The document discusses various topics related to emerging technologies including the internet of things, health internet of things, business intelligence, and more. Specific links and sources are provided on intelligent toothbrushes and glasses, the internet of everything, Intel's overview of IoT, Gartner reports on emerging technologies and the business intelligence market.
5. HIT
health internet of things
http://quantifiedself.com/2011/02/hit--health-internet-of-things/
6. HIT
1. Teeth. Toothbrushes that will measure fluoride, remember cavities and discoloration, and notify you of bad breath.
2. Eyes. Glasses that will monitor your eyesight and advise correction.
3. Hair. Combs which screen the follicles, report on dandruff density, scan for fungus or lice, and count the hairs (hair
loss).
4. Bottom. Toilets that will test excrements, both liquid and solid. Feces will be graded following the Bristol Stool scale.
5. Chest. Airport scanners that will broadcast their results to your phone.
6. Body. Clothes that will be intelligent because the fibers will compute, and that will visualize your body language.
7. Underbelly. A new field of underwearables that will integrate markers for early detection of cancers or other anomalies.
8. Forearms. Shirts that will screen the microbiome on your forearms (40x more than our own cells).
9. Neck. Collars that will chemically analyse your sweat.
10. Ear. Earphones that will measure your hearing and analyze the emotional level of people you are listening to (sound
analysis already allows that!), interesting for total communication (i.e. beyond words and including body language).
11. Heart. Pacemakers and stents that will broadcast data to the cardiologist plus ECG (CORVENTIS).
12. Nose. Tissues that will examine snot and mucus when you blow your nose.
13. Chin. Razors that will plot the surface of the skin looking for acne.
14. Lips. Balm that will scan for cold sores.
15. Tongue. Tongue scrapers that will screen salivary microbes (the oral microbiome).
16. Back. Chairs that will plot your posture and broadcast data for your spine.
17. Nails. Nail cutters that will determine the quality of your nails and count the ridges.
18. Feet. Step counters (FITBIT).
19. Pulse. Heart rate monitors (GARMIN).
20. Brain. Headsets that will measure electrical activity in the form of alpha, beta, delta and theta waves (Emotivs EPOC).
http://quantifiedself.com/2011/02/hit--health-internet-of-things/
10. 1. Teeth. Toothbrushes that will measure fluoride, remember cavities and discoloration, and notify you of bad breath.
2. Eyes. Glasses that will monitor your eyesight and advise correction.
3. Hair. Combs that will screen the follicles, report on dandruff density, scan for fungus or lice, and count the hairs (hair
loss).
4. Bottom. Toilets that will test excrements, both liquid and solid. Feces will be graded following the Bristol Stool scale.
5. Chest. Airport scanners that will broadcast their results to your phone.
6. Body. Clothes that will be intelligent because the fibers will compute, and that will visualize your body language.
7. Underbelly. A new field of underwearables that will integrate markers for early detection of cancers or other anomalies.
8. Forearms. Shirts that will screen the microbiome on your forearms (40x more than our own cells).
9. Neck. Collars that will chemically analyse your sweat.
10. Ear. Earphones that will measure your hearing and analyze the emotional level of people you are listening to (sound
analysis already allows that!), interesting for total communication (i.e. beyond words and including body language).
11. Heart. Pacemakers and stents that will broadcast data to the cardiologist plus ECG
(CORVENTIS).
12. Nose. Tissues that will examine snot and mucus when you blow your nose.
13. Chin. Razors that will plot the surface of the skin looking for acne.
14. Lips. Balm that will scan for cold sores.
15. Tongue. Tongue scrapers that will screen salivary microbes (the oral microbiome).
16. Back. Chairs that will plot your posture and broadcast data for your spine.
17. Nails. Nail cutters that will determine the quality of your nails and count the ridges.
18. Feet. Step counters (FITBIT).
19. Pulse. Heart rate monitors (GARMIN).
20. Brain. Headsets that will measure electrical activity in the form of alpha, beta, delta and theta waves (Emotivs EPOC).
15. What is Big Data?
Big data refers to data scenarios
that grow so large (petabytes and
more) that they become awkward to
work with using traditional database
management tools.
The challenge stems from data
volume + flow velocity + noise to
signal conversion.
Big data is spawning new tools that
are mix of significant processing
power, parallelism and statistical,
machine learning, or pattern
recognition techniques
17. BIO
biotech; biochips; bioprinting; human augmentation
SMART
smart advisors; smart cities; smart dust (missing from
this years list); smart government; smart grid; smart
machines; smart robots; connected home; wearable
devices in smart government
PEOPLE-CENTRIC
people centric experiences; citizen developer; citizen
experience; corporate social responsibility; digital
workplace; virtual care
https://etechlib.wordpress.com/tag/emerging-technologies/
18. Gartner Emerging Technologies
Hype Cycle report 2015
no longer
technology-literate people
fast becoming
people-literate technology
http://www.gartner.com/document/3063817
19. INTEL http://iotworm.com/intel-internet-of-things-full-overview/
HIT http://quantifiedself.com/2011/02/hit--health-internet-of-things/
IBM A smarter planet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfEbMV295Kk
Stephen Wolfram https://youtu.be/owGEpJ1F7-o
MSL Business Intelligence http://blog.mslgroup.com/the-internet-of-things-and-the-age-of-sensors/
DIKW-Knowledge pyramid http://jepoirrier.org/2011/12/12/1175/
Gartner Hype Cycle-Emerging technologies www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/3114217
BusinessIntelligence http://practicalanalytics.co/2011/04/24/gartner-says-bi-and-analytics-a-10-5-bln-
market/
People-literate technology https://etechlib.wordpress.com/tag/emerging-technologies/
Image credits:
Editor's Notes
Connectivity or Networking
The fundamental base of Internet of things is to get your daily use devices connected to the cloud. Using this technology you can easily get your daily use device at home (like security system, door sensors, light sensors and so on) or at your business (like Plant and machinery, data storage and analysis, Retail & Logistics etc.) to get connected to cloud and give allow you centralized management & control.
1.Teeth. Toothbrushes that will measure fluoride, remembercavities and discoloration, and notify you of bad breath.
2. Eyes. Glasses that will monitor your eyesight and advise correction.
3. Hair. Combs that will screen the follicles, report on dandruff density,scan for fungus or lice, and count the hairs (hair loss).
4. Bottom. Toilets that will test excrements, both liquid and solid. Feceswill be graded following the Bristol Stool scale.
5. Chest. Airport scanners that will broadcast their results to your phone.
6. Body. Clothes that will be intelligent because the fibers will compute, and thatwill visualize your body language.
7. Underbelly. A new field of underwearables that will integrate markers forearly detection of cancers or other anomalies.
8. Forearms. Shirts that will screen the microbiome on your forearms (40xmore than our own cells).
9. Neck. Collars that will chemically analyse your sweat.
10. Ear. Earphones that will measure your hearing and analyze the emotionallevel of people you are listening to (sound analysis already allows that!),interesting for total communication (i.e. beyond words and including bodylanguage).
11. Heart. Pacemakers and stents that will broadcast data to the cardiologist plus ECG
(CORVENTIS).
12. Nose. Tissues that will examine snot and mucus when you blow your nose.
13. Chin. Razors that will plot the surface of the skin looking for acne.
14. Lips. Balm that will scan for cold sores.
15. Tongue. Tongue scrapers that will screen salivary microbes (the oralmicrobiome).
16. Back. Chairs that will plot your posture and broadcast data for your spine.
17. Nails. Nail cutters that will determine the quality of your nails and count theridges.
18. Feet. Step counters (FITBIT).
19. Pulse. Heart rate monitors (GARMIN).
20. Brain. Headsets that will measure electrical activity in the form of alpha, beta, delta and theta waves (Emotivs EPOC).
edit to start at 11 seconds in..finish at 4m30s about?