The Citizen (Gauteng)

Get ready to be blown away

TECHNOLOGY: NEW DECADE RINGS IN BIGGER CHANGES FOR THE INDUSTRY

- Arthur Goldstuck

If we thought the technology revolution was slowing down, fasten those seatbelts. You ain’t seen nothing yet, industry veterans tell ARTHUR GOLDSTUCK.

The dizzying speed of technology advance over the past 30 years, driven first by the advent of the personal computer, followed by the internet and then by smartphone­s, was merely the curtain-raiser for the coming decade.

This view was expressed by one industry executive after another in interviews at last week’s Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona. And these were no start-up upstarts. These were industry veterans who had been instrument­al in some of the landmark products and services that built the informatio­n technology industry we know today.

Pat Gelsinger, CEO of cloud computing giants VMware, was the first chief technology officer at Intel and architect of the original Intel 486 processor. As one-time head of Intel Labs, he led many of the research projects in the 1980s and 1980s that would help speed up the pace of high-tech change.

“We are at the dawn of a re-accelerati­on of the technology industry overall,” he said in an exclusive interview at MWC. “The next decade will see more change and new technology than in the last 20 or 30 years.

“An accelerati­ng crescendo of technologi­es is coming together: cloud, mobile, big data, robotics, analytics, 3D printing, and more. It will bring together a reinforcin­g set of innovative activities.

“In the next decade, 75% of the world’s population will have a persistent connection to the internet with some smart device. Today it’s already 40%. Soon, you’ll be able to touch half the world’s population.”

These devices, he said, will come into their own once intelligen­ce is added.

“I can put intelligen­ce into everything for almost zero cost, so while there are more people than machines connected today, in the next few years there will be twice as many machine-connected intelligen­t devices as human-connected intelligen­t devices. It will transform supply chains and our quality of life.”

Emerging markets, including South Africa, may well have “some of the greatest opportunit­ies we have collective­ly over next decade”, he says. “Would someone in Ethiopia or Zambia be able to buy a $700 iPhone and $100 service? Of course not. But in markets where the price of a phone is $20 and a service less than $10, we see rapid innovation around affordable access to core technologi­es, basic financial services, crop informatio­n, trading informatio­n.”

Gelsinger offered a fascinatin­g vision of a future that is already possible.

“Tomorrow morning your smart device will wake you, and tell you: ‘last night you had a heart irregulari­ty, so I’m waking you early and uploading your biometrics to the medical cloud. I’m running comparison­s of your pattern with everyone in your DNA group. I’ve made a doctor’s appointmen­t and loaded the directions into your self-driving car. I’ve moved your regular coffee order to a different Starbucks on your revised route, and made it decaffeina­ted because you’re seeing the heart doctor.’

“None of that is unreasonab­le to implement, but the results are

life-changing.”

These sentiments were echoed by Frank Kern, chief executive officer of Aricent, a global technology services company with more than 12 000 staff focused on software and hardware innovation. He spent 30 years with IBM, including heading up its core consulting division, Global Business Services.

“This is the most exciting time yet,” he says. “Before, I was just in the boring old computer industry.

“I was around when IBM did a lot of interestin­g stuff. In 2009 I created an analytics practise with 9 000 people, worth $25-billion.

“But today is the most exciting time of all. It’s a time when you have a combinatio­n of an explosion of sensors, accelerati­ng of communicat­ions, combined with the software capabiliti­es of AI, and now we are designing the user interface of the future, the customer experience of the future.”

Aricent owns a renowned strategy and design company, frog, which was responsibl­e for the design of several Apple computers, along with hardware for numerous global organisati­ons. The parent company has also been in research and developmen­t of software for 25 years, with a strong focus on telecommun­ications.

“We are able to see and participat­e in multiple trends going on, and all are accelerati­ng at the same time.”

Gelsinger puts it neatly into perspectiv­e.

“All of this gives me an almost child-like enthusiasm. I’ve been in the technology industry for 37 years. If you ever used a microproce­ssor or a USB drive, I helped do all of them. But the next decade is as exciting as the last three decades. Because so many of these things will become life-changing and business-changing.”

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? NO HORSEPLAY. A metal horse installati­on manufactur­ed through 3D printing on display at the Hunan Farsoon High-Tech facility in China.
Picture: EPA NO HORSEPLAY. A metal horse installati­on manufactur­ed through 3D printing on display at the Hunan Farsoon High-Tech facility in China.
 ?? Picture: EPA ?? MAN VERSUS MACHINE. Pat Gelsinger, Chief Executive Officer of VMware. predicts big changes,
Picture: EPA MAN VERSUS MACHINE. Pat Gelsinger, Chief Executive Officer of VMware. predicts big changes,
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Illustrati­ons: iStock
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 ?? Picture: EPA ?? BITE SIZE. A metal laser sintering system machine operates to make a 3D print of dental crowns made of cobalt-chromium, at the Hunan Farsoon High-Tech facility in Changsha City, Hunan Province, China.
Picture: EPA BITE SIZE. A metal laser sintering system machine operates to make a 3D print of dental crowns made of cobalt-chromium, at the Hunan Farsoon High-Tech facility in Changsha City, Hunan Province, China.
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