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An opinion blog and my primary creative outlet. I post commentary twice a week as time allows, and a round-up of the links at the end of the week.
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Blog
- A little perspective, pleaseMay 18 2012 - Read more
- Planned obsolescenceMay 17 2012 - Read more
- The easiest setting to argue about May 16 2012 - Read more
- You think your landlords are badMay 15 2012 - Read more
- That's totally democraticMay 14 2012 - Read more
- A pattern of problematic behaviourMay 11 2012 - Read more
- Rest where the wild things areMay 9 2012 - Read more
- Pre-historic marriageMay 8 2012 - Read more
- The War Against WomenMay 7 2012 - Read more
- AdviceMay 3 2012 - Read more
- A little perspective, please
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1 Comment
Having specific programs to do specific functions and forcing an aesthetic on it is really really annoying, but developers are keen to attempt to cash in on the aesthetic’s appeal to a broad range of people. Apple is seen as hip, cool, an intelligent. Hence the dozens of knock-off stores in China that have been closed down recently. But people in general like their little boxes I guess … but when you put stuff together it is very powerful … see some examples from the Android market, like Layar and Wikitude. Enhanced reality is one of the first steps. I recall an MIT researcher whose grad student created a way to use a cellphones camera to read bar codes or, barring that, image and brand recognition and links it to the internet so people can in real time read reviews of various products. The same technology could also be used to snap photos on a whim with a hand gesture, and other functions that I thought were cool. Check it out, it’s on YouTube’s TED lecture series.
I think you’d be a wonderful Integration Engineer, btw :). That’s my job and in times of development we’re tasked to create holistic requirements for how an airplane should behave for my specialty (flight controls). We are supposed to know the basics of aerodynamics, electronics, software, control algorithms, and structures, but not be experts in any one thing. We then work with the specialists (and learn as we go) on their piece of the puzzle. In the end you have an airplane and even though airplanes are airplanes, how we build them and use them have changed dramatically over the past century of flight.
Much the same can be said of computers, I believe. Beginning in 2030, I believe we will see higher levels of integration of computers with the real world (augmented reality), our biology (cybernetics, etc) and government (with the hope of making it more accessible to the general public).
So, patience, grasshopper :). I think we will see more holistic, general applications of the power of computers and in the future it won’t be so much the innovation of individual specialties that drive radical change, but the integration of seemingly isolated but in reality related things.