TECH SPECIAL Do You Know What Life Will Be Like In 5
Years? IBM's ..City
The company's annual report of five
predictions for the next five years is all about the benefits of big data:
stores, cities, classrooms, and hospitals.
In the 5 in 5 report IBM’s top
scientists report on what the world, supported by smart sensing and computing,
will look like in five years. Last week, Fast Company previewed the
report with the physicist who heads up the research team: Dr. Bernard Meyerson, IBM Fellow, and Vice President of
Innovation.
In
five years, cities will be sentient. More buses will automatically run when
there are more people to fill them. And doctors will use your DNA to tailor
medical advice and smart computing to diagnose and plan treatment for big
diseases like cancer not in months, but in minutes.
We
never had a way to pull together enough data to do a real honest statistical
set of predictions about critical issues.
In
five years, physical retail stores will understand your preferences and use
augmented reality to bring the web to where shoppers can physically touch it.
Sophisticated analytics will allow the classroom (not just the teacher) to track
your progress in real time and tailor course work. Digital guardians will
protect your accounts and identity, proactively flagging fraudulent use, while
maintaining the privacy of your personal information.
In
five years, we will have analytical models that allow us to actually change the
future and prevent the traffic jam that would have happened if 20 minutes from
now if we hadn't already rerouted lights to stop it.
Here
are details about the ways these five predictions will define the future and
impact us at a personal level:
More
than half of the world’s population
currently lives in cities--and that is increasing. “By 2030, the towns and
cities of the developing world will make up 80% of urban humanity and by 2050,
seven out of every 10 people will be a city dweller.”
With
the rise in smart phone and sensing technologies, analytics and cloud
computing, cities will be able to respond
quickly, and even predict problems before they occur. The cities will soon be
able adjust automatically. “This will give rise to new cities that can respond
in real time, predict problems before they occur, and deliver up more tailored
services to make city life better for everyone.”
The
total number of smartphones in the world is expected to top 3 billion by 2017.
Increasingly, cities will enable new ways to interact with citizens via their
mobile phones. Mobile apps will become the tool for
identifying broken street lights, tagging and reporting pot holes, and text messages will alert people in
real time when a problem is fixed. When social sentiment reveals that new
zoning plans are unpopular or that rush-hour traffic is costing the local
economy, virtual town halls will incorporate
citizen feedback to adjust plans.
This
will also enable cities to adapt services and schedules based on feedback.
“Think about transportation,” says Meyerson. “In the city, transportation right
now is on a fixed schedule as opposed to need. What if you actually had the
ability to detect ahead of time the motion of your citizens and adjust your
flow of transport capability to match the immediate need? So that maybe a
baseball game went two hours long, you realize that meanwhile you may have had
14 trains tied up at local stations waiting for all the folks coming out of the
stadium who never show up."
"Contrast
that with looking at everybody's cell phones and where they are, and
anonymizing the data. But taking that anonymous result, you nonetheless know
that, ‘Wait a minute, all of a sudden 35,000 people got out of their seats or
are heading for the exits.’ You know it’s time to spool up the transport
system.”
Cities
and their leaders will make decisions based on infinite different types of
information that will be visualized on fluid heat maps of city systems. Using advanced
analytics, it will be possible to understand and continually digest new
information freely provided by citizens. Cities can become more flexible,
increasingly flatter, less encumbered by bureaucracy, and more open to sharing
data and insight.
http://www.fastcoexist.com/3023514/futurist-forum/do-you-know-what-life-will-be-like-in-5-years-ibms-top-scientist-does?partner=newsletter
No comments:
Post a Comment