Showing posts with label new generation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new generation. Show all posts

Monday, 19 January 2015

3D Printing: Now and the Future

3D Printing: Now and the Future
Somewhere, over a mountain range, a failing airplane part needs to be replaced. What if, instead of waiting for someone to discover the problem during a routine safety check, the part could signal for its own replacement, create a record of its flaws and set into motion an evolution of its own stronger, future predecessor? Upon landing, the improved part, printed while the flight was still in the air, could be installed.

Is this is a fantasy, or a realistic picture of the future? Will flexible, one piece machines make today’s assemblages of rigid parts look like antiques? It’s one thing to imagine machines evolving, but what about people? The way we see ourselves and the world might soon seem ancient as well. As manufacturing and fabrication methods continue to evolve, inspired by biology itself, in an ever-closer relationship between the physical and digital, the distant future of what it means to be human might look as radically different as the distant past--only faster. What kind of world will this be when hermit crabs resembling famous landmarks are the new normal?
What Innovation Looks Like
The future seems less far away and more bespoke every day. And it will be filled with new characters, like these from the Bold Machines project, an animated film called Margo.
As with most advances that end up radically changing the world, 3D printing might seem like silly fun to those who haven’t been closely following the industry. Technology is improving at a rapid clip, however, and new methods for improving manufacturing techniques are constantly being announced.
Many of the jobs of the future don’t exist yet, but the Department of Energy is already focused on creating the skills that will fill the need with a program to train workers. Already, there are robots made entirely of 3D printed parts. The FDA recently approved 3D printing for facial implants, an economical way to create options for patients in developing nations or those with specific needs that can be best met with a customized prosthesis, and a 12-year-old Chinese boy with bone cancer has a 3D printed spine, which will enable him to walk again after spending two months lying flat in a hospital bed.
Random Mutations
Jordan Husney, Strategy Director at Undercurrent, does things like explore biorobotics through the creation of remote controlled Venus Flytraps and work onthis pen for a transformative museum visitor experience. He was instrumental in one of GE’s first forays into 3D printing, a Grabcad contest facilitated by Undercurrentthat offered the engineers and others who use the site a chance to optimize, through what is known as “additive manufacturing,” a heavy bracket similar to those in a jet engine. A winner was chosen from 659 entries. GE has continued to develop itscapacity for 3D printing engine parts. Husney’s conclusion? Hardware is beginning to act like software.
Husney told me something about one of the contest entries that grabbed my imagination. The bracket design came paired with an algorithm that generated random genetic mutations so the part could evolve in response to environmental pressures.
In Episode 2 of Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s spectacular new Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, genetic mutations and natural selection are explored in a way that brings the process to life. In addition to the random mutation that happens without our intervention, humans have long selected traits in order to guide transformation in animals and plants. The examples are many. We turned wolves into dogs, for example, and we’ve been genetically modifying agricultural products since the Sumerians and Babylonians. The creation of algorithms and machines capable of directing their own evolution is a radical new dimension unique to this period in human history. The earliest stage of genetic manufacturing, the creation of material that can assemble itself from a genetic blueprint, is underway.
“When things become digital, the pace of evolution rapidly increases,” Husney said. “Feedback loops become much tighter. As the pace increases, a much broader diversity of experimentation takes place.”
Additive manufacturing, he said, will rock your retail base.
The Arrival of a Mini-Me
Earlier this year, a box arrived at Science House with a very tiny version of me inside. Small enough to fit in the palm of my hand, the sandstone statue wore the lilac colored scarf, black boots and jeans I’d been wearing the day I was scanned byShapeways at the Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) to generate the 3D file that would be used to print a copy.
In the future, however, a replica won’t just be made of gypsum powder, dye and superglue, like the 5,000 tiny statues of people who attended the exhibit at MAD. We may get new organs printed, manufactured in a variety of ways, perhaps including dissolvable blood vessel networks printed in sugar to help those organs function.
Currently, 3D printers only create objects using a single material at a time. The world of 3D printing is going to change radically, Shapeways evangelist Duann Scott said, when machines can print using multiple materials simultaneously, enabling people to take ideas and turn them into products with time being the creators’ only investment. I use Shapeways to create my Treasure of the Sirens amphorae in precious metals including bronze, gold and platinum. The amphorae were pulled up from the sea. Ancient shipwrecks surround my ancestral island, where the mythological sirens once perched on black volcanic rocks to sing their songs about the future. Are the sirens real? Judge for yourself. I know for sure that the amphorae are, thanks to technology mixed with imagination.
Shapeways participated in the launch of Google’s #MadeWithCode project, during which girls heard from Mindy Kaling and Chelsea Clinton about coding and then created their own customized 3D printed bracelets. The company also just announced a partnership with Hasbro for printing copyrighted characters. Here’s hoping that this glimpse of the future will create an army of children who want to create the world they can imagine. Some of them are already well on their way.

Saturday, 13 December 2014

Is Facebook Getting Less Cool?

Is Facebook Getting Less Cool?


“My goal was never really to make Facebook cool,” Zuckerberg said. “I am not a cool person, and I’ve never really tried to be cool. Our model for Facebook has never been to try to make it particularly exciting to use — we just want to make it useful.”

Why Facebook forced users to install the Facebook Messenger app

“Even it was a short-term painful thing to ask people to install a separate messaging app, we knew we could never deliver a quality experience inside Facebook as a tab. We needed to build a dedicated and focused experience,” explained Mark.

With the emphasis on Paid Advertising, when will the organic reach for Facebook Business pages return?

“As time goes on, people are just sharing more things on Facebook. Each person might read 100 stories from friends and pages a day. There is just more competition. There are about 1,500 stories a day that they could see in the News Feed and they only see about hundred. Less than 10% of what people are posting the person will get in the feed. Only the highest quality content will get through.”

How accurate was the movie Social Network compared to the real life story of Facebook

“I found it hurtful. One important piece of context is the woman I’m married to who I’ve been dating for ten years; I was dating her before starting Facebook. If somehow I was trying to create Facebook to find more women, that probably wouldn’t have gone over well in my relationship.”

Entrepreneurship

“The best entrepreneurs who I’ve met don’t really start companies because their goal is to build a company. They do it because they want to make a change in the world and help people.”

Team and leadership

“The thing that got me through it and I think gets a lot of people through it is the people around them. There is no super human ability that anyone has. It’s hard to do things on your own… so many challenges and there are going to be many things that you don’t know how to do. Find a team of people, friends or family and there will be different people over time… People like to focus on different problems or skills… Find people who share your passion.”

Why Zuckerberg is always wearing that one shirt

“I’m in this really lucky position where I get to wake up every day and help serve more than 1 billion people, and I feel like I’m not doing my job if I spend any of my energy on things,” Zuckerberg said. “Even though it kind of sounds silly that that’s my reason for wearing a gray t-shirt every day, it also is true.”
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Sunday, 7 December 2014

Google Wants Kids to Search the Darndest Things

Article cover image
Kids say the darndest things — and what they do say may make Google's search engine something of a mind reader.
Search engines already finish your sentences. Start typing "president" into Google or Bing or Yahoo and you're immediately presented choices you may have been thinking of. But, as you see from the examples below, the choices vary widely:
They also assume some pretty non-obvious things, like I am interested in politics, or in a particular president — or, as in the case of Bing, that I am a Turkish national?
Also, that I am probably an adult.
What if Google knew more about me before I touched a key?
A newly-revealed initiative by Google may be an important building block for an enhanced search engine that could further zero in on what I really want to know. In a lengthy interview with USA Today, Google VP of Engineering Pavni Diwanji talks about a "Google for Kids" initiative that would tailor some products for the under-13 set.
While she talks about protecting and serving kids (and their parents) it's not hard to connect some dots. This is a powerful way to achieve something it failed to do with Google+ — learn who its users are.
Diwanji recounts a story involving her own daughter, who pointed out the biggest flaw in the world's most-used search engine. It happened when she Googled 'trains.' "She came to me and said, 'Mommy, you should tell Google about Thomas the Tank Engine, because Google obviously doesn't know about him.'"
The secret to robust search is context, but greatness in search is requiring the searcher to provide as little ad hoc context as possible. It's a good first guess that you might be searching for something others are — hence those predictive type ahead suggestions.
But with more implied context, search can serve up better results. And nobody wants to craft Boolean sentences to refine the yield. We all want to live by the motto: "Do what I mean — not what I say."
Children are a great focus group. Kids searching the darndest things could inform other customizations that will yield results based on the data about me and only me: that I am a fireman, don't eat meat, or own a classic car. Relevant things that I wouldn't even think to mention in any given search session.
Backchannel Editor in Chief Steven Levy, author of "Inside the Plex," sees this as a natural fit. "What Google seems to want to do for children is very much in the spirit of what it wants to do for all of us — show us personalized results," he wrote in reply to an email.
Sure, there are privacy concerns (which Diwanji acknowledges), especially when it comes to targeting children. Google's entire business model is about looking over our shoulders to profile us for marketers, which is why special care and special laws are required when children are involved.
But I think this is a right-headed effort that doesn't exploit children. It leverages their unique thought processes to come up with answers for questions we wouldn't know to ask without them. The array of Google products tailored for children (not clear yet what they will all be) will be controlled by a parental dashboard, not by little Billy and Mary.
Is this right-track / wrong track? Will — should — the other search engines do something similar?