Endless childhood - Futurecasting Global Travel
This blog will speculate on the intersections of cultural identity, technology, innovation, and travel. An example might be the invention of a universal ID that is an application on your phone. How would each country apply the law, implement the technology, reflect its values in its implementation?
Sunday, June 6, 2021
Motorcycle AI and Suit integration
In the early 90’s, a technological revolution was
underway. Walkman cassette players were
replaced by Discman CD-players, transistor radios became smaller and smaller
and VHS (after overcoming Betamax) was overwhelmed by the invention of the DVD. But somewhere between VHS and DVD, was the
Laserdisc. My dad bought us one, it was
simply amazing to behold. The disc could
have been used as a weapon; it was heavy, sturdy and had a different metallic sheen
than CD’s or DVD’s. They were as big as
albums and packaging was designed the same way for some, like big DVD’s for
others. They harked back to older times
for those who missed the dominance of albums, they presented a nostalgia. VHS knew that it’s days were over but a new
standard had not yet been chosen. Laserdisc
was pushed heavily by Sony, but it wasn’t the powerhouse then as it is now so
adoption was slow. Laserdisc technology
was years better than TV’s of the period could resolve so there was massive
amounts of space on the disc for extra content or even other movies. This was a period where there was a device
for everything and folks would have had to go out and buy ANOTHER thing that
was going to be obsolete in a few years…this was a huge hurdle for Laserdisc
manufacturers. Available movies were
restricted to just a few available titles at Blockbuster, it seemed it was a
competitor even with DVD’s being pushed alongside.
Then streaming
video took off.
The
potential impact of the concept of a seminal idea derailing all development is
the fear. Technological improvements could
change the shape of the helmet or dispense with it altogether as there have
been some advances on inflatable crash helmets that deploy only in
emergencies. The display could
potentially be reduced to a set of sunglasses, contacts or grown in place
within the pupil.
Cultural
changes would be required as this technology would likely not stay on motorcycles
as people would feel more connected with their environment and would be more
interactive with the same. However,
people in the rest of society may have some issues with faceless people walking
around them recording everything they see. This would be a cultural problem but
one that, interestingly, may not be too much of one given COVID and the
preponderance of people wearing masks.
This and the potential need for police and firefighters to have similar
face shields would drive innovation further in this direction,
Friday, April 30, 2021
Impossible Dreams
CS875:
Futuring and Innovation
James
Thomas Vandiveer
Unit
3 Discussion 2
Instructor:
Dr. Cynthia Calongne
April
30, 2021
This assignment is after DB1 where we
discussed the differences between forecasting and scenario planning, so that
information will be heavy on my mind during this discussion. Forecasting and predictions in business
context can depend on the goals of the exercise, the future time frame, and the and
the perceived probability of risk.
Past thinkers and futurists have studied the future,
what is now the present, and made predictions based on the velocity of the
changes they perceived in their time.
Many of the predictions made were pure fiction with no basis, for
example, Jules Verne and his concept of the hollow earth. Other predictions were much, much closer to
the mark. For example, in 1953, Ray
Bradbury wrote Fahrenheit 451, a dystopian novel of the future where the
symbiosis between man and machine was explored in a series of vignettes. In this novel, Bradbury explored the growing
connectivity to technology and the social isolation of the human being among
the sea of information. More specifically,
he predicted the invention of earbuds and Bluetooth headsets which look like
seashells and produce a near-constant stream of technobabble to include news,
entertainment, music…whatever is desired.
More than 70 years later, earbuds have reached the masses, and reality mirrors
science fiction.
Two of the forces that have impacted this technological success have been technological and sociological. Many of the supporting technologies had to be
developed to allow for the creation of this device. The Internet had to be invented and bandwidth
to the endpoint had to be sufficient for music, data, and video. Further, cellular phones had to be improved
to transmit/receive this constant data stream, but Bluetooth had to be invented
so the devices could talk. Earphone
technology had to become more miniaturized so that all the components could fit
within the user’s ear. Lastly, the software
had to be written to tie all these disparate technologies together, not to
mention the software ecosystem on the internet to generate the quantity of programming
to ensure widespread demand and adoption by society. It is interesting in retrospect that porn was
the main driver of widespread video streaming on the internet and for personal
devices, for without this base human vice, it is highly likely that the realm
of the internet would have remained a University developed and hosted service a
la BBS’s. However, that is another fully
researched and discussed topic entirely and is outside the scope of this
paper. If past performance holds true,
our next breakthrough will be realistic full-sensory virtual reality, but
widespread adoption will not occur until the masses can use it to augment and
escape their reality. Several books and movies
come to mind, but Total Recall captures the concept perfectly.
References
Bradbury,
R. (1967). Fahrenheit 451. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
The Color Purple - A Victorian Innovation Story
For this post, I wanted
to write on something that I was not aware of as an accident. Because so many of our modern inventions are
spoken about incessantly, I had to go back a little further, to Victorian
England and the emergence of modern chemistry and its effect on the world of
fashion.
William Henry Perkin was an 18-year-old college student
enrolled at London’s Royal College of Chemistry in the year 1856. During this period, exploration of Africa was
exploding as the discovery of Quinine had allowed European colonizers to
effectively treat malaria and it was no longer a fatal illness. The Dutch had cornered the market on the
primary ingredient of quinine, cinchona bark, and other imperial powers of the
time were seeking other ways to create quinine without the use of this required
ingredient. (Quinine., 2021) Enter Mr.
Perkin, young, eager to impress his teacher with an inquisitive mind, a
willingness to experiment with his chemistry set at home and an impossible task:
to find a cheap way to produce quinine without cinchona bark.
One of Perkin’s experiments towards this end was to use coal
tar, the substance that remains when Victorian gas lighting is used. At the time, chemists believed coal tar and
quinine were made up of the same chemicals or were of similar structures. After experimenting with the coal tar, he was
unsuccessful in transforming it into quinine, rather his alchemy has altered it
into a thick black goo, a far cry from the clear property of quinine. Likely disappointed, he went to clean up his
experiment and found the residue was a brilliant purple color, it was easily
transferred to cloth and the cloth retained the stain. Mr. Perkin had figured out a way to create
industrial dye in large quantities and with brilliant and colorful
properties. Mauve was born…right into
the largest cultural fashion craze of the time as purple was the most desired,
most expensive, and typically dull and quick to fade with the existing natural
dyes. Mauve made form Perkin’s process
was cheap, brilliant and the first synthetic dye in history. Now, a regular woman of the period could
afford to wear the most fashionable styles as they suddenly became affordable
to the masses. (CNN., 2017)
Mr. Perkin’s discovery destroyed an industry that used natural
materials to make dyes and in the process was able to bring about efficiencies
in production and cost savings to build a business. In fact, during a period where chemistry was
looked upon as a scientific curiosity with no material value, he monetized it
and built an industry out of producing synthetic dyes. He could not have come upon this invention at
a better time. Not only was purple the choice of color in the spring of 1856,
he was also physically located in the heart of the Industrial Revolution and
the manufacturing efficiencies of process gained from the same. (CNN., 2017)
References:
Quinine. (2021, April 28). In Wikipedia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinine
The color purple: How an accidental
discovery changed fashion forever. (2017, August 29). In CNN.
https://edition.cnn.com/style/article/perkin-mauve-purple/index.html
Friday, April 9, 2021
About nothing - an intro to the futuring of global travel
Since my wife and I moved to the USA, we've noticed a lot of cultural differences, some better, some worse, most strange since it had been several years since I've lived in the USA. You can never truly know a place until you live there, and the USA has become a difficult place to live in.
In Europe, the housing costs are high but you are buying a concrete property that will last for hundreds of years. In the USA, a new home for the same cost will fall down in 40 years. In Europe, they have an amazingly low-cost health insurance system that is also efficient. Here in the US, our system is expensive, hard to navigate, and designed to funnel large amounts of money into the healthcare system. These are just some of the differences we've noticed culturally speaking. There have also been some technological differences as well as legal ones.
One of the most interesting ones that reflected the social differences between the USA and Europe was the Lane Assist feature that many newer vehicles have. When I rented a Peugeot in Brussels, I enjoyed playing with the lane assist feature by letting go of the wheel and ping-ponging around the lane. Alternatively, it was interesting to feel how much pressure I had to apply to force the steering wheel to turn enough to change lanes (a lot!) without using the turn signal.
Alternatively, here in the USA, I rented a car that had this feature. The feature on the American car embodies the American Ideal, "You Can't Tell Me What To Do!". It offers little more than a suggestion before it gives up completely when you change lanes without signaling. As for it stopping you from running off the road? Nope! No "ping-ponging" here, you're going right off the road with maybe a little annoying beep as everyone in your car dies screaming, except grandpa, he's sleeping and driving.
There are similar differences with mass transit, air travel, buses, trains...I hope to be able to share some of the experiences my wife and I have had traveling the world and I hope to be able to use that insight into their culture to speculate on how different methods of future travel or the process of traveling might look...IN THE FUTURE!!!!! :)
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CS875: Futuring and Innovation James Thomas Vandiveer Unit 3 Discussion 2 Instructor: Dr. Cynthia Calongne April 30, 2021 ...
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Since my wife and I moved to the USA, we've noticed a lot of cultural differences, some better, some worse, most strange since it had be...