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Tech Predictions for 2004

Quirk writes "The Independent has the predictions of Charles Arthur for 2004. 'The ubiquity of the iPod, the return of the Mac, and the simplicity of the portable memory stick are just some of the developments that could change our lives in 2004.'"

5 of 281 comments (clear)

  1. Anyone find it strange? by cubicledrone · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Practically the entirety of business now relies on computers for just about everything, yet few, if any, can find careers working with computers?

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    Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
  2. Boom in Computer-linked home security devices by Cryofan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There will likely continue to be an increase in crime due to several factors, such as increasing poverty because of neoliberal economic policies, and also due to importation of poverty from 3rd world, which also lowers wages.

    I predict that this increasing poverty will cause a boom in home and auto security devices which are linked to personal computers in order to provide more sophisticated theft deterrents. For example, motion detectors which transmit detected motion signals to a personal computer via serial port or USB interface via either wireless transmission or signal wires.

    The motion detected signals will be detected by software that will be able to be configured by an unsophisticated user to take actions that will scare off burglars. For example, play useful sound files output to speakers outside. The sound files might be randomly selected files that sound like a security officer talking to a dispatched about an intruder.

    Also the computer could communicate with relays and stepper motors via via serial port or USB interface to turn on and move in a random, jerky manner an outside floodlight.

    There are some products currently out now that can provide these deterrents, but they typically too expensive, unreliable, or too hard to use right now.

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    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  3. Brain virus by thefinite · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't see Apple surviving past 2005.

    I don't see you making much headway as a fortune-teller, let alone a business analyst. (I know, "same difference")

    I have decided that the "Apple is dying" thing is a disease. It has to be some sort of brain-inhabiting virus that just keeps moving from host to host. No matter what you do to stamp it out (facts, figures, lobotomies), it has already moved on to the next susceptible (i.e. apple-bashing, close-minded) brain. I guess we will have to live with it. It almost makes me wish Apple did die, just so these people will finally *shut up*.

    (By the way, in between the PPC, iMac, and G5 you have things like the Titanium Powerbook, iMovie and all of the other amazing iApps, OS X, and, of course, the iPod and iTunes Music Store. So, yes, your theory is a bunch of garbage.)

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    Boom Shanka
  4. Re:It's that easy? by shplorb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So, if I buy these Apple products and flash memory, my life will change and this gaping chasm which plagues my existance will be gone forever?

    To look at or touch Apple products is to experience the ultimate consumer orgasm - some sort of weird love-like feeling, where you can't help but feel good about forking over a wad of cash for the product that you've survived for years without, but now that you've held it you know that you can't live without it.

    Or maybe it's more like crack... they give you a freebie (test drive in the store) and then you'll do anything to get your hands on one.

    All I know is that I'm saving up for a dual G5 and iPod to complement my iBook =]

  5. Damn...some good predictions for once by Spoing · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I was expecting some lame article, and true many of the predictions are of the "Duh..." variety, though a few were quite interesting as well as plausable;
    1. * USB "flash memory" sticks (which you plug in to a port on a computer to provide extra storage space) will become very popular, and applications will be released that can be stored on them to run on any computer without altering its settings. Presently, 256Mb costs 125; expect that to halve this year. You could soon carry a stripped-down operating system in your pocket to boot any machine to look like yours. In the long term, this could lead to stripped-down computers where the machine holds no important data; it'd all be on the USB stick.

    That's something I'm looking into and it is very interesting. 256M, though, is not enough. A 1G USB stick could be the sweet spot for having both apps, data, and (optionally) an entire OS. At current prices for 1G sticks, though, I can't see many people doing it so development will be stalled.

    Most apps need to be installed or require a runtime environment that has to be installed

    To boot a USB stick currently requires BIOS changes or a boot diskette/CD and waiting. The alternative is to have a VM of some sort 'run' the OS as a guest.

    Fixing either of these issues seamlessly will take awhile...probably won't happen in 2004.

    --
    A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.