Sunday Times

Moonshot ideas to transform way of life

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IMAGINE ordering a television or your groceries online and having them delivered to you by an unmanned aircraft.

Even Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos admitted it sounds “like science fiction” when he announced that the company is experiment­ing with a project to do just that.

The drones, which will be offered to customers in four or five years, stand to transform Amazon’s slick delivery network. However, the fantastica­l developmen­t serves a much greater purpose than that.

It is one of a handful of off-thewall projects known in Silicon Valley parlance as “moonshot ideas”: examples of technologi­cal developmen­ts so ambitious that, before they appear, most people rule them out as impossible.

But the top US technologi­sts believe firmly that they can change the world.

Google has been one of the biggest proponents of this kind of thinking.

Google Glass, which allows users to search the web or take photograph­s of what they see through a pair of spectacles, may seem new and outlandish on the surface, but it is already old hat to the company’s founders. Larry Page and Sergey Brin are said to be far more engaged in the company’s self-driving cars, which stand to revolution­ise the way people travel, or its “Loon” project to deliver broadband to the developing world via balloon.

There are doubtless many even more radical ideas, still under wraps.

Other technologi­sts don’t just want to change the world. They are trying to reinvent it.

Peter Thiel, the PayPal founder and billionair­e Facebook investor, plans to create a number of artificial islands, independen­t of any establishe­d government, where people could experiment with ways of running society, and with new technology, with none of the regulatory interferen­ce that often acts as a roadblock to innovation.

His former PayPal colleague, Elon Musk, has set his sights a little further afield. His Space X company is devoted to colonising Mars.

James Cameron, the director

Silicon Valley is changing the world. In London, they’re not

of Avatar , has joined Page and Google chairman Eric Schmidt in investing in a company, Planetary Resources, that aims to mine asteroids for fuel and precious metals.

Back on earth, Bezos is spending $42-million on building an enormous clock, deep in a Texas mountain, which will mark time over the next 10 000 years. It is a folly designed to remind people of the importance of long-term thinking. All of these moonshot ideas serve a similar function: of focusing minds. On one level, they aim to change the world. On another, more tangible level, they help those companies attract and retain the top-flight engineerin­g talent they require for the more mundane parts of their business.

Google is, in essence, an advertisin­g business, but the sheer ambition of its moonshot projects helps to convince staff engaged in tweaking search engine algorithms and selling advertisin­g space that they are helping to change the world.

Similarly, Amazon’s grandscale thinking helps it secure top-tier talent to a business whose core function is to stack ’em high, sell ’em cheap.

“The best guys at Google are bored of search, but they’re too valuable to lose so it has to give them something to chew on,” says Dan Lavin, head of consultanc­y firm Silicon Valley Ventures.

“People go and work for such and such a guy because he had the vision for X. In order to stay, once X is complete, they need the next thing.

“You can march people to the top of Mount Everest, but when you get there … you have to give them something new. You have to march them down to the bottom of the sea.”

The effect in Silicon Valley is palpable. Technologi­sts approach their work with the zeal of missionari­es.

Google’s investors may be focused on its climbing share price, but the primary goal of Google’s idealistic co-founders is still to advance innovation and convert as many people as possible to their own world view.

The use of moonshot ideas is not exclusive to the US. In Aus- tralia, textbook rental firm Zookal has paired up with a start-up, Flirtey, and is also working on a drone delivery service. In China, the Southern China Aviation Industry Group has filed a patent for a flying car — a real-life version of the fantastica­l vehicles which zipped about on screen in Back to the Future 2 or The Jetsons.

However, Silicon Valley insiders generally regard Europe and Australia as lagging when it comes to blue-chip technology businesses with such off-thewall, large-scale ambition.

“Moonshot thinking massive- ly sets the US tech industry apart,” says Lavin. “Everyone who’s good goes there. In Silicon Valley, they’re changing the world. In London, they’re not, and they don’t think they are. They’re not even trying to.”

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ?? SPECIAL DELIVERY: Amazon hopes to deploy drones like the octocopter to deliver products
Picture: GALLO IMAGES SPECIAL DELIVERY: Amazon hopes to deploy drones like the octocopter to deliver products

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