Modern technology, such as email and the Internet, has increased both our productivity and our workload. Wouldn’t it be great if we could use this technology to find a way to do twice as much in a day? It may sound like a dream but the reality is not far off, according to Daniel Burrus, a leading technology forecaster and author of the best-selling book
Technotrends.
As Burrus explains, the already speedy rate of technology is about
to dwarf anything we’ve seen so far and give us some exciting
options in the years ahead. “In the next five years, we’re going to
experience more technology-driven change than we have in the last
15,” he notes. “Moore’s Law says that the technology behind most
devices – such as processing power, bandwidth and storage capacity –
doubles every 18 months. This has held up for 40 years but now
things are moving incredibly faster.
“For example, it took 20 years to go from a fivemegahertz chip to a
500-megahertz chip but to double that took just eight months. And
that was five years ago,” Burrus emphasizes. “The curve is now going
vertical, which means we can barely fathom the technology that will
come our way in the future.”
Twice the work in half the time
It’s this advance in technology that will make things even more
interesting – and give us our very own virtual personal assistant,
says Burrus. Soon you could wake up, turn on the television and be
greeted by your assistant – available 24 hours a day, seven days a
week without complaints. After outlining your schedule for the day,
your assistant then updates you on a change in your travel plans –
your morning flight was cancelled. But not to worry: your personal
assistant has already re-booked you on another flight and printed
your boarding pass. At the airport, your assistant tells you where
to find a free spot in the parking garage. Not enough time to
research the company you’re visiting? Not a problem, your assistant
does the research for you – in a nanosecond.
Waiting for the right buy price on stock you’d like to own? The
assistant can track stock prices and not only inform you when it’s
hit the target price but also buy the stock for you – with a
financial plug-in from your broker, of course. Anxiously awaiting
lab test results? Just download the medical plug-in from your doctor
and the wait will soon be over. As soon as the results are entered
into your medical records, your assistant gives you the details.
Eventually, your assistant will learn from your requests and begin
to anticipate your needs, almost like thinking for itself. The best
part: as our assistants take care of logistics, we can spend more
time on the things we actually enjoy. “With this, we could do almost
twice as much in one day,” Burrus notes. “And with the mountains of
new information that will be available in the future, having an
assistant will quickly become a necessity, much like owning a car.”
Best yet to come
In the healthcare field, there have also been tremendous
advancements in technology but the best is yet to come, says Burrus.
Besides e-enabled assisted living for patients and routine genetics
mapping, we could soon have access to a virtual hospital that
performs tests from the comfort of our own home. He offers the
example of late-night heart palpitations: is it a heart attack or
just indigestion?
Currently our options are limited, Burrus says. “If I experienced
heart palpitations, I would have two options: I could call an
ambulance to take me to the emergency room and after many hours and
many tests, I could find out that I only have indigestion – and a
large bill. But on the other hand, if I assume it’s indigestion and
go back to sleep, I may never wake up.”
But a virtual hospital opens up the options, he explains. “I just
turn on my television and choose the virtual hospital’s admissions
desk and give them my symptoms. After pulling up my medical records
using multiple biometrics for identification, they then ask me to
attach an inexpensive bio-sensor to my chest so they can take my
vital signs, like blood pressure and pulse, and an EKG reading – all
virtually,” Burrus notes.
“The information instantly transfers to a real-life doctor for
analysis, and the doctor either asks me to come in for further tests
or suggests I take an indigestion pill,” he adds. “Imagine the time,
stress and money a system like this could save. With the rate of
advancing technology, we could see this within the next 15 years.”
Fraud-proof identification
Both the virtual assistant and ‘at-home hospitaling’ would use
biometrics for identification but Burrus insists that neither
privacy nor fraud will be an issue. “Biometrics will soon become so
advanced that fraud won’t be a problem. We’ll see defense-industry
technology pour into the public domain and new biometrics will be
coming out that are almost impossible to steal, like the blood
vessel pattern embedded in our hands. We’ll also use multiple
biometrics like this to establish identity depending on the level of
security required.”
Another hot topic these days is climate change. But will the new
awareness impact technology? Actually, it could be the other way
around, says Burrus. “Technology is only bound by the limits we give
it as humans. If we decide to use technology to solve global
problems such as climate change, then it can get us there.
Technology has the ability to turn the impossible into the
possible.”