Tuesday, April 26, 2016

TECHNOLOGY

Researching future technology was an interesting task, especially when I came across a website titled “10 Nightmare Scenarios from the Internet of Things”.  This website had different scenarios such as robots taking over the world,  Google glass privacy issues, stalking techniques used through your phone, drones causing chaos by shipping illegal orders to your house, your self-driving car turning into “Christine” the killer car from the 1983 movie, etc.  

Now remember, these seemed a bit outlandish and scary but were at the same time believable to some extent.  #3 on their list caught my attention.  It was called “Grosse Point Blackout” and talked about a hitman and the options he could offer to take someone down.  The dialogue went something like this: “’So you’ll do it? You’ll take the job?’  The man glances around the bar before replying.  ‘You want it to look like an accident, right?  No problem.  I can do tire blowouts, brakes—and not the old-school detectable cuts, either, I can hack them.  Does he have a bad ticker?  Sugar problems, maybe?  That would be primo.  Pacemakers are easy to hack; insulin pumps aren’t much harder.  Anyway, all doable, no physical evidence.  Everything talks to everything else these days.  But it’s going to cost’”  

Now wait a minute—someone can hack into a pacemaker or insulin pump?!  I wear an insulin pump, and I rely on it to save my life—literally!   The thought of someone being able to mess with the settings on my pump is extremely unnerving to me.  I really work to monitor my diabetes with blood sugar testing and the functions my pump performs.  Going to sleep at night and hoping for the best is sometimes scary enough in itself.  The thought of someone being able to take my life by hacking is crazy….and yet doable?! 

Writing about technology that can potentially hack into pacemaker and insulin pump settings, control most devices, connect all gadgets to speak the same language electronically would definitely affect social media.  We have technology that enables ‘smart’ devices to talk to each other.  For example:  Imagine having a home that tracks everywhere you go through your vehicle, then automatically heats up to your preferred temperature before you get home?  
How about having a toaster that talks to your refrigerator and announces when breakfast is ready through television?  Who wouldn’t want to program their washer or robot vacuum to perform while you are at work? 
Think about a toothbrush that monitors your children’s use of it and sends you, the parent, that data?  


These things may seem either really cool or really creepy to you, depending on how you feel about it.  Many regular objects around us are being created to connect to networks, communicating with mobile devices and each other to form what’s being called an “Internet of Things”, or IoT.  Many ‘smart’ creations are being devised; homes, cars, clothing, factories, electronic gadgets, (pacemakers / insulin pumps), and pretty much anything else you can imagine!  

Here’s the problem:  Most ‘Internet of Things’ have struggled with wireless issues  and brands.  Many products can communicate with their own apps, but haven’t found a way to communicate with other company’s products.   It’s just a matter of time---it will happen! 
 A company called “Qualcomm” is working on a project to link all pieces.  Its platform, called AllJoyn, could act as a universal translator for the industry.  Their goal is to connect devices from different manufacturers.  The only way this will work is if companies all over the world are willing to cooperate and work with other brands, i.e. their competitors.
  
How will this affect social media?  How could it NOT may be a better question to pose?  If all our devices are linked according to where we are, what we are doing, etc. our social media platforms will also be reflecting these locations, activities and adjusting automatically to our every whim, and even thought.  (Locations are already in existence on our phones, but technology to communicate with our devices using brain waves is being worked on as we speak!)  Who knows, maybe social media will reflect what is on our mind?  Now THAT is a really scary thought!




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