What to Make of the Metaverse?

Why it’s likely that the metaverse won’t be good for humanity.

In October of 2021, social media giant Facebook announced that it had changed its name to Meta. The ancient Greeks gave us the word Meta, who used it to mean ‘after’, ‘beyond’ or even to transcend. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg clearly chose this name for that very reason since he is looking far ahead into the future of his company, far beyond today’s two-dimensional experience of posting photos and text on Facebook. He wants to evolve Facebook into an entirely new experience, where we interact and socialize in a virtual 3D world.

There is great promise and potentially great value in this next epoch of humanity but will the metaverse usher in a golden age, or is it all what the Roman’s called bread and circuses?

CONTINUE READING

Why you should love your products again

How an encounter with a turn-table can reorient your world view

Source : “‘Broken Heart'” by ImNotQuiteJack is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0

Remember Fonzie hitting the juke box? Or the Tardis landing in the wrong place (or time)? What about the Millennium Falcon’s warp drive going kaput? All are symbolic of our past experiences we’ve had with technology, and more specifically, the products we used to own.  But times have changed, and so too have the products that we buy. They are different than they used to be, so much so, that we now all but ignore them. And this indifference comes at a great expense to our civilization, and we need to look into the past to understand how we’ve got it all wrong.

CONTINUE READING

What will inspire you?

What Pillars of the Earth tells us about our species and our future

“Star” by Kiwi Tom is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Recently, I finished the book The Pillars of the Earth’ by Ken Follet. It’s about the fictional village of Kingsbridge that undertakes the building of a cathedral in 1100’s England. Truthfully, such a subject isn’t one I normally would be curious about, but Pillars is really a tale about the ruthlessness of politics, the will to power, the technical challenges of the age and the perseverance to overcome these. And it made me think about the architecture of today. Our modern society has significantly more resources, technology and materials to create buildings of such magnificence. But we rarely do. So how is it that a village of half-starving peasants managed to create something so grand, and we, with all our abundance choose not to? It’s because we lack something they had, something humans need, and without it, our future on this planet will be very bleak.

CONTINUE READING

Why Technology Won’t Save Us

How the Star Wars vs Star Trek debate has now officially been settled.

Source: “Science Worship” by jurvetson is licensed under CC BY 2.0

The camera pans around to Captain Kirk, his gaze stoic – yet – genial, as he negotiates with an alien, whose face fills the massive video screen at the forefront of the Enterprise’s bridge. Kirk receives the alien’s outrageous demands with a smirk as he stiffens his back slightly as he readies himself to dismiss them. He will tell the eight-eyed creature how things are really going to go, with a confidence that comes not only from experience, but from something greater. And you’d be forgiven if you thought it was the technological might of the Federation’s armies. For all their impressiveness, it is not what that fortifies Kirk’s nerve. It’s something much mightier than photon torpedoes.

CONTINUE READING
Politics / Tech / The Future / Uncategorized0 Comments

What the Unabomber Can Teach Us About the Perils of AI

In my novel, The 13th Vote, Albert, a developing AI plays a central role as it comes to grips with it’s place in a society of good but flawed humans. Us humans are familiar with the journey, emerging from childhood ignorance into increasing levels of maturity and awareness throughout adulthood. And with enough time, vigilance and experience, we’re blessed with the gift of wisdom. But what of AI? Can it ever gain wisdom? And if not, can we trust it to make big decisions that affect our lives? I’d say we cannot and the Unabomber’s manifesto proves it.

CONTINUE READING
The Future / World0 Comments

The Future of Funerals

Social distancing. Mandatory masks. The vaccine arms race. These are some of the new realities brought forth by Covid.  Another is the online funeral. Recently, I attended my first. I logged on early, eyes closed in quiet contemplation, and for the next twenty minutes, touching songs by Cohen, Sinatra, and Groban, accompanied me while I waited for the service to start. If you’ve ever sat like this, you’ve experienced how the mind drifts, and at some point, my thoughts went to the funerals of the future, and before long I concluded something with such certainty and wondered how a brilliant mind like Gene Roddenberry didn’t. The conclusion? Read on.

CONTINUE READING
Business / Entertaiment / Politics / Tech / The Future / World0 Comments

The Case for NTF’s

Beeple’s collage, Everydays: The First 5000 Days, sold at Christie’s

Why (and why not) NFT’s are here to stay

NFT’s or Non-Fungible Tokens are the new ‘thing’, the cool kid on the blockchain, for reasons I can’t completely understand but am nonetheless convinced of. And if that’s nonsensical enough to convince you to stop reading, then don’t. Let’s try to find out together and enjoy the process, since the art is in the telling.

CONTINUE READING
Politics / Tech / The Future / Travels / World0 Comments

Rise of the Drones

How Covid proves the future of warfare will be small-scale and robotic

Modern warfare is dehumanizing and it’s about to become small and dehumanized. In fact, Covid has accelerated the trend toward miniaturization, and cheaper, more distributed ways to kill. 2020 also shows us that Covid and its cousins will also continue to play and important role in the conflicts that follow. War will never be the same again.

CONTINUE READING
Source: https://www.starwars.com/databank/lobot
Business / Politics / Tech / The Future0 Comments

2084 – An Orwellian Fantasy

Why the next huge technological leap will stifle our freedom

May we live in interesting times. On this day of the Presidential inauguration, it is fitting to reflect back on  2020. A global epidemic. A summer of riots. A booming stock market. Bitcoin blowing past $40,000. And, a twice impeached president who was removed from big-name social media platforms.

This normally won’t be newsworthy. Regular Joes are booted off these platforms all the time, but Trump was the president at the time, with 80M+ Twitter followers. Whether one agrees with President Trump’s rhetoric or not, the fact remains that he exploited a technological marvel (social media platforms) to bypass traditional media, and delivered his message directly to the people. No filter, no spin, just raw rhetoric with expansive reach. Imagine President Lincoln at a whistle-stop, preaching from a soapbox,  with a megaphone that could project his voice clear across the South, skirting the editorial privilege of The Richmond Examiner. Could he have stopped the war with his rhetoric or at least turned Missouri and Kentucky?

Media outlets like Forbes, New York Times, NBC, Fox and more have extensively written about the constitutionality of Trump’s ouster from these platforms. Even Twitter CEO, Jack Dorsey has weighed in, curiously, casting doubt on his own decision. So, I won’t cover this ground, but explore another aspect of this decision that may have dire implications for our future.

What happens when a novel technology, that can dramatically augment a person’s intellectual capabilities, springs forth upon the masses? Will it liberate us or bind us in ways we can’t imagine? Until now.

CONTINUE READING
Entertaiment / Reviews / The Future0 Comments

A Quick Review of Midnight Sky

Good sci-fi films are hard to find these days, and so I was intrigued to see Midnight Sky released on Netflix this month. If its slick trailer and all-star cast were any indication, then I was due for a treat. It’s arrival just in time for the holidays was an added bonus, I could watch with much less distraction, and so, I hoped to add it to the pantheon of great sci-fi flicks. So … did it live up to its billing?

CONTINUE READING
1 2

SEARCH THE CATALOG