MIT Picks Top 10 Emerging Technologies
DeviceGuru writes "MIT's Technology Review magazine has just published its annual list of the top ten emerging technologies. Dubbed the TR10, these revolutionary innovations are poised to have a dramatic impact on computing, medicine, nanotechnology, our energy infrastructure, and more, say the magazine's editors. The TR10 technologies this time around are: cellulolytic enzymes, reality mining, connectomics, offline web apps, graphene transistors, atomic magnetometers, wireless power, nanoradio, probabilistic chips, modeling surprise. More details on the TR10 appear in the March/April edition of Technology Review."
Read the original, then steal all the best quotes and look like a genius...
Offline web applications, aka applications...
All the way back to 2003 (PDF alert!):
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And this is some random crap to make the lameness filter go away.
W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
Is this so much the top 10 emerging technologies, or what TR find interesting?
"emerging" is ambiguous - does it mean technologies that will have a definite effect on our way of life, technologies that show promise as maybe some day becoming useful, or...? This seems a little hit and miss to me, although I guess by definition it has to be.
The Mothership
You have been busy... I was just trying to point out the ludicrous pointlessness of these lists. They will one day identify the slack, vinegary lobe of the human brain that gets juiced by the thought of top 10s. If I don't get to mine first with a soldering iron through the ear that is.
"Be light, stinging, insolent and melancholy"
Everything on that list is either evolutionary technology (growth down some already determined path) or lame. Some are both.
... too early to tell how it'll sort itself out.
Here's my take:
Cellulolytic enzymes -- we already (a) have some that work and (b) use them to process biomass into biofuel. Better ones are of course great, but this is an evolution...
Reality mining -- What a douch-bag term. Devices watch your every move and report helpful hints to the government -- er, I mean you.
Connectomics -- Brain wiring diagrams. Neat, but it's too soon to tell if it'll reveal anything exciting.
Offline Web applications -- I've got an idea, instead of running my offline web app in a browser, let's cut out that part and run it with native system libraries. Okay, now lets deliver the application through a simple package system. I'll call this "dpkg"! (Alternative smart-ass comment: Oh, you mean Java?)
Graphene transistors -- Damn cool. But we have transistors. These are just smaller transistors. Evolutionary.
Atomic magnetometers -- Really small sensors are neat. Lose the "war on terror" retoric in the summary. These might actually allow some neat things, but it's a bit early to say.
Wireless power -- People have wanted to do this for a while, but all comers so far have big losses associated with them. Why, in a power-short future, would we be doing this?
Nanoradio -- Nifty. Especially if used for communication between multiple tiny machines
Probabilistic chips -- Right. So lets run our calculation enough times that we can have good statistics about the mean result and the standard deviation. Wait, now we've lost out power savings?
Modeling surprise -- Douche-baggery.
Look, my main point is that we can't predict revolutions in science and technology. All we can do is say advance x will help with problem y, but that's evolutionary thinking. Revolutions, by their very nature, cause huge changes in what people do and what they think can be done. You can't predict it ahead of time. We've gotten very good at grinding away at the next evolutionary step in technology, and that's really neat. Many of the ideas above have exciting applications. But I really hate the "revolutionary" and "disruptive" technology ideas.
Use the Firehose to mod down Second Life stories!
And I work in medical genetics and follow new technologies in energy and other fields, so I think somebody just did a braindump without thinking about what the implications are, quite frankly.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Uh we're already doing it. See MPT.
Just one paragraph given to the skeptics. http://www.technologyreview.com/Infotech/12264/?a=f