just slice the image into thousands of laser scans and then use some type of epoxy resin to pour the image. It is amazing.. They can create moving parts within the piece.
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It is amazing. An artist once showed me a paper scupture she did using a 3D printer, but I had no idea there were “inks” that could make things like shoes.
When I read that I thought, So much for the gun control debate.. Sure enough, Wikipedia addressed the same concern.
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Hi Judy, actually I only buy so much of that diatribe.
Companies like Uber will fade away as quick as they come. One large lawsuit will fix that. Also, I do not need Richard Branson, grinning like some demented ape, to tell me.
BTW. Kodak is still around. They just re-invested and got rid of their workforce. They were not so stupid that it came up on them, out of the wilderness. Companies that have little in assets quickly fade after the bubble bursts. Lack of assets means anyone can copy it. Lawyers are a scourge on our planet. Likewise real estate agents. Forcing the prices of real estate up.
Bankrupt? Donald Trump appears to be the master of that, act. Kodak Eastman. They still make movies … There may well be a movement to reduce world’s population, it’s claimed. Yet, more population means more money for food producers, etc. Less population means unions.
Those who would guide and mould the world to their visions, will soon depart, just like us all. Death comes quite quickly, when it seems you have it all. Nobody can cheat time .. Cheers Jamie.
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Marilyn agrees with you on many of those points. One thing is sure and that is that change comes fast and often without our permission. The place I see this most clearly is on the computer upgrades.. many of which I don’t want but seem to force their way onto my computer despite my best efforts to keep them at bay.
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Well, just seeing a wristwatch-sized computer sync’d with your smart phone is too George Jetson already!
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Oh God, Judy. Am I really going to have my cancer cured by google next week and live to 120? Strewth. That’s a helluva lot of blogging to do 🙂 Anton
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Ha.. Certain statements are speculation, as Marilyn points out. Some truth but not all necessarily fact. But I would be happy to live to 120 and beyond, wouldn’t you?
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after our Euro horror vote last night I’m not so sure.
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I’d be interested in why you describe it as a horror vote, Anton.
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