14 Tech Preditions for our World in 2020
(Part 2)
Treatments from the bacteria that live in the human body
In the life sciences, that we’ll have a greater understanding the dynamics of our micro biome – and the tiny organisms, including bacteria, which are live in the human body – they effects in multiple systems in our body, which including our immune systems, metabolic processes and other areas. This will result in seminal a discovery which is related to a variety of conditions, and including autoimmune diseases, pre-term birth and how our metabolism is regulated. And reformative medicine approaches to creating new tissues and organs from progenitor cells that will expand significantly. And finally, the long-awaited ability to employ precision medicine, that providing specific treatments to a specific patients, which will become much more common.The beginning of the end for cancer
In The appearance of real-time diagnostics for complex diseases which will mark the beginning of the end of their debilitating reign by 2020. And the ability to monitor cancer, the dynamic immune system, intestinal flora and pre-diabetes in with the real-time it will change the nature of medicine and usher in a new era of human health where wellness is protected with versus illness treated. And As a result, fundamental shifts in healthcare will occur, that causing it to become largely preventative rather than fire-fighting. And It’s far more productive and economical to stop a fire from happening in this first place it will reconstruct something after the fire has taken its course.
Data-driven healthcare
The amount of data which available in the world is growing exponentially, and analyzing large data sets (so-called big data) is becoming key for market analysis and competition. And analytics will theatrically shift away from reporting and towards predictive and prescriptive practices, melodramatically enhancing the ability of healthcare providers to help the ill and injured. And even more important, this can create the opportunity for truly personalized healthcare by allowing providers to impact the biggest determinants of health, which including behaviors, genetics and environmental factors.
Printable organs
And today, we are already in a turning point in our ability to 3D “bio print” organ tissues, which is a process that involves depositing a “bio-ink” made of cells exactly in layers, resulting in a functional living human tissue for use in the lab. And these tissues should be better predictors of drug function than animal models in many cases. And In the long-term, it has the possibility to cover the way to “printing” human organs, such as kidneys, livers and hearts. In 2020, our goal is to have the technology be broadly used by medication companies, resulting in the identification of safer and better medication candidates and some failures in clinical trials.
The ‘internet of everywhere’
And we know at this time we are on the edge of the “internet of everywhere”. And It will be far more self-governing: and accessible to everyone, rich and poor. And the excitement of the internet of things will be a small cross-reference in the history as the internet of everywhere becomes our reality. So Do you remember the old movie, Minority Report, with the Tom Cruise? Ultra cheap, internet-enabled solar-powered screens that display in HDTV resolution that will be on bus stops, and in shopping centers, at tables in restaurants – all operating on a centralized advertising model. Which Gone are the days of the static acetate poster on the wall of a shopping mall. And finally, since these HD monitors have inspirations, and they will dynamically change content as your phone passes by, or telling the monitor all your preferences.
Renewables will power mobile networks
And we have become dependent on mobile communications in our daily lives, but the dirty secret is that mobile networks around the globe are disreputably energy inefficient. That In fact, we are stuck with outdated mobile network technology that are basically performs as poorly as glowing light bulbs, and with the result that 70% of the energy were used is wasted as heat. In 2020, we forecast that the groundbreaking innovations in radio engineering which will have a positive impact on the world’s economy, environment and quality of life. We even predict a time which advances allow renewable energy to power the mobile industry, and helping bridge the digital divide and spread communications to the 1.7 billion people living off-grid.
Learning on the job will never stop
The skills gap is actually an information gap. And the problem is not that workers are unskilled; it’s that workers don’t know what skills employers need. And technology is already disrupting existing jobs, and creating new jobs that never existed before. But In fact, the top 10 in-demand jobs in 2010 did not even exist in 2004. And Change is happening so rapidly that 65 percent of today’s grade school kids in the U.S. will end up at jobs that haven’t even been invented yet.
And how will our education institutions keep up? Today, there is a disconnect between education providers and employers.
And In the future, however, technology will enable education and training to respond dynamically to real-time labor market changes. That with extensive access to training and courses online and which will available on-demand, and workers can be informed of the skill updates while they work, and will regularly top up their education with the skills they need to remain relevant in the workforce.
Wastewater is an asset, not a liability
Water is one of our most valuable resources, yet our infrastructure is failing. And Driven by global population growth and rising water shortage, the UN reports that 75 percent of the world’s available freshwater is already polluted. And Under-investment in water management is intensifying the problem, causing serious impacts on human health and the environment. That is a key challenge is the high capital cost, and high energy requirements, of current wastewater treatment and management systems.
In 2020 I forecast that a new class of distributed systems, are powered by advances in our ability to use biotechnology to extract resources, such as energy, from waste, and the dropping cost of industrial automation, which will begin to change our approach to managing water globally. And Rather than a liability, wastewater will be viewed as an environmental resource, which providing energy and clean water to communities and industry, and accompanying in a truly maintainable and economical approach to managing our water resources
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