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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."

10 of 70 comments (clear)

  1. Check out the original by brianerst · · Score: 5, Funny

    Read the original, then steal all the best quotes and look like a genius...

    1. Re:Check out the original by courseofhumanevents · · Score: 4, Funny

      Nikola Tesla would like to have a word with you about "new" karma-whoring techniques.

  2. Offline web apps by Annymouse+Cowherd · · Score: 5, Funny

    Offline web applications, aka applications...

    1. Re:Offline web apps by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're actually asking me why webapps are popular?

      Because install software is too damn hard and insecure?

      I'm not a huge *fan* of webapps but they exist for a reason.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  3. Re:Don't forget TR10: 2007 by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Informative

    All the way back to 2003 (PDF alert!):
    (Coral versions)
    2003
    2004
    2005
    2006

    (Original Links)
    2003
    2004
    2005
    2006

    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.
  4. Re:Don't forget TR10: 2007 by Naughty+Bob · · Score: 4, Funny

    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"
  5. Most of these are totally ridiculous by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.

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    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  6. Re:Is this worth much? by wizardforce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is this so much the top 10 emerging technologies, or what TR find interesting?
    the latter. top ten lists like these are subjective by nature. What I may find interesting and worth putting on a top ten list, you may think are not and vice versa. Arguably they glance over *a lot* of tech that has potential to change this whole planet in dramatic ways. protein design and synthetic biology for example. being able to control the properties of a lifeform to the point where it is capable of doing things that biology hasn't evolved in the last 3.5 billion years. quantum computers that can crack codes in hours rather than the many millenia it takes us now. DNA based data storage- two fold applications- allowing storage of data billions of times that of what is currently possible and the synthetic biology allowing it can be used in biological systems with unimaginable redundancy and capabilities. computationally driven AI- modelling brains from the neuron up such as deep blue which is now modelling a system of 10,000 neurons. space travel with solar sails and air breathing rocket engines with the possibility of taking the cost of launching things into orbit down 10-100 fold. there's a lot more stuff going on that make this list fairly irrelevant.
    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.
  7. Re:It is an annual list, so... by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Uh we're already doing it. See MPT.

  8. Re:Nothing revolutionary by wizardforce · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.
    exactly. a great deal of the science and technology we now enjoy couldn't possibly have been forseen as it was developed by accident! who would have thought penicillin from a mold could keep millions from dying of bacterial infections? or that gel electrophoresis was developed after a chance observation that clay particles in a liquid environment migrate under an applied electrical field- this is now used for analysis of DNA- it has even lead to the freeing of wrongfully convicted people. sulfanilamide drugs were originally dyes found to have an antibiotic effect. the drug now known as viagra was originally developed to help with heart disease [vasodilator] it didn't help with that but it did help with something completely different... point being that to attempt to predict the next 20 years is idiotic, 50 years is utter lunacy and any list of revolutionary tech fails to account for the fact that a lot of what we have and will have won't be developed on purpose.
    --
    Sigs are too short to say anything truly profound so read the above post instead.