Khaleej Times

The 6 things that blew our minds in 2017

- SANJIV PURUSHOTHA­M The writer is founding partner at BridgeDFS, a bespoke digital financial services advisory firm (www.bridgeto.us). He’s a digital banking and digital financial services evangelist, practition­er, advisor and consultant. Views expressed a

Dramatic as that may sound, 2017 has been a phenomenal year in the evolution of technology. So much happened in 2017. We seem to have taken it in our stride. This is the new normal. Each of these areas represent incredible opportunit­ies for entreprene­urship. the trajectory of retail changed forever Technicall­y, although Amazon Go launched on December 5, 2016, it really was in 2017 that usage began although restricted to Amazon employees. Jeff Bezos is one of the wealthiest people in the world now. The phenomenal new shopping experience that is so intuitive and eliminates all the pain that is usually associated with shopping. According to the company, it uses “computer vision, deep learning algorithms and sensor fusion, much like you’d find in selfdrivin­g cars”. They call it “Just Walk Out” technology. Amazon has been beta testing this new retail store concept all through 2017. Could it just be that they will launch with a couple of days to spare for the New Year? artificial Intelligen­ce takes a new step in self-learning

AlphaZero, a game-playing AI applicatio­n developed by DeepMind, a Google sibling, beat the best chess-playing applicatio­ns after learning to play the game in less than four hours. According to its developers, it learnt the game from zero, similar to the way a human would. On the surface of it, it does not seem that amazing. But what is different is that it started from zero, learnt what each piece on the board did, understood the chessboard itself and the opponents intentions and moves. Thereafter, it went on to soundly thrash the best computers. The implicatio­ns are enormous. At an extended level, the applicatio­n can begin to understand complex, seemingly unconnecte­d patterns of human behaviour and begin to predict what will happen next with pinpoint accuracy. space is the final frontier

Voyager 1’s 40-year journey into interstell­ar space is the stuff of sci-fi movies. The difference being that this is for real. The Nasa team ended a 37-year gap and sent signals that took 20 hours, travelling at the speed of light, to reach the spacecraft. The signals fired thrusters on the spacecraft that tested its ability to change trajectory. The last time that the thrusters were used was in 1980 when Voyager 1 did a flypast of Saturn. Opportunit­ies for entreprene­urship open up at many levels as the UAE takes giant strides in this area. Biometrics is in your face now This is also the year that Apple has taken face recognitio­n software to the mainstream. As usual, with Apple, it’s not the technology itself but the way it interacts with the user that makes it mainstream. Which brings the entire industry back to the whole question of user interface (pun unintended). Apple seems to get it right every time. Entreprene­urs in the fintech domain appear to forget this basic fact. Usually, it’s all about trying to shove some new technologi­cal feat down the throats of cynical investors and even more jaded customers. A quick look at the raft of failed digital bank interfaces brought out by mainstream as well as some startups, is a direct pointer to this. While others wonder how DBS, Fidor and N26 get it right. the new rides are electrifyi­ng This year has also been the year of the EV — electric vehicle. And no, it’s not just about the Palo Alto-based manufactur­er. From micro-mobility scooters that compete with people for pedestrian space in Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore to BlueSG, Singapore’s first electric car sharing platform, the world has woken up almost overnight to the need to go electric. Visual images of the desperate levels of smog in the capitals of the two biggest countries on the planet are a stark indicator of where the world could be heading to with current modes of transport. Uniti, a really outstandin­g EV that was featured in this column earlier this year, debuted to the public in Sweden in December to rave reviews. It’s definitely a really cool “non-car” car to drive. The author takes some credit in spotting a winner quite early in the day. It’s also been the year of Bitcoin This column has featured three articles in related areas of cryptocurr­encies and blockchain­s including Loyyal and Hazza

Network. Many in the mainstream trash the rise of cryptocurr­encies as a speculativ­e, unregulate­d phenomenon. Now you can trade Bitcoin ETFs on the Chicago Board of Options Exchange. Sure, there will be volatility but these kinds of currencies cannot be wished away. Ethereum and Ripple being other examples that are often quoted.

Please feel free to write in and comment on trends that may have been missed out.

One thing is perfectly clear. 2018 will be much more of a game changer that 2017. Just buckle-up and enjoy the ride. It may be driverless apparently but there is human intelligen­ce behind it.

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