IoT launches full force, and is an immediate catastrophe. Estimates suggest over 50% of IoT devices in the home are susceptible to RCE, but vendors still do not issue patches because no one is forcing them. Underground video channels exist where you can spy on people through the enormous collection of cameras embedded on devices like toasters, light bulbs, doorbells, etc.
Cyberwar (ugh, that term) has become white hot after a nuclear reactor meltdown in Russia where every adversary blames each other and America blames Russia for a false flag operation. Packets are now blocked from entering/exiting entire countries unless you have a special permit. Like with radio/tv in Cold War I, everyone begins suspecting spies and government malware in their computers. People increasingly huddle for safety in walled gardens like Facebook, rarely venturing out to unknown sites.
Node/js experiences a huge exodus of maturing developers seeking a more professional, rigorous language, leaving behind massive codebases of poorly-written and completely undocumented code and over 3 million node package libraries with varying dependency issues. Javascript has become so popular worldwide that Americans barely make mimimum wage coding in it.
Ethereum still struggles to find any devs who can understand how the fuck their entire platform is supposed to work despite an additional white paper being published.
Microsoft admits no one wants a windows phone and retreats from the mobile market, dooming themselves to simply dominating the dismal "legacy" desktop world only inhabited by developers, people too poor to afford a mobile phone, enterprise customers, and call support centers. Open Sourcing .Net winds up causing large amounts of developers to learn Linux, and they develop a taste for it. C# developers are recognized for their overall brilliance and steadfastness and paid 500K/yr salaries by all employers. (OK, that's a wish, not a prediction)
VR has completely polarized the planet between "pukers" and "players". Thousands die every year from VR-wasting disease brought on by malnutrition and lack of sleep from being fully immersed for weeks on end.
TechCrunch collapses under the weight of it's hideously poor commenters and a management sex scandal.
Self-Driving cars get off to a rocky start, as normal drivers everywhere attempt to run them off the road to "test" their safety.
NoSql replaces Not-NoSql so quickly people begin dropping it from their resume as a skill.
1. The Sharing Economy or Protocols, Protocols, Protocols
The sharing economy will be governed by protocols.
Decentralization will be standard. Companies like Ethereum and OpenBazaar as well as the Bitcoin protocol are already being used/leveraged for this. It will be standard.
1. Decentralized authority will be used for most things and will destroy the power distance between individuals and regulators stripping their power. These protocols provide privacy, authority and identity by design and the gov’t can’t do anything about it.
2. Government won’t matter much
This is basically the affect of trrend one. When decentralized protocols become common place there will be no way for government to enforce regulations. Some of this is good and some is bad. On balance it is good. They can still stop people from doing bad things in the physical world, but not govern and collect your communications, interlope into network governance and stop being the world’s sysadmin.
Centralized authorities will prosper servicing things like DNS naming authorities, identity, licensing, communications, financial transactions, legal transaction, wills deeds etc.
2. Everyone will realize uber is a logistics company.
Uber is building teams to for autopilot and self-driving tech right now.
They have a “Math Department” to create algorithims and heuristics for prediction.
They know that ridesharing p2p is something that can only last ~10 years.
They will be the first people to do interstate logsitics and transport with self-driving vehicles. They will be the level 3 or cogent to Amazon’s comcast/verison. By this I mean that Uber will handle 90% of long distance supply chain hubs and Amazon will be the last-mile provider.
3. Wearables will stil suck because the problem they need to be solving is Peripherals
The reason wearables suck and why glass failed is because they offer nothing. There is very limited value in a watch that lasts ~12-24 hours and can only take your pulse and display text messages.
Google glass is awesome, but there was no way to actually use it. You immeadiately let everyone know you were a google employee or wealthy technologist by wearing it. The way you communicated with it was by shouting at it. Not very discreet at all.
A company will emerge with a very low profile set of rings or bracelets that allow you to quickly gesture to your device what you want it to do. Before peripherals move past a keyboard or voice control there is no hope for wearables. Also, battery life is a factor.
I also think that glass will be replaced by something like oculus with front facing cameras, intake the information, process it and deliver it. You won’t need to actually look through the glasses but see it on a screen. Night vision will just be cached copies of the previous days imagery processed on a master server using seadragon or similar software.
- Speech recognition has acquired acceptable (par with human) accuracy. This has been a great boon for the digitally excluded. It has also increased the relative prevalence of text based commands in the operating system, not that too many people notice.
- CNC machines that can operate on anything strong now require a license, it was too easy to make guns with them and on balance governments decided that was the important thing.
- VR headsets have failed to gain market share. They were neat, but only if you stayed in one place. Elite Dangerous and co' weren't able to support a physical product of that cost by themselves. There are some fantastic applications of the technology, but you need to find an old headset to play.
- Linux is still waiting for it's year of the desktop and still looks like a poor knock-off of Windows.
- Turing complete systems aren't banned yet, but it looks increasingly likely as phones and tablets start to dominate the marketplace.
The consumer sector of the Internet of things will still not have a killer app. Offerings will still be incremental, and will remain hammers looking for nails.
Driverless cars will still not be available for use by consumers, as the flow of edge cases which completely confuse the cars is continuous.
Cyberwar (ugh, that term) has become white hot after a nuclear reactor meltdown in Russia where every adversary blames each other and America blames Russia for a false flag operation. Packets are now blocked from entering/exiting entire countries unless you have a special permit. Like with radio/tv in Cold War I, everyone begins suspecting spies and government malware in their computers. People increasingly huddle for safety in walled gardens like Facebook, rarely venturing out to unknown sites.
Node/js experiences a huge exodus of maturing developers seeking a more professional, rigorous language, leaving behind massive codebases of poorly-written and completely undocumented code and over 3 million node package libraries with varying dependency issues. Javascript has become so popular worldwide that Americans barely make mimimum wage coding in it.
Ethereum still struggles to find any devs who can understand how the fuck their entire platform is supposed to work despite an additional white paper being published.
Microsoft admits no one wants a windows phone and retreats from the mobile market, dooming themselves to simply dominating the dismal "legacy" desktop world only inhabited by developers, people too poor to afford a mobile phone, enterprise customers, and call support centers. Open Sourcing .Net winds up causing large amounts of developers to learn Linux, and they develop a taste for it. C# developers are recognized for their overall brilliance and steadfastness and paid 500K/yr salaries by all employers. (OK, that's a wish, not a prediction)
VR has completely polarized the planet between "pukers" and "players". Thousands die every year from VR-wasting disease brought on by malnutrition and lack of sleep from being fully immersed for weeks on end.
TechCrunch collapses under the weight of it's hideously poor commenters and a management sex scandal.
Self-Driving cars get off to a rocky start, as normal drivers everywhere attempt to run them off the road to "test" their safety.
NoSql replaces Not-NoSql so quickly people begin dropping it from their resume as a skill.