2014 technologies that promise smarter devices
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With every new lifestyle comes the need for a new technology to meet our needs in home and work. The 20th century’s move from motor focused technology towards electrical marked a huge turning point when it came to what was essential for our daily lives, both practically and personally.
Technical innovators of course didn’t let 2014 pass without making their mark. Even if we don’t need them at this very moment there is no reason why we won’t in the future. Here we recall some of the innovations that have changed concepts of technology.
Batteries
The search for solutions to store
power in batteries poses one of the biggest challenges for
electronic devices. As 2015 begins it seems that the future of this
sector will be largely made up of chemical batteries that can
store large amounts of power, as well as lithium-ion
micro-batteries with nanowires, which can be recharged more
quickly, and can, in principle, store 30 to 40% more power than
other batteries.
Micro 3D printing
2014 saw micro 3D printing emerge
as something not so odd and elusive. Its evolution has seen
printing at different levels become available, using different
materials, including plastic and metal, that have made it useful
for printing and building huge structures. Using the micro
technology to print such materials makes it possible to manufacture
biological tissues, blood vessels, and ultra-precision equipment.
Its advantageousness reaches so far that NASA wants to use it
to print spare parts for its spaceships in
space.
Drones
Once the exclusive plaything of the
military world the drone has entered the civilian market,
especially with the development of the Quadcopter technique was
developed this year. Their small size and ability to manoeuvre and
transport, especially cameras. Its uses vary between delivering
items and postage to specific locations, capturing aerial images,
tracking traffic, detecting agricultural lands in order to
rationalize water consumption and improve production, and even
selfies!
Personal drones are not the end of the line though, soon they will be working as sensors. Of course, the abuse of such technologies needs to be monitored also (invasion of privacy as one).
Electronic memory
2014 saw tremendous advancement in
this field. The Solid-State Drive (SSD) which competes with hard
drives (HDD) for popularity witnessed progress in terms of its
capacity to hold additional memory space faster and with less
energy consumption, especially with the NAND-based flash memory
technology, which allows automatic data storage even in the case of
sudden power shutdowns. The SSD’s gradually decreasing prices also
contributed to its wider reach into laptops and other
devices.
Alternately the MicroSD memory also saw a boon with SanDisk producing in February a memory chip that can store up to 128 GB of data.
Neuromorphic chips
Microprocessors are increasingly
able to work like a human brain with its advancement in artificial
intelligence. Designed to process sensory data with images and
sounds they are now more able to respond to the changes in these
data in ways that are not pre-programmed. What that means? Machines
will soon be able to understand things and interact with them like
human beings by assessing the situation automatically.
While it might still be too early to talk about a comprehensive robot like the one in the 2004 movie ‘iRobot’, these processors can be leveraged by merging them with sensors and medical devices to track users’ vital data and response to treatments, or, to learn how to adjust doses or even detect diseases in their early stages. They can also be utilized in all electronic devices.
Virtual reality
If ‘The Matrix’ wasn’t enough to
convince you of how human entry into a machine was possible
then 2014 might have changed that for you. Oculus has developed a
headset that sends the user to a virtual world. Samsung
cooperated with Oculus to issue a Gear VR version of this device
that is compatible with its Note4 phone. Gear VR is nothing like
the Google glasses as it completely separates you from reality.
However, the development of this virtual reality headset is not
only aimed at games, by using it doctors could operate on patients
remotely while wearing it, and engineers could walk inside their
designs virtually.
Devices that can read brain signals
Helmets or electronic connectors
worn on the head these devices allow computers to read and
interpret brain signals. Although this concept is relatively old,
it got closerto reality, and to the consumer in 2014. The
most important thing about this innovation is that it has achieved
several medical successes, and people who suffer from quadriplegia,
complete paralysis, or brain strokes, are now managing to move
their own wheelchairs. Also worth mentioning is
what Lebanese students have achieved in
this field at the Seoul International Invention Fair 2014. This
technique allows the control of a robot arm, which creates great
solutions in terms of moving prosthetics too. Additionally the
technology provides the possibility of helping people who have lost
their sight to restore partial vision.
Wearables
This concept may have materialized before 2014, but it certainly witnessed a tremendous development this year, starting with watches, bracelets, glasses and lenses all the way through clothes, shoes, and other devices. Some are used in the health and sports fields to track the human body’s vital data such as the heart rate, calories, body temperature, and other data such as distances achieved, while others have become complementary to the capabilities of human beings such as the smart Google glasses which can for example help doctors go through the patient’s entire health record and many information they may otherwise overlook during surgical procedures.
When it comes to the capabilities of these devices there are no limits, particularly when most of them are connected to other smart devices like phones and computers. Their impact on society is obvious, and as we advance, so do our behaviors as we become more reliant on them.