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Simplifying Complexity

YouTube - Finding New Memory Structures at HP Labs

YouTube - Finding New Memory Structures at HP Labs.

Philip J. Kuekes, computer architect on quantum science research team at HP Labs shows Scoble the lab where they discovered Memristors. Insights into what’s coming inside our laptops.

Philip sums up  just one of the ways why its all going to come together within 10 short years. ‘Futureshock’ here we come! Everything from speed to saving energy (10 nuclear power stations worth) and building on software development that use neural networks.

Print’s demise is greatly under exaggerated

No matter what people say, print publishing is gasping its last breaths and the recession is rooting around for the life support plug. The new rule is: everything for everyone — no matter who or where they are.

As internet creator Sir Tim Berners Lee flipped on the switch for the world wide web in 1991, he had an inkling that it would lead to a global business revolution — and so along comes the demise of the mass print media and advertising markets. It was the shortest life span of any market in the history of man.

The web’s ability to be the proverbial sniper, to print’s weapon of mass destruction, makes it so much more attractive to advertisers who crave fast, high quality results for their limited budgets.

An example of the ‘long tail’ market that is replacing the mass market is that of my fictional hero, Romano, and his “Alfa Anti-Ruggine” — a device made specifically for the 1974 Alfa Romeo Spyder to keep it rust free (remember, it is fictional).

The old market model would have Romano pay tens of thousands of dollars for the pleasure of waiting for weeks while publications were printed and distributed with his advert in them. He would then have to replicate the process dozens of times around the world to cover his markets properly — all on an off chance that an owner of a such a classic car in need of his product would see the ad. If Romano were really, really lucky, he may have had some positive coverage in one of the magazines.

The new model has Romano’s company sell the product on eBay or an Amazon type site for a few percentage points in commissions. Romano’s company would also buy some Google keywords to make sure that the thousands of people searching for ‘1974 Alfa repairs’ would find it easily. These avenues are instant, highly targeted, cost effective and global.

Importantly for Romano’s “Alfa Anti-Ruggine”, his customers could be members of an Alfa group on social networking, site such as Facebook, or could even be a writers of the Argentinean or Norwegian Alfa blogs — giving them an ideal outlet to write about and discuss the miracle cure that stops their cars falling apart. Romano could then freely use these testimonials, enhancing his products credibility and saleability. How very Web 2.0.

¡Viva la revolucón!

Welcome to Web 3.0. It’s here, right now — and it’s all about semantics and content with context. What if our Argentinean or Norwegian Alfa owner is a racing buff? Facts, such as how many Alfas won races 1974, would probably interest him. That information is out there and this is where data linking — or semantics — opens up limitless possibilities.

Crucially, it would bring advertisers directly to customers surfing for information that holds a deep personal interest for them. Imagine our car buff, while looking for the antirust gadget he had recently read about on a blog, mouses over the phrase “1974 Alfa” and a poster of an Alfa winning the 1974 Canadian-American Challenge Cup slides out? Or, perhaps a framed poster of a car just like his, but in its prime and rust free? It is conceivable that a purchase would be made.

Publishers still hold the aces: they are (mostly) respected authorities in their fields and, essentially, have extensive archives of quality content that can be exploited for its semantic value. This is the new big traffic driver. Content is also being constantly updated and created — adding to the giant jigsaw puzzle. All of this gets married to advertising — be it banner networks or Google AdSense — the more pages, the more views, the more revenue.

The way to get our hero and his car parts business back into magazines is by providing a platform that enables him to effectively and directly target consumers — those readers that the publishers should know so well.

At the same time, intelligent targeting and a tightly wound online brand awareness campaign will increase traffic and at the same time convert print readers to online — reducing overheads and increasing revenues-per-reader.

This will all lead to a much deeper relationship between publishers, advertisers and readers — and everyone gets precisely what they want.

Unveiling the “Sixth Sense” in Tech

About this talk

This demo — from Pattie Maes’ lab at MIT, spearheaded by Pranav Mistry — was the buzz of TED. It’s a wearable device with a projector that paves the way for profound interaction with our environment. Imagine “Minority Report” and then some.

About Pattie Maes

At the MIT Media Lab’s new Fluid Interfaces Group, Pattie Maes researches the tools we use to work with information and connect with one another.

Kevin Kelly: Predicting the next 5,000 days of the web

About this talk

At the 2007 EG conference, Kevin Kelly shares a fun stat: The World Wide Web, as we know it, is only 5,000 days old. Now, Kelly asks, how can we predict what’s coming in the next 5,000 days?

About Kevin Kelly

Kevin Kelly has been publisher of the Whole Earth Review, exec editor at WIRED, founder of visionary nonprofits, and writer on biology and business and “cool tools.”

Kwabena Boahen: Making a computer that works like the brain

About this talk

Researcher Kwabena Boahen is looking for ways to mimic the brain’s supercomputing powers in silicon — because the messy, redundant processes inside our heads actually make for a small, light, superfast computer.

About Kwabena Boahen

Kwabena Boahen wants to understand how brains work — and to build a computer that works like the brain by reverse-engineering the nervous system.

Multi Touch Screens

Multi Touch screens have been around for sometime now, although the majority of people have not seen this yet, in Europe they are already part of the furniture of bars and clubs.

The cost is already down significantly to make this a real technology to change our lives on an interesting level. Both for fun but of course we have all seen minority report and how it can be put to serious use (and I don’t mean predicting the future).

The iPhone brought a hint of what we have in store for the future, it is also an example next step for how we interact with web sites and content. Our next generation of web sites will take this in to account.

This is Nicholas Negroponte (A founder of the MIT Media Lab), making the same predictions back in 1984:

Photosynth - Future collaborative image browsing

I was amazed when I first saw this as it combined two main technologies, one being their Seadragon image zooming and the other a technology that literally analyses and stitches together images in to a 3D space (no not the Quicktime equivalent).

For me though the future link is when they line up the idea of dynamically pulling semantic content from Flickr, because the content is already tagged, its a no-brainer to see how humanity could document the world through images.

The exciting part is linking this back to broader content through the existing semantic connections already created.

You maybe already interested in viewing the image you have in front of you, but at a right click you could view related content (Wikipedia?), or even take a look at the profile of the person that took the picture in the first place.

You can also see the connection of ‘Multi Touch Screens’ being able to navigate using your fingers would be more intuitive.