While machines have simplified our lives and relieved us of certain redundant activities, there is cause to worry if we have created a monster out of the machines.
Technology has advanced so much that what was before only seen in sci-fi movies are now all around us. Take, for example, the 100,000 individual IoT sensors that stud the 1400-kilometre waterway that connects the Danjiangkou Reservoir to Beijing and Tianjin, to monitor structural damage, tracking water quality and flow rates, and watching for intruders, whether humans or animals. Or, KIT's ARMAR-6 Humanoid, which helps humans fix other robots, or even a no steering wheel GM car. Media coverage, today, is liberally sprinkled with the following terms - 5G, Internet of Things, artificial intelligence/machine learning, robots, and driverless cars, and for good reasons. The time is now.
When we look at the recently concluded CES 2018, the world's gathering place for all those who thrive on the business of consumer technologies, we see a common theme – pushing boundaries of technology.
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