Title: The Future of Society
1The Future of Society
We are engaged in a revolution a technological
revolution. We have commenced an era where
computers, databases, and the internet handle
tasks formally completed by the human hand and
mind. We live in and at our computers. We do not
have to leave the comfort of our own computer
station any longer. Everything imaginable can be
found on the internet from research, to
shopping, to business transactions, to love. It
is not us that makes technology obsolete, it is
our technology which is making us obsolete. We
are the computers, the computers are us.
- http//www.uvm.edu/artclass/cyborg/NateCloutier.h
tml
2The Future of Society
- Think of your life before the answering machine,
the ATM, e-mail. Think of your grandparents'
lives before the television and the airplane.
Think of your great-grandparents' lives before
the telephone. All told, the shift will be that
substantial. Machines will recognize our faces
and our fingerprints. They will watch out for
swimmers in distress, for radioactivity- and
germ-laden terrorists, for red-light runners and
highway speeders, for diabetics and heart
patients. - Imagine devices that monitor the breathing
rhythms of infants in cribs, watch toddlers at
day care, and track children as they go to and
from school that can keep an eye on our home
supply of orange juice and let us know when the
milk is sour. Machines might watch our calorie
intake and burn-off, monitor air quality in our
homes, and look out for mice and bugs. - Envision sensors as large as walls and as small
as molecules in your bloodstream sending quiet
signals to nearby computers, which will process
and relay information to you, your doctor, your
lawyer, your grocer, your building manager, your
car mechanic, your local fire or police
department. As time and technology march on, less
and less will escape the attention of
sophisticated machines. They'll have us covered. - http//magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0311/featu
re1/index.html
http//www.janis-purucker.de/3dgallery/utopia.jpg
3Who controls who?
We shape our buildings and afterwards they
shape us. Winston Churchill.
www.hasekamp.net/thailand/thailand1.jpg
www.tickintsofcentralohio.org/images/Historical/Ho
rseless_carriage_ca._1915.jpg
4What was the role of (information) technology in
Sept 11th?
http//www.ptb.be/scripts/center.phtml?sectionA1A
AAABS
http//media.guardian.co.uk/gallery/image/0,8560,-
10904255171,00.html
5What is he talking about?
- We have one here at Cambridge there is one in
Manchester and there ought to be one in Scotland
as well but that is about all. - Douglas Hartree 1947 quoted in The Dream Machine
p 8.
6Growth in technology.
Manchester Mark I www.man.ac.uk/Science_Engineerin
g/CHSTM/nahc.htm
7http//foodman123.com/ibm709.htm
IBM 709 1955
8DEC 2060 Early 1980s
DEC 2060 with 1 million 36-bit words of MOS
memory, PDP-11 front end, PDP-11 sync
communications, 1 RP06 176 MB disk, 2 RP07 498MB
disks. Running TOPS-20 with FORTRAN-20,
COBOL-68/74, BASIC-PLUS-2, CPL-20, and MS (a mail
system). http//www.hawaii.edu/infobits/s2000/ima
ges/dec2.jpg
9Moores Law
Moore's law (rule of thumb) - processor power
doubles every 2 years List of Intel
Processorshttp//www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/qui
ckrefyr.htm
10Developments
11Computers in Towson in 2008
- How many computers will there be in Towson when
you graduate? - How powerful will they be processor, memory,
etc. - What will the situation be in 2018?
12The future of technology.
- Early in the next millennium your right and left
cuff links or earrings may communicate with each
other by low orbiting earth satellites and have
more computing power than your present PC. Your
telephone wont ring indiscriminately it will
receive, sort, and perhaps respond to your
incoming calls like a well trained English
butler. - Being Digital. N. Negroponte, 1995.
13The Home of The Future
- Changing Places/House_n The MIT Home of the
Future Consortium - architecture.mit.edu/house_n/
- Welcome to the Broadband Home of the Future Wired
Magazine article January 2004 www.wired.com/wired/
archive/12.01/wiredhome_1.html
14Cybernetics
- I was born human. But it was an accident of fate
a condition merely of time and place. I believe
its something we have the power to change.. - www.kevinwarwick.com
15Impact Of IT Upon Society
16Convergence!
Communications
IT
Convergence
Computers
Communications
Applications
Content
17The Information Society
Communications
IT
The Information Society
18A day in the life..
- Many examples in the press and media of home and
work in the future..
www.arch.usyd.edu.au/kcdc/vds96/elective/images/nc
.gif
19Technology Society
- NAIVE MODEL OF TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENT
ART
LAW
Technology
WORK
Set of feasible applications - expanding
LEISURE
ECONOMY
Society
202 Things to Note
Pervasive ! Important Rate of change
21Rate of Change
- The first steam powered cotton mill in the US
dated from 1847 - sixty three years after its
adoption in Britain. - The first electronic computers were developed in
the mid forties. - Fifty years later we have..
22Pervasive
- Not All Pervasive Technologies Are Important
- Zip fasteners and matchsticks are clearly not all
that important. - The automobile, radio and TV, electricity and
printing have greater claims to importance. - Why is this?
23What does history tell us?
- Technology has always had a huge influence upon
the development of society. - Examples?
24Some Previous Technologies Social Change
- Farming
- settled life, villages.
- Industrial revolution.
- Output increased faster than labor input.
- Work centralized in factory units.
- Land declined as the chief source of wealth.
- Urbanization.
- Train network, printing press, sanitation,
mechanical clocks, the telescope etc. etc.
25The Telegraph
- See The Victorian Internet for a very
interesting discussion. - Effects include
- Commerce stock exchange
- The .com phenomenon
- News reporting Crimean War/Florence Nightingale
- World Peace!
- "It brings the worlds together. It joins the
sundered hemispheres. It unites distant nations,
making them feel that they are members of one
great family". Standange 98
- http//www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/SESLL/STELLA/STARN/scot
play/SMITH/CARNEGIE/act1.htm
26The Case of the Automobile Kling 96
- Originally promoted as a clean mode of private
transport. - Today society is strongly dependent upon the
private car with accompanying, pollution and
traffic jams. - Deaths due to accidents
- 400-500 each holiday weekend in the USA. (Kling)
- Helped give rise to suburbia and the decline of
urban centers. - The road infrastructure requires huge on going
public investment - Dependence upon oil.
- 1970s oil crisis, the Gulf War (I) and (II), ..
27Neutral
- Technology May Not Be Neutral
- Often With Technology Society Gets More Than It
Bargained For!
28A Variety of Views
http//www..pensacolabeach.com/ domeofahome/
http//www.filmarchiv.at/events/lang/metropolis.ht
m
29Dawn of a new age.
- Within a few short decades, society
rearranges itself - its worldview, its basic
values, its social and political structures, its
arts, its key institutions. Fifty years later
there is a new world. And the people born then
cannot even imagine the world in which their
grandparents lived and into which their own
parents were born. - Peter Drucker. Post Capitalist Society, 1993.
30Negropontes View
- The change from atoms to bits is irrevocable and
unstoppable. P4 - Computing is not about computers any more it is
about living. P6. - Early in the next millennium your right and left
cuff links or earrings may communicate with each
other by low orbiting earth satellites and have
more computing power than your present PC. Your
telephone wont ring indiscriminately it will
receive, sort, and perhaps respond to your
incoming calls like a well trained English
butler. P6. - On-demand information will dominate digital life.
We will ask explicitly and implicitly for what we
want, when we want it. P169. - The information superhighway is more than a short
cut to every book in the Library of Congress. It
is creating a totally new, global social fabric.
P183. - Being Digital. N. Negroponte, 1995.
31Chris Evans View (1980)
- In the home in the short term future (early
1980s) there will be - speaking bathroom scales, freezers which remind
you to restock them, cookers which tell how the
meat is coming along, telephones that tell you
how many people have rung in your
absencethermometers which advice you what to
wear before you get up." (p79) - The first practical shift will be reflected in a
cut in the working week to an average of 30
hours, a retirement option at fifty five or even
fifty, and annual vacations of at least six
weeks. (p95) - Evans C., The Mighty Micro, Cornet, 1979
32Thoreau (1850)
- Technology for Technologys Sake?
- ...so with a hundred other modern improvements
- ..... our inventions are wont to be pretty toys
which distract our attention from serious things.
- They are but an improved means to an unimproved
end.. - Walden by Henry Thoreau 1818-1862
33Klings View
- The Seductive Equation of Technological Progress
with Social Progress. - Social Revolutions are based on changes in ways
of life, not just changes in equipment..
34Steve Talbott
- No law seems more certain than this one the
next generation of computers will be better than
the last. Yet no law conceals a more socially
devastating lie. Netfuture, 1, Dec, 1995 - I recently heard an industry pundit say, "As
voice recognition technology gets more
sophisticated, we can expect computers to become
more user-friendly. Self-evidently true? Let's
consider. Perhaps the most conspicuous
application of voice recognition today is in
telephone answering systems. The idea, of course,
is that better listening skills will enable the
software to deal more flexibly with your and my
needs. The notorious klunkiness of the current
answering systems will yield to friendlier
capabilities. - In a sense, this is true. When I call a business
in the future, the options will be more numerous,
and I'll be able to negotiate those options with
voice commands more - complex than "yes" and "no." But this is to
ignore an obvious fact about the new
capabilities their reach will be extended. Where
earlier software eventually routed you to a human
operator, the - "friendlier" version will replace the operator
with a software agent who will attempt to conduct
a crude conversation with you. - So the earlier frustrations will simply be
repeated -- but at a much more critical level.
Where once you finally reached a live person, now
you will reach a machine. And if you thought the
number-punching phase was irritating, wait until
you have to communicate the heart of your
business to a computer with erratic hearing, a
doubtful vocabulary of 400 words, and the
compassion of a granite monolith! - The technical opportunity to become friendlier,
in other words, is also an opportunity to become
unfriendly at a more decisive level. This is the
prevailing law of technological development,
underlying nearly every claim of progress. - Netfuture, 1, Dec, 1995, http//www.netfuture.or
g/1995/Dec1495_1.html3
35Digital Age Nonsense
- I sometimes wonder whether the folks at the
M.I.T. Media Lab are pulling our legs. Are they
stand-up comedians in disguise? It seems that a
lot of energy at the prestigious lab (which
claims to be "inventing the future") is going
into the redesign of the American kitchen. For
example, one project involves training a glass
counter top to assemble the ingredients for
making fudge by reading electronic tags on jars
of mini-marshmallows and chocolate chips, then
coordinating their quantities with a recipe on a
computer and directing a microwave oven to cook
it. - Dr. Andrew Lippman, associate director of the
Media Lab, says that "my dream tablecloth would
actually move the things on the table. You throw
the silver down on it, and it sets the table." - One waits in vain for the punch line. These
people actually seem to be serious. And the
millions of dollars they consume look all too
much like serious money. Then there are the
corporate sponsors, falling all over themselves
to throw yet more money at these projects. - Nowadays this kind of adolescent silliness is
commonly given the halo of a rationale that has
become respected dogma. - Netfuture, 87, March 30, 1999,
http//www.netfuture.org/1999/Mar3099_87.html2c
36Views of/on Technologists
- Computer Science is the systematic study of
algorithms. ACM task force quoted in Kling
p33. - A man trained in computer science alone is by
any definition an uneducated man C. Holland,
The Idea of A University. - Whether or not it draws upon new scientific
research, technology is a branch of moral
philosophy, not of science, Kling, p33.
37Globalisation
Communications
IT
The Information Society is a Global Society
38Charles Handy - Globalisation
- In the large
- Today we are faced with the complexity of the
global community. Decision makers have to operate
beyond the traditional limits of national
boundaries and regulations, beyond the
conventions of a particular culture. - In the small
- Life is now horribly confusing. We are mixing up
home and work, and work is no longer secure. - Charles Handy
39Essential Argument
- The role of (Digital) Technology in all this
change, globalisation, information society,
employment, views of humanity etc. etc. - The role of Engineers in all this..
- The role of Education in all this..