Strategies for innovating into the future:
Global futurist and author Jack Uldrich offers essential strategic information on nanotechnology, robotics, biotechnology, RFID and many other future technologies to help you prosper as exponential trends converge at this unique moment in history.
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Chapter 7: Get in Touch with Your Animal Instincts
A Tale of Two Robots
Robots have always been a fun source of speculation about the future, and soon the speculation will get more interesting. This is because a number of innovative researchers are experimenting with different biological models for the creation of next-generation robots. For example, this article discusses how researchers are already mimicking the bones and muscles of humans to create more life-like robots, while this article reveals how other researchers have created a tiny swimming robot small enough to inspect the clogged drain pipe in your bathroom.
To better understand robots amazing potential, I invite you to watch the two very short videos posted below:
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The Robot Will See You Now
Jump the Curve Strategy #11: Park n’ Save with Robots
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To Survive the Future, The Publishing Industry Must Unlearn the Past
On August 5, 1949 Wag Dodge and a team of fire-fighters went into the Mann Gulch in Montana to battle a fire. The conditions were hot and dry. As evening approached, the fire changed directions and hot embers flew over the crew cutting off access to the Missouri River. It was soon apparent to everyone that they could not contain the fire.
Dodge and his fellow team members did the most logical thing and sprinted toward the top of the closest ridge. Soon the winds grew faster and the fire began advancing at a rate of 600 feet a minute. The crew dropped their gear and 50-pound packs in an attempt to run even faster.
Feeling the heat now pressing upon his back, it was clear to Dodge that he and his team weren’t going to make it to the ridge. He yelled at his men to stop. Either not hearing Dodge over the din of the roaring fire or thinking he had lost his mind, the men continued running. Dodge then did something even more incredible. He lit a fire.
As expected the dry brush quickly ignited and raced aheadof Dodge. With the larger fire still roaring down upon him, Dodge doused his handkerchief with water from his canteen, stepped into the still smoldering embers of his self-ignited fire, and laid down and began sucking up what little oxygen remained as the larger fire leapfrogged over the small patch of burnt land.
Amazingly, Dodge survived. Unfortunately, thirteen members of his crew did not. They couldn’t outrun the powerful fire.
Out of this disaster was born something positive. On that fateful day, Dodge inadvertently invented the escape fire—a tactic that is today standard operating procedure among forest firefighters—but which was created, literally, “in the heat of the moment.”
The story is relevant to the publishing world because, like a raging forest fire, continued exponential advances from the world of technology are going to continue to wreak havoc on the industry. For example, the first edition of the Amazon Kindle held 250 books. The second version—1500! It’s not going to stop there. Data storage capability is doubling roughly every 6 months. In other words, when Kindle 3.0 comes out, it will store 6,000 books. At this point, it is foolish for K-12 and post-secondary administrators not to use this technology.
Because of continued advances in bandwidth, it is already possible to download an electronic book in a minute. What this implies for textbook publishers is that rather than publishing annual updates, their authors can modify textbooks on the fly as new knowledge becomes available. Of course, this makes eminent sense because scientific and technical knowledge is now doubling every two years.
The changes won’t stop here. Advances in flexible electronics will make e-books easier and more enjoyable to use. The addition of color “digital” ink will make it feasible to include visual animations into books. The net impact is that books can become multi-media in nature. Is there really any reason why the printed word must stay confined to the printed word? No!
Another exciting technological advance I have written about before is Live Ink. The current paradigm for reading the printed word—in straight lines read from left to right (as you are doing right now)—was created because historically paper was a limited commodity. When the written word transfers to an electronic format, however, a new paradigm—such as Live Ink—can emerge.
Wikis, crowd-sourcing and collaboration will also continue to transform the publishing world; as will other unexpected advances in other areas. For a example, consider the following paragraph:
”Dave Striver loved the university--its ivy-covered clock towers, its ancient and sturdy brick, and its sun-splashed verdant greens and eager youth. The university, contrary to popular opinion, is far from free of the stark unforgiving trials of the business world: academia has its own tests, and some are as merciless as any in the marketplace of ideas. A prime example is the dissertation defense: to earn the Ph.D., to become a doctor, one must pass an oral examination on one’s dissertation. This was the test Professor Edward Hart enjoyed giving.”
As a writer, I think it is a fine piece of work and, like most good fiction, it seems to possess an aura of real- world experience. Here’s the problem--especially if you’re in the publishing world or if you are a writer like me—the paragraph was written by a computer program, dubbed StoryBook.
Change is coming to the publishing world and it is unlikely anyone is going to be able to outrun the technological winds fueling the conflagration. Like Wag Dodge, the best strategy is to take a match to your own industry and start thinking of an entirely new strategies for surviving. To do so, it will help if you can first unlearn.
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The Future is Creative
I recently finished reading the June 2009 edition of Fast Company. It is entitled “The 100 Most Creative People in Business” and I highly recommend it. If you don’t have the time but are interested in the future, I will provide links to two “must-read” profiles. The first is of Neri Oxman, a Presidential Fellow at the MIT Media Lab. I especially loved this quote of hers: “I believe that in 50 years buildings will be like biological tissues.”
The second profile is of Dr. Anthony Atala, Director of the Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, and a world leader in growing human tissues. I have always been a strong advocate of “thinking like a child,’ and I enjoyed this quote of Atala’s: “It was naive of me. But being naive helped me not accept the current dogma that tissue can’t grow outside the body.”
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A New Bio “Bible”
In my book, Jump the Curve, I dedicate a whole chapter to the idea that we can learn a great deal from Mother Nature. Well, now the Biomimicry Institute has just made the job of learning from biology that much easier. They have created a new website, AskNature.org. For more information, you may also want to read this article.
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The Future of Telecommunications in Six Videos
On Tuesday, I am traveling to Florida to give a speech on the future of the telecommunications industry. One of the bigger (and, to be honest, not terribly new) trends in the field is the continued growth of video. In the spirit of this trend, I’d like to offer you six different videos which, each in its own unique way, offers a glimpse into the future of the telecommunications industry. The first three are very cool, and the next three are more technical but still provide some very good information.
The first clip from Nokia offers an idea of what future mobile devices might look like:
The second offers an idea of how holographic information might become more pervasive:
The third video reviews how advances in algorithms and nerotechnology could lead to “voiceless” communication:
The next three clips review how terahertz transmissions, sensors and RFID technology could lead to some cool new applications for future mobile devices:
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There Will Also Be Robots on the Wall in the Future
I know I just wrote a post about the future of advertising being “on the wall,” but it is increasingly clear to me that there is going to be something else on our walls in the not-so-distant future—robots. Check out this new video from New Scientist:
The robot is slow and inflexible but it will improve. You might recall that just a few years ago Boston Dynamic’s Big Dog robot couldn’t even climb a six-inch curb. But as we saw in this impressive video BigDog has made some dramatic strides in the last two years and I predict that wall-climbing robots will see a similar amount of progress in the near future.
Interested in some other future-related posts about robots? Check out these recent posts:
Will Robots Have Tails?
Is the Future of an ATV a Robot
The Robot Will See You Now
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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Will Future Robots Have Tails?
Yesterday, I showed this cool video of Boston Dynamic’s very impressive BigDog robot. What was really impressive about the robot was its ability—if it was kicked or if it slipped on ice—to balance itself in real-time.
Well, it now appears that future robots might be able to improve upon this performance by simply adding a tail. According to this informative article in ScienceDaily scientists are now studying how the gecko uses its tail to keep its balance.
In addition to giving robots better balance it is thought that the geckos tail might provide the inspiration to also help unmanned aerial vehicles manuever more effectively in the air and assist astronauts manuever more effectively in space.
Looking for more bits of inspiration from the animal kingdom? Check out these past posts:
Bettle Biomimickry
A Little More Bio-inspiration
Follow the Ants
To Survive ... Change Diets
Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Biomimickry at its Best
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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Beetle Biomimickry
As regular readers know, I am fond of looking to the natural world for hints of where the future might be headed. To this end, I’d like to bring to your attention this wonderful article about the Hercules Beetle. Amazingly, the Hercules Beetle can carry up to 850 its own weight.
Alas, this post is not about mankind developing a device capable of lifting 850-times its weight (although I must admit that that would be pretty cool.) Rather, the Hercules Beetle has another interesting feature—its outer shell turns from green to black in humid environments. The reason this is important is because today there is no shortage of products—especially food stuffs—which can be damaged by humidity. One way to ensure that these products have not been compromised would be to create a new type of packaging that demonstrates the same property. Alternatively, sensors could be designed on the same basis and employed in food processing plants to monitor the moisture level.
My guess is that it is only a matter of a few years before “smart” packaging and sensors are a commercial reality
Looking for more bits of inspiration from the animal kingdom? Check out these past posts:
A Little More Bio-inspiration
Follow the Ants
To Survive ... Change Diets
Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Biomimickry at its Best
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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A Little More Bio-inspiration
Yesterday, I was in Hawaii and gave a keynote presentation to the Recreational Vehicle Industry Association. As part of my talk, I encouraged the group to seek inspiration from biology for next-generation breakthroughs. In this spirit, I’d like to bring to your attention this article about how the shipping industry is drawing inspiration from the petoral fin of the Bluegill sunfish to design a more efficient and manueverable propeller.
The moral of the story? Mother Nature has been designing things for billions of years and there is still much we can learn from her.
Looking for more bits of inspiration from the animal kingdom? Check out these past posts:
Follow the Ants
To Survive ... Change Diets
Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Biomimickry at its Best
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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An Exponential Encyclopedia
In my new book, Jump the Curve, I advise executives interested in understanding where the future is headed to scan the biological world for inspiration. For some 4 billion years evolution has been busy at work at creating innovative solutions to some vexing problems. For example, salamanders can re-grow limbs, geckos can climb walls, and octupus’ can shape-shift their bodies to fit through small crevices. In their own way, each of these examples can be applied to products or inventions in order to improve life for humans.
It now appears that the world is about to be the beneficiary of an exponential explosion of biological information thanks to the new Encyclopedia of Life project which is seeking to put on-line information about every species known to mankind. According to this article, the first 30,000 pages will go up on the web tomorrow. More significantly, however, the project hopes to place an additional 1.77 million descriptions within the decade—a 59-fold increase!
In other words, within the decade there will be an exponential explosionof biological information from which to seek “bio-inspiration.”
Looking for more bits of inspiration from the animal kingdom? Check out these past posts:
Follow the Ants ... or Not
To Survive ... Change Diets
Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Biomimickry at its Best
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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Follow the Ants … or Not
In my new book, Jump the Curve, I dedicate an entire chapter to the idea that business executives can learn a great deal from the biological world around us. One of the more interesting creatures I highlight is the humble ant.
According to this fascinating article from the London Telegraph, we can now add one more thing that the ant can teach us: It doesn’t alway pay to follow the person—or ant—in front of you!
According to the study, people have a frightening tendency to follow what the previous person did—regardless of whether their action is the best, most efficient or wisest course of action. One real world consequence of this behavior is that in the event of a fire people can mindlessly follow the crowd to their own demise.
One way to prevent being lead astray by the crowd is to borrow another trick from the ant’s bag of tricks. In many ant colonies there are a handful of “wild ants” or “pioneer ants” that purposely stray from the crowd. Often, it is these rogue ants that blaze new trails and, more importantly, find new sources of food.
In this same way, it is important for businesses to hire the equivalent of “wild ants”—free spirits if you will—who don’t conform to the crowd.
These people are not always easy to get along with (because they don’t conform), but they could very well be the key to your business’ future survival because they are the ones who are most likely to spot the new trends and blaze the new trails.
If you doubt me and are looking for a second opinion on this idea, I’d encourage you to consult the Good Book. Proverbs 6:6 reads: ”Go to the ant thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.” Be wise, indeed.
Looking for more bits of inspiration from the animal kingdom? Check out these past posts:
To Survive ... Change Diets
Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Biomimickry at its Best
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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To Survive … Change Diets
The University of San Diego is scheduled to publish a paper on the Argentine Ant later this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. What makes the study so fascinating is that the researchers have discovered that it is the Argentine Ant’s ability to change diets which has allowed it to not only survive but thrive in a variety of different environments. More specifically, the Argentine Ant is able to switch from a carnivorous, protein-rich diet (in which it eats other insects) to a carbohydrate, sugar-water diet as conditions change (or once it has devoured all of its competitors).
I mention this study because I think it is a wonderful methaphor to keep in mind as you seek to remain competitive in today’s Exponential Economy: To survive, you will need to possess the necessary flexibility to change diets on occasion. For example, in the health care sector companies might think they are in the disease “treatment” business, but as advances continue to accelerate in the fields of genomics, nanotechnology and information technology, these companies could find that they will need to become distributors of “preventive” health care information. Similarly, a number of traditional manufacturing companies might need to adopt a new business model as the field of rapid prototype manufacturing continues to progress.
The bottom-line is this: The real lesson of Darwinian evolution is not that the “Fittest” or the “strongest” survive. Rather, survival is more closely aligned with the ability to change and evolve quickly. The Argentine Ant is a case in point.
Related Posts
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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Swarm Intelligence Gets Even Smarter
Today’s New York Times has a fascinating article entitled ”From Ants to People, an Instinct to Swarm.” In my forthcoming book, Jump the Curve, I dedicate an entire chapter to the topic of biomimickry—which is just a fancy way of saying that we still have an amzing amount to learn from the natural world around us.
As the article explains, ants are an intriguing topic of study. For instance, has it ever occurred to you how thousands of individual ants are able to travel all over the place without ever getting into a traffic jam? The answer is that they follow a simple set of rules and have antennas that sweep the air and allow them to avoid collisons.
To me, this is interesting way to think about the future. I have written extensively on the possibility that robotic automobiles are fast becoming a reality. It never occurred to me that the robots might be designed with antennas which could allow them to become even better at avoiding collisions. Yet the more I think about it, the more reasonable it seems to me that the robotic cars of the future might be designed with ants in mind.
The entire field of applying swarm intelligence to robots is one of immense potential. Last week, Technology Review discussed how a company called Kiva Systems is using robots to deliver online orders faster. At the present time, the robots rely on sophisticated algorithms to avoid collisions. What if, however, these algorithms could be combined with antenna-like feelers or, alternatively, the algorithms could be improved through a better understanding of swarm intelligence? One likely outcome—which will impact almost every retailer—is that soon a lot more companies than just Staples and Walgreens will soon be using robots to fulfill online orders.
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Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future technology and future trends, nanotechnology, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and trade associations.
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Is the Future Really Drying Up?
The New York Times Magazine yesterday ran an article entitled, ”The Future is Drying Up” documenting the growing crisis over water in the western part of America. For the most part, it was a thoughtful and sobering look at a situation that desparately cries out for action. It is hard to argue with the fact that the region’s surging population is putting an enormous amount of pressure on the area’s dwindling water supply. The picture above of Lake Powell, alone, is quite telling.
Nevertheless, the article has a major fault: it barely touches on technology’s ability to help address—and potentially alleviate—this problem. Now, I’m not suggesting that people in the region should count on a quick, technological fix to their situation; but, at the same time, I believe it is silly to not acknowledge how various emerging technologies might help resolve this problem. More specifically, I take offense with the author’s suggestion that to even look at technological solution is, and I quote, “almost certainly the wrong way to think about the situation.”
To my way of thinking this is yet another example of linear thinking -- or what I describe as a view of the world that is almost incapable of understanding how emerging technologies might radically reshape the environment around us.
For example, new advances in sensor technology will help people better monitor their water usage. These same sensors can be used to more accurately price water. If people know both how much water they are using and how much it costs, my prediction is that water usage will decrease.
Secondly, because agriculture is the biggest source of water consumption, I find it troubling that the author didn’t at least acknowledge how new advances in genetically modified corn and wheat might lead to new strains of crops that need little water.
Third, new advances in wind and solar power might drive down the cost of powering desalination plants to the point where some water can be economically shipped from the Pacific Ocean to Arizona and Colorado. Related to this point, new advances in nanotechnology might also improve filtering technology. Again, such advances might make desalination a more viable solution.
Finally, new advances in nanomaterials could lead to some very innovative applications in how people get there water in the future. For instance, this piece explains how researchers are studying how the African beetle can collect water droplets from the air. The implication is that large swaths of the material (which would mimics the beetle’s wing) might capture enough water everynight to fill a bath tub or wash a load of clothes.
Again, I want to make it clear that I am not advocating people take no action to address this serious problem, my point is that when assessing any situation it is important to view the world not just as it is today, but as it will be in 10, 25 and 50 years.
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequent speaker on future trends, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and associations.
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Build It With Nano-Steel
Researchers at the University of Michigan have created a new composite plastic that it as strong as steel but which is significantly lighter. As an added benefit, it is also transparent. I won’t bore you with the details of how this new nano-plastic is created (although if you’re interested I’d encourage you to read this piece), but, as I stress in my book, Jump the Curve, executives and managers in a variety of different industries need to familiarize themselves with such advances in the field of material science because they offer ample opportunities to improve existing products as well as develop entirely new ones.
For instance, in the medical profession, a great many hip, knee and joint replacements today use expensive titanium as the material of choice. This new nano-plastic could offer patients lighter alternative which might also be more biocompatible and, thus, less susceptible to infections and scaring. Similarly, executives in the automobile industry could utilize the material to construct cars which are lighter, safer and more fuel efficient; while architects might be able to ”jump the curve” and design new buildings with amazing new properties by tapping into the transparency and strength characteristics of this new nano-plastic.
Jack Uldrich is a writer, futurist, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business. He is also a frequenter speaker on future trends, innovation, change management and executive leadership to a variety of businesses, industries and non-profit organizations and associations.
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Biomimicry at its Best
In my forthcoming book, Jump the Curve, I devote an entire chapter to the field of Biomimicry—or the idea that people in business can gain useful insights by studying Mother Nature. A recent edition of The Economist had a useful article along these lines entitled ”Borrowing from Nature”.
One sentence in particular caught my attention. It was about how today’s builders and architects don’t create closed-loop systems. It read: “Instead, man-made systems tend to be linear, consuming raw materials at one end and producing waste at the other. The result is a gradual depletion of natural resources.”
I would like to focus on the word “linear.” As I say in my book, if builders and architects (and other businesses as well) want to survive in the 21st century they need to start thinking different. In short, they can’t afford to think linearly, they need to think exponentially.
The article goes to highlight an architectural firm by the name of Grimshaw that offers a wonderful example of “jumping the curve” and thinking exponentially. The company is now designing a new building that will not only be carbon neutral, it will actually generate income by using waste to heat during the winter months. (When waste breaks down in large composting units it reaches temperatures of 75 Celsius or 167 Fahrenheit). Not only does this smart step cut down on the building’s energy bill, the owner will actually be able to make money because it can take waste that would normally cost $40 a ton to dispose at a landfill and instead pocket that money for itself—while at the same time is uses that waste to heat the building.
Jack Uldrich is a writer, public speaker and host of jumpthecurve.net. He is the author of seven books, including Jump the Curve and The Next Big Thing is Really Small: How Nanotechnology Will Change the Future of Your Business, and speaks frequently on future trends, innovation, change management, nanotechnology, robotics, RFID technology and executive leadership to the architecture and building industries.
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