Category: News

  • 2010 Avus Performance Audi S4

    2010 Avus Performance Audi S4 - Side View

    Avus Performance has released a new sporty kit and performance upgrade for the Audi S4. Avus Performance Audi S4 comes with a threaded spring kit was built in that allows adjusting the height more individually, however still maintaining adjusting possibilities of the Magnetic Ride chassis.

    Audi S4 Avus Performance 2010 - Front Side View 2010 Avus Performance Audi S4 - Rear Angle View Audi S4 Avus Performance 2010 - Rear Side View

    The Avus Performance Audi S4 features mirror caps, front grill, front bumper blades and back diffuser were painted in shiny black, 20-inch wheels, 3-part CC-line rims in connection with Hankook Ventus S1 Evo wheels in 255/30/20. Interior cabin is outfitted with custom leather upholstery and a steering wheel with carbon fiber inserts.

    The Audi S4 engine performance was adjusted accordingly. Instead of the standard 333 PS (245 kW; 329 bhp), 430 PS (316 kW; 424 bhp) are on now.

    Source: Lincah.Com – New Car and Used Car Pictures

  • Justin Bieber “American Idol” VIDEO [“U Smile/Baby” Medley]

    Bieber Fever hits Idol….

    Teen sensation and BET Awards nominee Justin Bieber performed a medley of his smash singles “U Smile”/”Baby” on the American Idol semi-finals on FOX Wednesday evening.


  • New Oyster 2 Wave Power Generator Unveiled

    Inhabitat has a post on the latest iteration of the Oyster wave power generator – New Oyster 2 Wave Power Generator Unveiled This Morning.

    Basically it works like this. The Oyster 2 is anchored to the seafloor about half a mile off shore. Near-shore waves pound against its frame and engage the hinge mechanism. The hinges engage two hydraulic pistons that are connected to hydroelectric plants onshore. Essentially the Oyster turns offshore wave power into onshore water power. The first prototype Oyster 1 was installed and tested in the summer of 2009 and Aquamarine Power used information from that test to vastly improve their design. The Oyster 2 is simpler in design, has fewer moving parts, generates 250% more electricity and is easier to maintain.

    A lot of issues developing in the offshore wave power industry have to do with the cost of installation versus the amount of energy extracted. It seems that the Oyster design solves this problem by replacing conventional turbines with hydraulic pistons to create the energy onshore instead of out in the waves. Three Oyster 2s will be deployed and connected to the grid in the summer of 2011 at the European Marine Energy Centre in Scotland. These Oyster 2 farms sound like a productive — and adorable — addition to the renewable energy market.


  • Seventh Sense, Rox Anderson and Bob Langer Startup, Seeks to Collect Blood With No Pain

    Seventh Sense Biosystems logo
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    Seventh Sense Biosystems wants to remove some of the hassle, expense, and pain of collecting blood for medical tests. The secretive startup has recently begun talks with major healthcare companies about its technology, which includes a device for collecting blood samples that almost anyone ought to be able to use without causing pain, says Doug Levinson, the firm’s co-founder and CEO.

    The Cambridge, MA-based firm—which counts among its co-founders two of Boston’s medical technology gurus, R. Rox Anderson of Harvard and Bob Langer of MIT—prides itself on putting sophisticated technology into simple-to-use packages. Levinson, a partner at Flagship Ventures, managed to convince his own venture firm and the startup’s other backers at Polaris Venture Partners in Waltham, MA, and Boston-based Third Rock Ventures to invest $4.75 million in its Series A round in 2008 to get the operation rolling. The Seattle-based Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropic organization, is also supporting infectious disease research at the startup.

    Last year at our big XSITE event, Levinson gave us a look at the startup’s unique chemistry that enables polymer particles to reveal certain colors or form into defined shapes when they come into contact with specific molecules in the blood or other bodily fluids. The technology opens the door to potential uses in the diagnostics field such as monitoring drug dosage levels or spotting infection. Yet Levinson was less clear last year how a patient’s blood would be tapped to enable the startup’s chemical invention to alert patients of certain health conditions.

    Enter the startup’s TAP (touch activated phlebotomy) device, which is in development. With the push of a button, the system …Next Page »

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Audi A2 next generation renderings

    New Audi A2 renderings

    The Audi A2 will be back in 2012 as the MPV variant on the new Audi A1. The A2 will share the same platform as the A1, although some technical aspects may still come from the New Small Family platform of the Volkswagen Up!, which is spawning the Volkswagen Lupo, and the same segment cars from Seat and Skoda. The next generation Audi A2 will have the same style and design elements as the A1, including the sloping roof line and similar front and rear.

    The A2 will have an extensive engine range, which will include an e-tron electric model, while 2013 could see the arrival of the Audi A2 hybrid. The A2 will mostly have four-cylinder engine units, although if the Volkswagen Up! platform is adopted, three-cylinder may be utilised. Compared to the previous A2, the biggest difference with the new model is its steel and not aluminium chassis, which would result in an increase in price.

    New Audi A2 renderings New Audi A2 renderings

    Source | Caradisiac


  • IP67 ultra miniature micro switch with fixing hole!

    One of the Zippy’s most popular IP67 switches has a modified version with a screw fixing hole. DW guarantees 500,000 operations in 0.1mA. Due to its ultra miniature size, 19.75 X 5.4 X 12 (mm^3), with the screw fixing hole and different types of pillars, our users can better mount the switch on their devices!

  • Universal EDXRF-Spectrometer – FISCHERSCOPE X-Ray XAN 150

    The FISCHERSCOPE X-RAY XAN 150 instruments are compact and universally applicable energy-dispersive x-ray spectrometers for nondestructive thickness measurements and material analysis.

    The XAN 150 is especially well suited for measuring and analyzing thin coatings, even with very complex compositions or small concentrations.

    Typical areas of application are:
    – Measurement of functional coatings, starting from a few nanometers, in the
    electronics and semiconductor industries
    – Trace analysis for consumer protection, e.g. lead content in toys
    – Analysis of alloys with highest requirements of accuracy in the jewelry and watch
    industries and in metal refineries
    – Research in universities and in the industries

    To create ideal excitation conditions for every measurement, the XAN 150 features electrically changeable apertures and primary filters. The modern Silicon-Drift-Detector (SDD) achieves high accuracy and good detection sensitivity.

    Using the fundamental parameter method, coating systems as well as solid and liquid samples can be analyzed standard-free. It is possible to detect up to 24 elements in a range from aluminum (13) to uranium (92) simultaneously.

    The instrument has an excellent accuracy and long-term stability, which among other things is reflected in a significantly reduced calibration effort. For high accuracy tasks calibrations can be performed at any time.

    Excellent ergonomics, easy operation, fast calculation and data presentation are all features of the instrument.

    The FISCHERSCOPE X-Ray XAN 150 is now available at all FISCHER offices around the world.

  • New Managing Director of Technology at NORD Drivesystems

    Bargteheide – Since the beginning of 2010, Dr.-Ing. Jürgen Jendryschik com-pletes NORD Drivesystems’ management team as Managing Director of Tech-nology. After a transitional period, G.A. Küchenmeister, the company’s founder and Managing Director, will retire from active work. This means that NORD will continue to be led by an executive team of five members, that also includes Jutta Humbert, Ullrich Küchenmeister, Peter Dittmers and Jens Paulsen. Dr.-Ing. Jendryschik’s last position was with a major German manufacturer of frequency inverters. A strategic leader who coordinates all technical developments, he will continue to maintain NORD’s established strengths in drive mechanics but also focus the company’s efforts on its electronics range. NORD Drivesystems has been manufacturing electronic drive technology since 1984 and has become a leading manufacturer for several product segments. These include decentralized frequency inverters that offer exceptional functional flexibility, for example through a choice of several fieldbus connection options, which has found great demand. Dr.-Ing. Jendryschik’s aims include expanding NORD’s product range, thereby systematically increasing such successful de-velopments.

  • New cranes.nord.com site by drive expert NORD

    Bargteheide – Throughout the world, manufacturers of cranes equip all crane types and sizes with efficient and safe drive technology from NORD DRIVESYSTEMS. Now, there is a new web address dedicated to this industry. The cranes.nord.com microsite presents solutions and products and provides access to NORD’s extensive online services, e.g. individual configuration of drive systems. Additionally, NORD’s large sales network ensures optimal avail-ability and individual consulting and support.
    Cranes and trolleys employ NORD’s helical parallel-shaft geared motors with power ratings up to 200 kW and a wide range of gear ratios. Speeds are about 80 m/min for crane movement and 32 m/min for trolley movement, with an acceleration of 0.2 m/sec. Two or three-stage basic types are available with hollow or solid shafts, in foot mounted, flange mounted, or face mounted ver-sions, each with the same housing. The UNICASE concept enables high per-formance helical parallel-shaft gear units with extremely compact dimensions. They can be combined with many components from the modular NORD sys-tem.
    A further emphasis in crane applications is on helical-bevel gear units, usually with hollow shafts and torque arms. With this drive version, the large range of standard components also allows the gear unit to be precisely matched to the requirements of the application. In addition to the high efficiency of gear units with helical, parallel shaft, bevel and worm gears, there are further essential benefits to operators: maximum operational reliability, high output torques, high axial and radial load capacity, quiet running, high efficiency, minimal maintenance, and long operating life. Products with protection classes IP55 and IP66 as well as rust and dust-protected versions with a special coating are optionally available. Furthermore, gear units can be filled with synthetic oil, if cranes are to be used in high temperatures, e.g. in foundries.

  • From madhouse to medication

    I just watched a thought-provoking BBC documentary called Mental: A History of the Madhouse which follows the history of British psychiatric treatment in the 20th century from the monolithic mental hospitals inherited from the 1800s to the development of ‘care in the community’ at the end of the century.

    If you’re based in the UK you can watch it on the BBC’s streaming service but I also notice that it has appeared on various public torrent servers. *cough*

    It’s definitely a dissenters look at history as the professional commentators, such as psychiatrist Joanne Moncrieff and psychologist Rachel Perkins, hail from the most critical end of mental health.

    It’s probably true to say that 20th century psychiatry was not exactly a litany of success stories, although it would have been useful to hear some of the more positive angles as well.

    However, I was interested to hear that one of the major figures in the removal of the old mental hospitals was conservative politician Enoch Powell who secured his place in history with his rabidly anti-immigration 1968 ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech (synopsis: ‘we fought the war and now there are darkies everywhere!’).

    Years earlier, however, he gave a speech that cemented his determination to dismantle the old hospital system and he didn’t mince words.

    They imply nothing less than the elimination of by far the greater part of this country’s mental hospitals as they exist today. This is a colossal undertaking, not so much in the new physical provision which it involves, as in the sheer inertia of mind and matter which it requires to he overcome. There they stand, isolated, majestic, imperious, brooded over by the gigantic water-tower and chimney combined, rising unmistakable and daunting out of the countryside – the asylums which our forefathers built with such immense solidity to express the notions of their day. Do not for a moment underestimate their powers of resistance to our assault. Let me describe some of the defences which we have to storm…

    The speech reads very strangely today as it was clearly the beginning of huge reforms while openly talking about ‘sub-normals’.

    The documentary is well worth checking out. It largely focuses on the story of one hospital, High Royds, in West Yorkshire.

    Interestingly, the hospital has had two rock tributes to it. The Kaiser Chief’s song ‘Highroyds’ and Kasabian’s album named ‘West Ryder Pauper Lunatic Asylum’, riffing on its original name.

    Link to info about the documentary.

  • Kindle App for Android Coming Soon

    Kindle recently announced an app for Android phones to download, manage and read e-books. The app will be free and available in limited quantities projected for this summer. Users will be able to access some Kindle features like browsing books, access previous purchases, add bookmarks, browsing by author/genre, read Amazon consumer and editorial reviews, and get personal recommendations.

    The app will not have Kindle newspapers, magazines and blogs. However Christopher Dawson of ZDNet brings up a good point, will this mobile device convergence kill the Kindle device as there will be no need to buy/carry the larger device around… simply read your books on your phone. What do you think?

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • Terrorists Caught by Behavior Police: 0

    Terrorists Caught by Behavior Police: 0
    Though the U.S. government has paid nearly $200 million in 2009 for 3,000 “behavior detection” agents to work at 161 airports, they’ve never caught a single terrorist. The GAO uncovered 16 individuals later accused of involvement in terrorist plots who flew 23 times through U.S. airports since 2004. None were stopped by behavior officers working at those airports. “It’s a disgrace,” said aviation security analyst Charles Slepian.

  • How Baseball Became America vs. the Damn Yankees

    How Baseball Became America vs. the Damn Yankees
    Baseball has always proceeded according to the law of the jungle with the Yankees as King Kong, but in the past even they never dominated financially as they do now.

    By Mark Heisler

    Baseball has always proceeded according to the law of the jungle with the Yankees as King Kong, but in the past even they never dominated financially as they do now.

    Related Entries


  • Mark Souder Affair May Not Break Congressional Rules

    Mark Souder Affair May Not Break Congressional Rules
    The good news for soon-to-be ex-Rep. Mark Souder: There are no rules that expressly prohibit Members of Congress from sleeping with their staff. The Indiana…

    Calderon Speech To Congress: Mexican President To Address Immigration During Joint Session
    WASHINGTON — Mexican President Felipe Calderon is taking his case for a fair and orderly overhaul of U.S. immigration policies to the people who can…

    Al Eisele: Nancy Pelosi to GOP and Tea Party: Bring It On
    I’ve covered eight Speakers of the House since coming to Washington as a young reporter for a string of midwestern newspapers in 1965, including six…

    Gary Rivlin: The Payday Industry’s Powerful Friend
    This past fall, Lynn DeVault, the head of the trade association representing the country’s payday lenders, spoke frankly about what her group was doing to…

    ‘Modifying’ Miranda Rights Modifies The Political Debate
    WASHINGTON — Hammered for months by Republicans as soft on terrorism, Attorney General Eric Holder and the rest of the Obama administration are suddenly playing…

  • Theora Founder: WebM Project is ‘Wonderful’

    Google’s move to open source its VP8 video codec as part of its WebM Project has gotten wide support from browser makers and other industry players, but the open source community was notably absent from today’s announcement, with the obvious exception of Mozilla. There was no shout-out from the Free Software Foundation, who had urged Google to open source the codec earlier this year to kill Flash.

    Instead, a smiling Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch walked on stage to announce that his company is going to ship VP8 support as part of Flash. So what do open source developers think about the move, and what’s going to happen to Ogg Theora, the current open source video codec of choice for projects like Wikipedia?

    “This is great news,” said Christopher “Monty” Montgomery, founder of the Xiph.org Foundation, when I reached him by phone right after the announcement. Montgomery is spearheading the development of Ogg Theora and is a Theora developer himself, but he called VP8 going open source “absolutely wonderful” and sounded honestly stoked about the initiative. Montgomery did mention that Google didn’t make too much of an effort to reach out to open source developers ahead of the official announcement. He was notified of the development, but many others weren’t. “We have to see how it’s going to play out in the open source community,” he told me, adding that it will be a while until VP8 will really have an impact.

    So will VP8 kill Ogg Theora? “Maybe in the long run it will,” he said, but the Theora community is for now committed to its road map, and Montgomery said he doesn’t think this development will be immediately affected by VP8. He did acknowledge that Theora is about ten years old now, adding that codecs usually have a life cycle of 20 years. Theora is based on On2′s VP3.2 codec, which was first released in 2000. There have been ongoing discussions in the open source world about whether Theora is as good as H.264, but Montgomery doesn’t think this matters anymore. “We don’t want to play catch up,” he told me, “we want to be leapfrogging.” Having an advanced codec like VP8 available would finally make this possible.

    This sentiment was echoed in a blog post published by the Open Video Alliance, which has been advocating HTML5 video with open codecs for some time. “This is excellent news from Google, Mozilla, and Opera, and will help catapult web video into the next generation,” the post reads.

    Florian Mueller, founder of the European NoSoftwarePatents Campaign, was a little more skeptical: “While it appears to be a nice gesture if a major player releases software on open source terms, it’s imperative to perform a well-documented patent clearance,” he wrote us in an email. He mused that HTC being sued about Android shows Google might stand on the sidelines if developers get into trouble with video patent holders, and added: “We all know Steve Jobs’ recent email in which he said a patent pool was being assembled to go after open source codecs. So the patent question is really a critical one.”

    However, Montgomery didn’t share this outlook. He acknowledged that Google and other companies supporting WebM are a much bigger target than Theora’s supporters have been, but said that patent litigation around open source video codecs isn’t any more likely after the announcement than it was before. He pointed to the fact that no one has ever tried to bring claims against Theora, but admitted that you can never say never. “Patents are like every teenager carrying a hand gun,” he told me.  Sooner or later, one of those guns could go off.

    Related content on GigaOM Pro: What Does the Future Hold For Browsers? (subscription required)



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »

  • Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan wouldn’t let “willing Harvard law students” meet with military recruiters

    Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan wouldn’t let “willing Harvard law students” meet with military recruiters

    A Washington Times op-ed baselessly claimed that Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan promoted an “anti-military campaign” while dean of Harvard Law, citing the false claim that Kagan “den[ied] JAG officers and willing Harvard law students the opportunity to meet and talk about opportunities to serve in the military.” In fact, students had access to military recruiters throughout Kagan’s tenure as dean, and Kagan’s respect for the military is well established.

    Wash. Times op-ed falsely claims Kagan “ban[ned]” military recruiters from Harvard Law

    From a May 19 Washington Times contradicted by data Media Matters for America obtained from Harvard Law School’s public information officer. The prohibition on Harvard Law’s OCS working with military recruiters existed during the spring 2005 semester, meaning that it could have affected only the classes of 2005, 2006, and 2007. However, the number of graduates from each of those classes who entered the military was equal to or greater than the number who entered the military from any of Harvard’s previous five classes.

    Kagan did not “discriminat[e]” against the military

    Kagan: Anti-discrimination policy applied to “any employer that uses the services of OCS.” Kagan did not, as Rotunda claimed, “discriminat[e]” against the military, but rather briefly ended the military recruiter exception (created in 2002) to Harvard Law School’s broad op-ed by Flagg Youngblood labeling Kagan an “anti-military zealot,” three Iraq war veterans attending Harvard Law School wrote in a letter to the editor that Kagan has “created an environment that is highly supportive of students who have served in the military” and that “[u]nder her leadership, Harvard Law School has also gone out of its way to highlight our military service.” The veterans also stated that their support for military recruiting at the school “has not diminished our appreciation for Miss Kagan’s embrace of veterans on campus.” The Harvard Law Record later reported on the veterans’ letter, quoting Iraq veteran Geoff Orazem as saying, “Kagan has great respect for the military.”

    Conservative legal blog: No reason to believe Kagan is hostile to the military. At Volokh Conspiracy, a group blog run by mostly conservative law professors, George Mason University law professor Ilya Somin wrote: “I don’t see any reason to believe that [Kagan’s decision on military recruiters] reflects a general hostility towards the armed forces.”

    Republican Sen. Brown: Kagan is “very supportive of the military as a whole.” The Hill speech at the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York, Kagan stated: “I am in awe of your courage and your dedication, especially in these times of great uncertainty and danger. I know how much my security and freedom and indeed everything else I value depend on all of you.” Kagan further stated that she has been “grieved” by “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” because she “wish[es]” that gays and lesbians “could join this noblest of all professions and serve their country in this most important of all ways.” Kagan added:

    But I would regret very much if anyone thought that the disagreement between American law schools and the US military extended beyond this single issue. It does not. And I would regret still more if that disagreement created any broader chasm between law schools and the military. It must not. It must not because of what we, like all Americans, owe to you. And it must not because of what I am going to talk with you about tonight — because of the deep, the fundamental, the necessary connection between military leadership and law. That connection makes it imperative that we — military leaders and legal educators — join hands and be partners.

    Kagan: It’s “just wrong” that gays and lesbians “cannot perform what I truly believe to be the greatest service a person can give for their country.” In an October 6, 2003, email announcing that Harvard Law School would allow military recruiters on campus, Kagan wrote that “[t]he importance of the military to our society — and the extraordinary service that members of the military provide to all the rest of us — makes this discrimination [against gay troops] more, not less, repugnant,” a sentiment she reiterated in a 2005 letter offering “background” on the school’s position on military recruiting on campus. In October 2004, Kagan reportedly said in protest of the ban on openly gay troops: “These men and women, notwithstanding their talents, their conviction, their courage, cannot perform what I truly believe to be the greatest service a person can give for their country. And that’s just wrong, that’s just flat out wrong.” In a 2008 statement on the military recruiting issue, Kagan wrote, “The military is a noble profession, which provides extraordinary service to each of us every day.”

  • Staffer Who Had Affair With Souder Resigns

    Staffer Who Had Affair With Souder Resigns
    Tracy Jackson, the part-time staffer who had an affair with Rep. Mark Souder (R-IN), on Tuesday resigned her position, which at least partly consisted of interviewing Souder for a Web video series, the AP reports….


    Stanford ‘A Wreck Of A Man’ As Defense Team Turns To Dershowitz
    Allen Stanford has been reduced to “a wreck of a man” and fears he is “losing his mind” as he awaits trial in a Texas prison, according to his attorneys. They’ve brought in celebrity lawyer Alan Dershowitz to argue that the conditions in which Stanford is being held are hindering his ability to prepare a defense, and to request his immediate release.


    Alan DershowitzAllen StanfordLawyerStanford Financial GroupLaw

    At Same ‘08 Speech, Blumenthal More Correctly Describes Military Record (VIDEO)
    In the same speech where Richard Blumenthal claimed he had “served in Vietnam,” he also described his service more accurately, saying he served “during the Vietnam era.”

  • Samsung i8920 Omnia HD2 leaking its way across the net as we speak

    Samsung i8920 Omnia HD2Samsung’s successor to the Symbian-powered i8910 (aka OmniaHD) has just bust its pipes, and is now leaking all over the internet (too soon?).

    The leaks thus far point to a 4″ Super AMOLED screen, a 12MP camera with both Xenon and LED flash (why not?), 30fps 720p video recording (just like its older sibling), and 16 or 32 GB internal storage, all running atop Symbian^3.

    Oh, and it also includes the soon-to-be-standard-on-high-end-phones WiFi b/g/n and Bluetooth 3.0.

    No details of screen resolution were leaked, but some people are suggesting 640×360. That resolution on a 4″ screen would be… lousy… so let’s hope for something better when and if more details trickle out.

    Now, here’s some salt (you know, the grains of which you should be taking with this): the left-hand side of the screen looks a little dodgy, so it could be ’shopped.

    …aaand it’s Symbian. Now, no offence to the OS, but I’m finding it pretty hard to get excited about any phone running Symbian when there are so many better alternatives out there (well, two of them). Also, Unwired View add that Samsung are rumoured to stop making Symbian phones by 2011, so this could very well be the last Symbian phone from the Korean manufacturer.

    [via Unwired View]


  • Jennifer Lopez Diva Demands Raise Eyebrows At World Music Awards

    Breaking News: Jennifer Lopez is a diva!

    Jenny From The Bronx can bark off bizarre orders with a sense of entitlement that would make Mariah Carey burst with pride. The aging diva agreed to perform at the World Music Awards in Monaco Tuesday, but not before laying down a list of ‘necessities’ — including a $5,000 set of diamond headphones, which she’ll likely use to block out the sound of reality.

    “As well as a helicopter ‘on stand-by’, Jennifer insisted on a custom-fitted speed boat – complete with love seat, faux leather seats and a champagne fridge – oh, and a pair of $5,000 diamond-encrusted headphones to keep the noise of the boat’s motor down,” a baffled backstage squeal tattled to London’s The Mirror.

    Lopez entertained the crowd with a selection of her hits after scooping the coveted Legend for Outstanding Contribution to the Arts accolade. On arrival, Jen also demanded an on-call masseuse, a 12-man strong hair and makeup team, a hotel floor to herself and a stretch of private beach. But when asked if she needed a private butler, Jen turned down the offer, insisting she was more than capable of doing things for herself.

    Could have fooled us!


  • Bill Gates: More Profit Than Prophet

    It’s been 15 years since Bill Gates published The Road Ahead, a book packed with the Microsoft founder’s predictions about the future.  How do Gates’s prophecies hold up now that the road ahead has arrived? Let’s take a look at Bill’s hits and misses:

    E-Mail

    Prediction: Gates wrote, “Electronic mail and shared screens will eliminate the need for many meetings…when face-to-face meetings do take place, they will be more efficient because participants will have already exchanged background information by e-mail … information overload is not unique to the (information) highway, and it needn’t be a problem.”

    Verdict: Miss. Gates’s view of e-mail now seems naively Utopian, failing to account for unintended consequences. If anything, e-mail has made workplace meetings more frequent and less efficient. “Didn’t you get that e-mail?” is probably the single most common question posed at meetings, a query that often leads to…another meeting. By some estimates, nearly 40 percent of workers spend at least two hours of the work day sifting through e-mail, leading some companies to adopt policies aimed at reducing e-mail glut. One frequent solution: more face-to-face meetings.

    The Wallet PC

    Prediction: “You’ll be able to carry the wallet PC in your pocket or purse. It will display messages and schedules and also let you read or send electronic mail and faxes, monitor weather and stock reports, play both simple and sophisticated games, browse information if you’re bored, or choose from among thousands of easy-to-call up photos of your kids.”

    Verdict: Hit. Gates’s wallet PC is more or less today’s mobile smartphone with voice capability added.

    Wireless Networks

    Prediction: “The wireless networks of the future will be faster, but unless there is a major breakthrough, wired networks will have a far greater bandwidth. Mobile devices will be able to send and receive messages, but it will be expensive and unusual to use them to receive an individual video stream.”

    Verdict: Miss. Today, receiving a wireless video stream is neither expensive nor unusual; in fact, it’s so commonplace that most people don’t give it a second thought. Gates failed to anticipate that wireless would become cheaper and faster, but his chief mistake was a common but flawed assumption among techno-futurists: that new technology is adopted chiefly on the basis of technological superiority rather than social factors. Even though most wired networks still have greater bandwidth than wireless nets, that’s trumped by the tremendous social utility of wireless, allowing information to be accessed anytime, anyplace.

    Social Networking

    Prediction: “The (information) highway will not only make it easier to keep up with distant friends, it will also enable us to find new companions. Friendships formed across the network will lead naturally to getting together in person.”

    Verdict: Hit and Miss. One of the killer apps of the information highway has turned out to be social networking. Facebook has more than 400 million registered users worldwide and countless other social networks are creating new connections among people. But friendships formed online don’t regularly lead to face-to-face meetings. Far more common is the user with 250 Facebook friends, most of whom he rarely, if ever, sees in person.

    Online shopping

    Prediction: “Because the information highway will carry video, you’ll often be able to see exactly what you’ve ordered … you won’t have to wonder whether the flowers you ordered for your mother by telephone were really as stunning as you’d hoped. You’ll be able to watch the florist arrange the bouquet, change your mind if you want, and replace wilting roses with fresh anemones.”

    Verdict: Miss. Gates was right that the information highway would carry video, but he completely misread the social and economic factors that would shape its use in online commerce. How on earth would a harried florist find the time to hold a videoconference with every customer who orders flowers for Mother’s Day? What company would absorb the colossal expense of having orders changed at the last second according to customers’ shifting whims? Gates’s vision of online shopping has turned out to be a lot like past predictions about personal jet packs and moving sidewalks: a future that’s technologically possible but socially and economically impractical.

    Videoconferencing

    Prediction: “Small video devices using cameras attached to personal computers or television sets will allow us to meet readily across the information highway with much higher quality pictures and sound for lower prices.”

    Verdict: Hit. What came to be called webcams are standard issue on PCs, or can be purchased from Bill Gates’s favorite company for under $30.

    The Internet and the Web

    Prediction: Gates’s 286-page book mentions the World Wide Web on only four of its pages, and portrays the Internet as a subset of a much a larger “Information Superhighway.” The Internet, wrote Gates, is one of “the important precursors of the information highway,” along with PCs, CD-ROMs, phone networks, and cable systems, but “none represents the actual information highway … today’s Internet is not the information highway I imagine, although you can think of it as the beginning of the highway.”

    Verdict: Miss. Gates’s notion that the Internet would play a supporting role in the information highway of the future, rather than being the highway itself, was out-of-date the day The Road Ahead was published. Even Gates realized it. Shortly before his book hit the stores, Gates reorganized Microsoft to focus more on the Internet, and he made major revisions to a second edition of The Road Ahead, adding material that highlighted the significance of the Internet. In many ways, Gates’s cloudy crystal ball regarding the Internet amounted to wishful thinking.

    Gates built Microsoft into a global powerhouse by selling proprietary software that users loaded onto their PCs. He wasn’t likely to warm to the idea that the same functions could be delivered cheaper and faster through a decentralized network that he couldn’t control. Of all of the predictions Gates missed in The Road Ahead, this one might be the costliest; Microsoft is still playing catch-up as a result of failing to anticipate the dominance of the Internet

    Privacy

    Predication: “A decade from now, you may shake your head that there was ever a time when any stranger or wrong number could interrupt you at home with a phone call … by explicitly indicating allowable interruptions, you will be able to establish your home — or anywhere you choose — as your sanctuary.”

    Verdict: Little Hit, Big Miss. It’s true that technology lets you explicitly indicate allowable interruptions — you can use caller ID to dodge unwanted calls or sign up at the National Do Not Call Registry to nix telemarketers. But the notion that technology would pave the way to greater privacy has turned out to be anything but true. Privacy has become one of the great casualties of the computer age, a reality most people have come to accept as the cost of traveling on the information superhighway.

    Don’t bother looking for privacy on The Road Ahead — it’s already in the rear view.

    It’s fun to see where Gates went wrong in predictions from 15 years ago, but how would you do? Take a shot in the comments section below with what you think technology will look like in 2025.





    Email this Article
    Add to digg
    Add to Reddit
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to StumbleUpon
    Add to Facebook






    Bill GatesMicrosoftRoad AheadWorld Wide WebPersonal computer