Friday 24 June 2016

The Seven Wonders of the Business Tech World

The Seven Wonders of the Business Tech World

Just over 2000 years ago, Philo of Byzantium sat down and made a list of the seven wonders of the world at that time. Like any such subjective list, it was met with criticism in its own time. The historian Herodotus couldn’t believe the Egyptian Labyrinth was left off and Callimachus argued forcefully for the Ishtar Gate to be included.

At Gigaom Change in September (early adopter pricing still available), we will explore the seven technologies that I think will most affect business in the near future. I would like to list the seven technologies I chose and why I chose them. Would you have picked something different?

Here is my list:

Robots – This one is pretty easy. Even if you make your trade in 1’s and 0’s and never touch an atom, robots will still impact some aspect of your business, even if it is upstream. Additionally, the issue of robots has launched a societal debate about unemployment, minimum wage, basic income, and the role of “working for a living” in the modern world. We have dreamed of robots for eons, feared them for decades, and now we finally get to see what their real effect on humanity will be.

AI – This is also, forgive the pun, a no-brainer. AI is a tricky one though. Some of the smartest people on the planet (Hawking, Gates, Musk) say we should fear it while others, such as the Chief Scientist of Baidu say worrying about AI is like worrying about overpopulation on Mars. Further, the estimates to when we might see an AGI (artificial general intelligence, an AI that can do a wide range of tasks like a human) varies from 5 years to 500 years. Our brains are, arguably, what make us human, and the idea that an artificial brain might be made gets our attention. What effect will this have on the workplace? We will find out.

AR/VR – Although we think of AR/VR as (at first) a consumer technology, the work applications are equally significant. You only have to put on a VR headset for about three minutes to see that some people, maybe a good number, will put this device on and never take it off. But on the work front, it is still an incredibly powerful tool, able to overlay information from the digital world onto the world of atoms. Our brains aren’t quite wired up to imagine this in its full flowering, but we will watch it unfold in the next decade.

Human/Machine Interface – Also bridging the gap between the real world and the virtual one is the whole HMI front. As machines become ever more ubiquitous, our need to seamlessly interface with them grows. HMI is a wide spectrum of technologies: From good UIs to eye-tracking hardware to biological implants, HMI will grow to the point where the place where the human ends and the machine begins will get really blurry.

3D Printing – We call this part of Gigaom Change “3D Printing” but we mean it to include all the new ways we make stuff today. But there isn’t a single term that encapsulates that, so 3D Printing will have to suffice. While most of our first-hand experience with 3D printing is single-color plastic demo pieces, there is an entire industry working on 3D printing new hearts and livers, as well as more mundane items like clothing and food (“Earl Grey, hot”). From a business standpoint, the idea that quantity one has the same unit price as quantity one-thousand is powerful and is something we will see play out sooner than later.

Nanotechnology – I get the most pushback from nano because it seems so far out there. But it really isn’t. By one estimate, there are two thousand nanotech products on the market today. Nano, building things with dimensions of between 1 and 100 nanometers, is already a multi-billion dollar industry. On the consumer side, we will see nano robots that swim around in your blood cleaning up what ails you. But on the business side, we will see a re-thinking of all of the material sciences. The very substances we deal with will change, and we may even be said to be not in the iron nor stone age, but the nano age, where we make materials that were literally impossible to create just a few years ago.

Cybersecurity – This may seem to be the one item that is least like all of the others, for it isn’t a specific technology per se. I included it though because as more of our businesses depend on the technologies that we use, the more our businesses are susceptible to attacks by technology. How do we build in safeguards in a world where most of us don’t really even understand the technologies themselves, let alone, subtle ways that they can be exploited?

Those are my seven technologies that will most effect business. I hope you can come to Austin Sept 21-23 to explore them all with us at the Gigaom Change Leader’s Summit.

Byron Reese
Publisher
Gigaom




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Structure News: Docker embraces and extends its container foothold

STRUCTURE EVENTS Newsletter
 
Where Structure: Docker Is Maybe Looking Like A Thing?
June 24th, 2016 / by Tom Krazit
This week, we'll talk about those pesky security threats known as your employees, the possibility of an ARM-powered supercomputer, and Docker's big week in Seattle.
STRUCTURE NEWS
EMPLOYEES ARE THE WEAKEST LINK IN COMPUTER SECURITY
Our good friends over at Fortune (official media partner of Structure Events) allowed me onto their digital pages this week to write about a problem that has made our board of advisors chuckle ruefully several times in conversations: the best security software and engineers can’t prevent intrusions via employees who click on the wrong thing. In 2016, everyone should probably know better, but as we all know, these security breakdowns happen all too often, and that's something we’ll talk about at Structure Security in September.

(Photo courtesy Flickr user North Devon Council BEC Accountancy Office, which we do not want to insinuate follows bad security practices, but which makes photos available under Creative Commons license 2.0)
INDUSTRY NEWS
FORMER APPLE ENGINEERS LAUNCH SNAPROUTE, AN OPEN-SOURCE NETWORKING STARTUP, OUT OF STEALTH
Networking technology will need to improve at a pretty fast clip over the next couple of years to keep up with the deluge of data posed by the internet of things and cloud services, and a bunch of ex-Apple employees are claiming they’ve made a breakthrough. Venturebeat profiles SnapRoute, which has developed networking technology that HP plans to use and that the startup plans to release to the Open Compute Project.

WHAT’S NEXT FOR ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

The Wall Street Journal put together a great package of thoughts and ideas from some of the leading artificial intelligence researchers of our time, including Facebook’s Yann LeCun and Structure Data 2016 speaker Andrew Ng of Baidu. The combination of interviews and short essays is a great primer on the state of artificial intelligence in 2016, and where the field is headed next.

INSIDE JAPAN’S FUTURE EXASCALE ARM SUPERCOMPUTER

The ARM server remains a bit of a unicorn in the tech industry -- and not in the lucrative way -- but Fujitsu announced this week that it is planning to build a huge supercomputer based on ARM processors by the end of the decade. The Next Platform takes a look at Fujitsu’s plans, which were revealed this week at the International Supercomputing Conference in Germany (check out all of The Next Platform’s coverage of the event here, it’s worth your time if you’re a Big Iron nerd).

WHY GENERAL ELECTRIC WON TALENT FROM APPLE

We showcased GE’s Chris Drumgoole at Structure 2015 explaining how the old and massive company is actually quite forward-thinking and nimble with its infrastructure planning, and now The Information (subscription required) has more details on that strategy. GE has hired two former Apple engineers behind the creation of Siri to build out a new cloud service for its customers, and while GE is pretty adamant about moving internal applications to public cloud services, it’s developing a hybrid cloud approach to serve its external customers.

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT NORTH KOREA’S SUSPECTED BANK BLITZKRIEG

As embarrassing as the Sony hack was for executives of that company, this is a little more serious. Fortune looks at the digital heist of $81 million from the central bank of Bangladesh, which is suspected to have come from groups affiliated with The Hermit Kingdom.

HOW GOOGLE IS REMAKING ITSELF AS A “MACHINE LEARNING FIRST” COMPANY

The easiest way to tell that Google is really serious about a new technology is when it lets that technology run Google Search. Backchannel has a good piece interviewing several Googlers -- including Structure Data 2016 speaker Jeff Dean -- on how the engineers-first search giant is making the transition to a company driven by the principles of machine learning.
BIG PICTURE
In just two years, it’s clear Docker has made the short list of enterprise computing movers and shakers. Only a few hundred people attended the first DockerCon in San Francisco in 2014, but over 4,000 people packed into the Washington State Convention Center in Seattle this week to hear updates on the container company’s newest efforts.

Docker didn’t invent the container approach to software development, but its tools have gotten a ton of traction among developers who are just starting to realize the benefits of the approach and are looking for something that’s easy to use. And the new version of its software released this week at DockerCon includes container orchestration technology, which companies like Google (Kubernetes) and Mesosphere have been pitching for the large-scale container deployments that are becoming more and more common in production.

Geekwire took notes during a lunch conversation with Docker CEO Ben Golub (pictured, right, with co-founder and CTO Solomon Hykes), who suggested that he sees Docker’s potential market as every server in every data center. CEOs are chief sales people, of course, so a little exaggeration is par for the course, but the shift from virtual machines pioneered by VMware to containers popularized by Docker seems inevitable.

The big question is how the real cloud heavyweights -- Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, and Google -- respond to Docker’s growth and pull with developers. Microsoft cozied up to the startup this week, announcing plans to make it easier to use Docker Datacenter within its Azure service on stage with the company, while AWS also joined the party a little more quietly.

Golub admitted this week that Docker is still spending more money than it is making, but the company is certainly well-capitalized for the future. And even if 2016 really is the year of containers in production (as Battery Ventures’ Adrian Cockcroft suggested last year at Structure 2015) there’s still a long way to go before containers are widely established inside big-company software development teams.

Where will Dockercon 2017 be held? Some unsolicited advice: don’t blow all this goodwill by shutting down major arteries South of Market any time soon.
 
 
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