Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Why we need to live in the future

We are just commencing the greatest shift that society has ever seen, thanks to technology

- Vivek Wadhwa is a Distinguis­hed Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University at Silicon Valley and author of The Driver in the Driverless Car: How Our Technology Choices Will Create the Future. The views expressed are personal VIVEK WADHWA

Ilive in the future. I drive an amazing Tesla electric vehicle, which takes control of the steering wheel on highways. My house, in Menlo Park, California, is a “passive” home that expends minimal energy on heating or cooling. With the solar panels on my roof, my energy bills are close to zero. I have a medical device at home, which was made in New Delhi, Healthcube­d, that does the same medical tests as hospitals — and provides me with immediate results. Because I have a history of heart trouble, I have all of the data I need to communicat­e with a doctor anywhere in the world, anytime I need.

I spend much of my time talking to entreprene­urs and researcher­s about breakthrou­gh technologi­es such as artificial intelligen­ce and robotics. These entreprene­urs are building a better future. I live in the future as it is forming and this is happening far faster than most people realise, and far faster than the human mind can comfortabl­y perceive.

The distant future is no longer distant. The pace of technologi­cal change is rapidly accelerati­ng, and those changes are coming to you very soon. Look at the way smartphone­s crept up on us. Just about everyone now has one. We are always checking email, receiving texts, ordering goods online, and sharing our lives with distant friends and relatives on social media.

These technologi­es changed our lives before we even realised it. Just as we blindly follow the directions that Google Maps gives us — even when we know better — we will comply with the constant advice that our digital doctor provides. I’m talking about an artificial­ly intelligen­t app on our smartphone that will have read our medical data and monitor our lifestyles and habits. It will warn us not to eat more gulab jamuns lest we gain another 10 pounds.

So you say that I live in a technobubb­le, a world that is not representa­tive of the lives of the majority of people in the US or India? That’s true. I live a comfortabl­e life in Silicon Valley and am fortunate to sit near the top of the technology and innovation food chain. So I see the future sooner than most people. The noted science-fiction writer William Gibson, who is a favourite of hackers and techies, once wrote: “The future is here. It’s just not evenly distribute­d yet”. But, from my vantage point at its apex, I am watching that distributi­on curve flatten, and quickly. Simply put, the future is happening faster and faster. It is happening everywhere.

Technology is the great leveller, the great unifier, the great creator of new and destroyer of old. Once, technology could be put in a box, a discrete business dominated by business systems and some cool gadgets. It slowly but surely crept into more corners of our lives. Today the creep has become a headlong rush. Technology is taking over our lives; every part of society; every waking moment of every day. Increasing­ly, pervasive data networks and connected devices are causing rapid informatio­n flows from the source to the masses—and down the economic ladders from the developed societies to the poorest.

Perhaps my present life in the near future, in the technobubb­le in Silicon Valley, sounds unreal. Believe me, it is something we will laugh at within a decade as primitive.

We are only just commencing the greatest shift that society has seen since the dawn of humankind. And, as in all other manifest shifts – from the use of fire to the rise of agricultur­e and the developmen­t of sailing vessels, internal-combustion engines, and com- puting – this one will arise from breathtaki­ng advances in technology. This shift, though, is both broader and deeper, and is happening far more quickly.

Such rapid, ubiquitous change has a dark side. Jobs as we know them will disappear. Our privacy will be further compromise­d. Our children may never drive a car or ride in one driven by a human being. We have to worry about biological terrorism and killer drones. Someone — maybe you — will have his or her DNA sequence and fingerprin­ts stolen. Man and machine will begin to merge. You will have as much food as you can possibly eat, for better and for worse.

The ugly state of global politics illustrate­s the impact of income inequality and the widening technologi­cal divide. More people are being left behind and are protesting. Technologi­es such as social media are being used to fan the flames and to exploit ignorance and bias. The situation will get only worse — unless we find ways to share the prosperity we are creating.

We have a choice: to build an amazing future such as we saw on the TV series Star Trek, or to head into the dystopia of Mad Max. It really is up to us; we must tell our policy makers what choices we want them to make.

The key is to ensure that the technologi­es we are building have the potential to benefit everyone equally; balance risks and the rewards; and minimise the dependence that technologi­es create. But first, we must learn about these advances ourselves and be part of the future they are creating.

 ?? AP ?? Google's new selfdrivin­g prototype car, Mountain View, California
AP Google's new selfdrivin­g prototype car, Mountain View, California
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