quinta-feira, 26 de maio de 2011

Micro-Robotics Firefighting

Micro-Robotics is probably the topic that excites me more about future technologies.

You may find some articles I wrote about it in 2009 with the tittle of Micro-Machines. Now I see it wasn't very smart to use such an expression instead of micro-robotics.

It isn't so amazing to say that I identified some patterns 2 years ago, as most of them are a mash of science films and common knowledge about technologies and neural networks.

Now, very small automated machines are using the group orientation patterns to help fire-fighters detecting humans that may be trapped in a fire.

Certainly this decade will be full of great usages for micro-robotics, and this video is a great example.

The place is Carnegie Mellon which is no surprise.

quarta-feira, 4 de maio de 2011

Touch&Go Vs. Last Mile

Touch and Go is a psicologycal and cultural Trend that is becoming very powerful, and might be very destructive by it’s nature.

An easy way to understand is looking at how kids relate to their toys, specially Legos.

I am from a time, when kids didn’t have so many toys. We had plenty, but not so much that we could play with a toy just one time. Today it’s normal for a kid to receive so many toys that he plays with each one just one time. They assemble their puzzle or they Lego, then they disassemble it, and it goes straight to the shelf where it will stand indefinitely.

Now looking at grown-ups, we can spot the same pattern. For some it’s clothes, for other it’s technologies and phones. There is a buy it, try it and throw it pattern that is very common.

Some people would say that this is the face of capitalism and consumism, but it’s important to understand that this is a different kind of consumism. In the limit, this could bring to the end of the concept of property.

Previously, on this blog I have spoken about the reducing importance of property, and the touch&go culture which is very much related to the disengagement trend.

The good side about touch&go is that people are becoming more open minded, trying a little bit of everything which breaks a lot of communication barriers, like we had in the 90’s. The 90’s teenagers were divided between stereotypes: geeks, heavies, athletes, etc. It was harder than today for individuals from different groups to interact.

The down side is the incapability to practice the last mile effort. Last mile is a concept that relates to that little bit of extra effort, that so often makes the difference between failure and success. On sports it’s common to hear about it, when that lust push-up when your arms are hurting makes more benefit than all the others. On martial arts, a lot of athletes give up just before they get their black belt.

On Work and businesses, the last mile usually makes the difference between failure and success. There is a great cultural gap between going for sufficiency or making that extra effort, which makes all the difference.

If on some trends is good to go with the flow, on this specific trend is important for individuals and educators to understand this, and in a way contradict this trend within them.