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Emerrging Trends in Electronics and Technology

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
7 views4 pages

Emerrging Trends in Electronics and Technology

Uploaded by

ruttoa10
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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EMERRGING TRENDS IN ELECTRONICS AND TECHNOLOGY

1.Artificial Intelligence

The holy grail of artificial intelligence research is general AI, a machine that is self-aware
and commands intelligence equal to a person’s. These theoretical systems would be our
intellectual equals—well, until v2.0 drops and we fall to a distant second.

Until then we have narrow AI, which are systems that perform very specific tasks. That may
seem too limited, but narrow AI already powers systems like SPAM filters, Google Maps,
and virtual assistants such as Siri. And its use cases are projected to diversify even more.

As Max Tegmark, physicist and machine-learning researcher, told Big Think in an


interview: “What we’re seeing now is that machine intelligence is spreading out a little bit
from those narrow peaks and getting a bit broader.”

Chatbots, logistics, self-driving cars, virtual nursing assistants, personalized textbooks and
tutors, and even artificial creativity: These are just a few of the applications that narrow AI
can improve or bring to light in the coming years.

2. 5G and the Internet of Things

5G may not seem very exciting. We already have 4G, so what’s another G? But the
difference will be exponential. 5G networks may ultimately be 100 times faster than 4G,
allowing many more devices to connect, reducing latency to practically zero, and providing
more reliable signals.

This wireless technology will provide the backbone for the internet of things (IoT), which
will expand the power of the internet beyond computers and across a wide range of objects,
processes, and environments. The IoT is the keystone technology for such futuristic scenes
as smart cities, robot-driven agriculture, and self-driving highway systems.

For businesses, this one-two combo will continue recent trends and power them to the next
level. Remote offices become more dependable under the 5G paradigm, and real-time data
sharing of, say, live events or desktop captures will be seamless. As for the IoT, it helps
remove intermediate steps that bog down productivity. Why have someone waste their time
collecting data from the factory floor when the factory floor can collect, curate, and send it
to them?

3.Serverless Computing

Serverless computing isn’t truly “serverless.” Sans tapping into some seriously dark arts, it’s
impossible to provide computational resources without a physical server somewhere.
Instead, this technology distributes those resources more effectively. When an application is
not in use, no resources are allocated. When they are needed, the computing power auto-
scales.
This technological shift means companies no longer need to worry over infrastructure or
reserving bandwidth, which in turn promises the golden ticket of ease of use and cost
savings.

As Eric Knorr, editor in chief of International Data Group Enterprise, writes: “One of the
beauties of this architecture is that you get charged by the cloud provider only when a
service runs. You don’t need to pay for idle capacity—or even think about capacity.
Basically, the runtime sits idle waiting for an event to occur, whereupon the appropriate
function gets swapped into the runtime and executes. So you can build out a big, complex
application without incurring charges for anything until execution occurs.”

4.Biometrics

Biometrics allows a system to recognize users by biological markers such as their face,
voice, or fingerprint. Many people already have one or several of these on their laptops and
smartphones, but as the technology improves and becomes more ubiquitous, it may finally
end the password paradigm.

Because most people have inefficient passwords, use the same one for every account, and
never change them, hackers typically need only one hit to enjoy carte blanche over
someone’s personal and professional data. Even those who do passwords correctly can find
managing the system a nightmare.

For these reasons, biometrics promises much-needed security of sensitive data. A fingerprint
is much more difficult to hack with raw computational power than a password, and that
difficulty is increased by magnitudes when multiple markers are used in tandem.

5.Augmented/Virtual Reality

With hardware costs lowering, processing power increasing, and high-profile players such
as Google and Facebook entering the game, virtual reality’s day may have finally come.
And the more widespread acceptance of augmented reality apps in smartphones may make
such technologies an easier sell moving forward.

The recently announced Microsoft Mesh and its competitors hope to capitalize on our new
remote-work era. The concept combines these “mixed-reality” technologies to create virtual
shared spaces that business teams can use to hold meetings or work on projects.

And Peter Diamandis, chairman and CEO of the XPRIZE Foundation, imagines this
technology can revolutionize the customer experience in retail. Customers could, for
example, try clothes on a virtual avatar or sit in their amphitheater seats before making a
purchase.

6. Blockchain
It may be surprising that Bitcoin, the much-hyped cryptocurrency, didn’t make the list. But
the technology’s online ledger, the blockchain, has supplanted the digital denomination as
the rising business star.

Unlike traditional, centralized records, a blockchain is decentralized. The permanent record


is not stored in one location but exists on nodes spread across the system. This design makes
it difficult to lose records or tamper with them.

As tech entrepreneur Elad Gil told Big Think in an interview: “[Blockchain] systems are
effectively censorship proof or seizure resistant. In other words, the government can’t come
and take your asset if you’re in a country that has very bad governance, or it means that no
third party can suddenly, accidentally erase your data, or you can’t hack a third party to
access your data (although obviously, you can still hack a blockchain).”

This is why blockchain has caught the attention of organizations that need to store records
(i.e., all organizations). And the potential use cases are impressive. Blockchain could be
used by hospitals to store and share health records. It could underpin a secure online voting
platform. It could track logistics across international supply chains. And, of course, there are
numerous applications for cybersecurity, too.

7.Robotics

The first industrial robot punched the clock in 1962. Technological advancements have
steadily widened robotics’ workforce representation since, and in the coming years, robots
will continue moving from factories to First Street to perform rudimentary tasks such as
cleaning and delivery.

Such advancements have kept the Luddite fires burning for more than a century now, so one
challenge faced by organization leaders will be reassuring their teams that the robots aren’t
here to replace them. In fact, as more people move into soft-skilled, human-focused jobs,
they’ll likely find the transition a beneficial one.

“Introducing robots into a workplace can be a complex and dynamic undertaking. While it
may start with workers feeling like their jobs are being threatened, the end result is a
warehouse full of happier, healthier humans who remain the centerpiece of a competitive
business,” writes Melonee Wise, CEO of Fetch Robotics, for the World Economic Forum.

8.Natural Language Processing

Natural language processing is a subfield of AI that aims to develop systems that can
analyze and communicate through human language. Sound easy? If so, it’s only because
you’re reading these words with a mind endowed by evolution with the gift of language.

Algorithms aren’t so lucky. They have trouble parsing the eclectic hodgepodge of symbols,
gestures, sounds, and cultural cues that we use to express meaning and ideas.
“There’s an obvious problem with applying deep learning to language. It’s that words are
arbitrary symbols, and as such they are fundamentally different from imagery. Two words
can be similar in meaning while containing completely different letters, for instance; and the
same word can mean various things in different contexts,” writes Will Knight for MIT
Technology Review.

When algorithms finally crack language, the business use cases will be substantial. Think
chatbots, virtual editors, market analysis, instant translation of live conversations, resume
readers, and phone auto-attendants that don’t send every caller into a rage.

9.Quantum Computing

Quantum computing is “the exploitation of collective properties of quantum states, such as


superposition and entanglement, to perform computation.” Translation: It solves problems
faster and more accurately—in some cases, ones that stump even modern supercomputers.

While we shouldn’t expect the quantum PC any time soon, we can expect quantum
computers to become the backbone for the emerging technologies listed above. These
machines already exist today, and IBM has announced plans to build a 1,000 qubit version
by 2023, a milestone physicist Jay Gambetta told Science would reflect an “inflection
point.”

Adoption of this technology could make big data more manageable. It could cut costly and
complex development time through speedy simulations and solve multivariable optimization
problems with ease. Finally, it may make currently intractable problems manageable, such
as those faced in the processing of natural language.

Quantum computing also illustrates why it’s important that organizational leaders don’t
develop tunnel vision. To focus on one emerging technology or one model of the future is to
risk your company’s well-being. It’s not a question of which technology will dominate, but
the potentials each technology brings and how they may work together.

“The innovation that will be delivered by these technologies, especially as I said, when
they’re leveraged in tandem, will be staggering over the next few years and will enable
customer solutions that will actually have paradigm shifting impact for those that act on
them,” Mike Haines, chair of the Emerging Technology Community’s executive council,
said on the CompTIA Biz Tech podcast.

Navigating these technological shifts will certainly challenge business leaders for years to
come. But by keeping an open mind to the possibilities, they can chart a path that predicts
dangers and capitalize on these emerging technologies.

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