Tuesday, December 15, 2015

TECH SPECIAL................. 10 IMPORTANT TECH TRENDS FOR 2016


10 IMPORTANT TECH
TRENDS FOR 2016


The future is all about software rather than the hardware it powers.
Here's how software will change your life in 2016

Forget drones, FinTech and (especially) apps that claim to be 'digitally
disruptive'.
The big tech trends that will have a sig nificant impact in 2016 and
beyond range from machine learning and neuromorphic computing
architectures to a growth in sensory and contextual information and
 more ambient user experiences. Could 2016 be the tipping point
when the physical and virtual worlds finally merge?

INFORMATION OF EVERYTHING
It's chaos out there. Smart devices of all kinds are producing and sending
 text, audio, video, sensory and contextual information.
“The Information of Everything addresses this influx with strategies and
 technologies to link data from all these different data sources,“ say
analysts at IT research company Gartner.
Whether you call it the Internet of Things, the Internet of Data or the
Information of Everything, we know one thing 2016 will produce more
and more big data. It's what we do with it that could change.

THE DEVICE MESH
The smartphone is just the start.The era of the device mesh means
accessing information and apps via all kinds of devices, from phones,
watches and wearables to smart TVs, sensors in homes and even the
dashboard in a car.
“The device mesh is innately part of the Internet of Things ...even apps
like Waze are part of this trend, turning cars into live traffic data,“ says
Mike Crooks, Head of Innovation at Mubaloo Innovation Lab.
 “The device mesh is the trend of moving to the interconnected ideal
of the Internet of Things.“

3D PRINTING
As the materials that can be 3D printed increase, so do the practical
applications for 3D printers, with aerospace, medical, automotive,
energy and the military all destined to benefit.
“Open hardware and democratised production methods like 3D printing
can be seen as ushering in a third industrial age,“ says Dr Kevin Curran,
Technical Expert at the IEEE, who sees food printing as the imminent
trend for 2016.ChefJet can print in chocolate and sugar, Choc Edge
creates on 2D3D chocolate decorations, ChocoByte prints custom 3D
solid chocolate bars, and Natural Machines' Foodini can print pasta and pizza.
A major research area is bioprinting, where food is printed dot by dot
to build up edible meals. The mission is to eliminate the production
chain for food.

AMBIENT USER EXPERIENCES
Here we're talking about a longterm future of immersive environments
with augmented and virtual reality, but for now it's about continuity
between devices and location. Mobile is becoming more about short,
fast interactions with minimal user input. “It's different from the simple
 sensor-based apps on smartphones today,“ says Curran. “Instead of the
user having to go and look for something like hotels, the device would
 already know what kind of hotel they are looking for based on what
hotels they have picked in the past.“
Context comes from both human and physical elements the former is
emotional state, habits, interests, etc, while the latter is the user's
positions, light, pressure, noise, etc.
ADVANCED MACHINE LEARNING
In advanced machine learning, computers automate data processing
by learning and adapting. The end result is artificial intelligence.
Handling complex datasets requires deep neural nets (DNNs) that
allow computers to both act autonomously and perceive the world
on their own.
“DNNs enable hardware or software-based machines to learn for
themselves all the features in their environment, from the finest
details to broad sweeping abstract classes of content,“ says Gartner.

VIRTUAL ASSISTANTS
Hardware is dead it's software that's increasingly the agent of change,
so think of virtual personal assistants as the future faces of tech.
Google Now, Cortana, Alexa and Siri are just the beginning.
“Over the next five years we will evolve to a post-app world with
intelligent agents delivering dynamic and contextual actions and
 interfaces,“ says David Cearley, vice president and Gartner Fellow.
“IT leaders should explore how they can use autonomous things and
agents to augment human activity and free people for work that only
people can do. However, they must recognise that smart agents and
 things are a long-term phenomenon that will continually expand
their uses for the next 20 years.“

ADAPTIVE SECURITY ARCHITECTURE
With more digital businesses come more hackers, and with the birth
of a new threat landscape we're seeing the death of antivirus software.
 “The Volatile Cedar malware takes great strides to remain under the
 radar of leading antivirus solutions,“ says Curran.
As well as a 'stealth mode' where it lies dormant to evade detection,
Volatile Cedar is capable of sophisticated monitoring of system processes
 as well as a custom-built remote access Trojan.

BLUETOOTH BEACONS
Bluetooth-powered beacons AKA 'lighthouses' are now being installed
in shopping malls, museums, hotels, air ports and even offices that can
track the exact loca tion of a smartphone or smartwatch wearer, and
send them real-time noti fications.
So far it's been rather lamely talked up as a way of texting vouchers to
passing shoppers, but beyond mobile commerce the spread of intelligent,
wireless Bluetooth beacon hardware also means indoor mapping and more.
Think notifications of gate changes and train delays at airports and train
stations, handsfree payments, and multi-room music that follows you
around.

IOT PLATFORMS
Not a day goes by without some company stating that it's the best platform
 for the Internet of Things, but IoT devices will have an increasing need
for management, security and integration.
“IoT platforms constitute the work IT does behind the scenes from an
architectural and a technology standpoint to make the IoT a reality,“
says Gartner.

ADVANCED SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE
With the digital mesh and smart machines about to go ballistic, enter the
latest powerplay ­ ultraefficient neuromorphic architectures underpinned
by field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), which will allow computers
to run at speeds of over a teraflop.
“Systems built on GPUs and FPGAs will function more like human brains
that are particularly suited to be applied to deep learning and other
pattern-matching algorithms that smart machines use,“ says Cearley.
The result? Advanced machine learning will be present anywhere that
Internet of Things devices hang out, such as in homes, in cars,
on wristwatches... and even in humans.

Jamie Carter

MM23NOV15

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