industryterm:disruptive technology

  • Lifescale: The Antidote to Our Tech Addicted, Digitally Distracted Lifestyle
    https://hackernoon.com/lifescale-the-antidote-to-our-tech-addicted-digitally-distracted-lifesty

    If you’re already a Brian Solis reader, get ready for a surprising turn. And if you’ve never read a Solis book before, his eighth and latest is the one to start with. Lifescale: How to Live a More Creative, Productive, and Happy Life launched at SXSW in Austin last month, and it promises to help us wake up from our tech-addicted comas and rediscover creative, empowered lives.Solis is principal analyst at Altimeter, the digital research group of Prophet. He’s spent his last seven books analyzing the impact of disruptive technology on business, markets and society.Now, he’s turned his research powers in a different direction. Lifescale asks what happened to our attention spans and creative capacities, when we, as humans, were disrupted by “disruptive technology.” More so, he ventures on a (...)

    #digital-transformation #brian-solis #work-life-balance #digital-health #productivity

  • #bitcoin — a decade of disruption, distribution, digitization, decentralization and decimation
    https://hackernoon.com/bitcoin-a-decade-of-disruption-distribution-digitization-decentralizatio

    Bitcoin — a decade of disruption, distribution, digitization, decentralization and decimationJourney from an abstract concept to being the world’s largest CryptocurrencyInWara provides research on ICO and STO projects. In addition to ICOs/STOs, we provide research on Crypto exchanges and their security, private blockchain companies, Hedge Fund, VC, HNI and angel investments in the Blockchain industry and Mergers/Acquisitions in the space.Disclaimer: this is not financial advice. For more details visit terms and conditions.Download 40-page ICO landscape Annual Report 2018Bitcoin came into existence as a disruptive technology that could potentially transform the way people choose to transact globally. It’s been 10 years since Satoshi Nakamoto and Martti Malmithe, two of the very first (...)

    #bitcoin-disruption #bitcoin-distribution #bitcoin-decimation #bitcoin-decade

  • How to penetrate into the #blockchain space as a developer without having a concrete project
    https://hackernoon.com/how-to-penetrate-into-the-blockchain-space-as-a-developer-without-having

    Lets go through various entry points into the Blockchain space“The journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.”This is one of my favourite quote from the ancient Chinese philosopher Laozi. The purpose of this article is to get you taking that step.The year is 2019 and Blockchain has the potential to emerge as one of the most disruptive technology known to mankind. Some of you might argue that AI is more disruptive, however in order to reach singularity we will require several breakthroughs in the field and I am not sure if that is going to happen in our lifetime.Blockchain on the other hand is where I see the low hanging fruits are. The technology has matured and its applications such as cryptocurrency, ICO, STO, digital identity, smart contracts has already begin mass (...)

    #blockchain-technology #blockchain-startup #hyperledger #blockchain-development

  • 9 Things You Need To Know About Mesh Networks
    https://hackernoon.com/9-things-you-need-to-know-about-mesh-networks-f61a77e5751a?source=rss---

    Mesh networkCatch up on the latest disruptive technology on the marketEven though you might have heard more and more about it these past months, mesh networks are actually a technology that has been around for a while. It is not a temporary tech hype. They have considerable benefits that will bring us a step closer to a seamless connected world of people and things. But what is the technology behind the fancy words? This article addresses common questions about mesh networks. Most people often need to visualise the context to fully understand concepts that one has never heard of before. So to better explain what a mesh network #topology is, this article will explain the bigger picture, backed up with visual diagrams.The OSI Model — 7 LayersThe OSI modelTo start with, we are talking about (...)

    #connectivity #iot #mesh-networks #basics

  • #blockchain and VR are Coming After the Real Estate Industry
    https://hackernoon.com/blockchain-and-vr-are-coming-after-the-real-estate-industry-d2aab0c62036

    This Paid Story is brought to you by Deedcoin.Disruptive tech is changing industries ranging from taxicabs to healthcare. Can it improve the homebuying experience too?The U.S. real estate landscape has long been dominated by the National Association of Realtors (NAR), an influential industry group that’s gotten in hot water before for their attempts to squelch disruptive technology (see their 2008 consent decree from the U.S. Department of Justice, which forbid them from discriminating against online brokerages). But better tech and a better experience for home buyers are coming to the real estate world, whether NAR is prepared for it or not.Blockchain and Virtual Reality (VR) are two of the most talked-about technologies in Silicon Valley — and with good reason. Blockchain’s immutable (...)

    #blockchain-startup #real-estate #virtual-reality #paid-story

  • Inside X, Google’s Moonshot Factory |The Atlantic (novembre 2017)
    https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/11/x-google-moonshot-factory/540648

    (…) The decline in U.S. productivity growth since the 1970s puzzles economists; potential explanations range from an aging workforce to the rise of new monopolies. But John Fernald, an economist at the Federal Reserve, says we can’t rule out a drought of breakthrough inventions. He points out that the notable exception to the post-1970 decline in productivity occurred from 1995 to 2004, when businesses throughout the economy finally figured out information technology and the internet. “It’s possible that productivity took off, and then slowed down, because we picked all the low-hanging fruit from the information-technology wave,” Fernald told me.

    The U.S. economy continues to reap the benefits of IT breakthroughs, some of which are now almost 50 years old. But where will the next brilliant technology shock come from? As total federal R&D spending has declined—from nearly 12 percent of the budget in the 1960s to 4 percent today—some analysts have argued that corporate America has picked up the slack. But public companies don’t really invest in experimental research; their R&D is much more D than R. A 2015 study from Duke University found that since 1980, there has been a “shift away from scientific research by large corporations”—the triumph of short-term innovation over long-term invention.

    The decline of scientific research in America has serious implications. In 2015, MIT published a devastating report on the landmark scientific achievements of the previous year, including the first spacecraft landing on a comet, the discovery of the Higgs boson particle, and the creation of the world’s fastest supercomputer. None of these was an American-led accomplishment. The first two were the products of a 10-year European-led consortium. The supercomputer was built in China.

    As the MIT researchers pointed out, many of the commercial breakthroughs of the past few years have depended on inventions that occurred decades ago, and most of those were the results of government investment. From 2012 to 2016, the U.S. was the world’s leading oil producer. This was largely thanks to hydraulic fracturing experiments, or fracking, which emerged from federally funded research into drilling technology after the 1970s oil crisis. The recent surge in new cancer drugs and therapies can be traced back to the War on Cancer announced in 1971. But the report pointed to more than a dozen research areas where the United States is falling behind, including robotics, batteries, and synthetic biology. “As competitive pressures have increased, basic research has essentially disappeared from U.S. companies,” the authors wrote.

    It is in danger of disappearing from the federal government as well. The White House budget this year proposed cutting funding for the National Institutes of Health, the crown jewel of U.S. biomedical research, by $5.8 billion, or 18 percent. It proposed slashing funding for disease research, wiping out federal climate-change science, and eliminating the Energy Department’s celebrated research division, arpa-e.

    The Trump administration’s thesis seems to be that the private sector is better positioned to finance disruptive technology. But this view is ahistorical. Almost every ingredient of the internet age came from government-funded scientists or research labs purposefully detached from the vagaries of the free market. The transistor, the fundamental unit of electronics hardware, was invented at Bell Labs, inside a government-sanctioned monopoly. The first model of the internet was developed at the government’s Advanced Research Projects Agency, now called darpa. In the 1970s, several of the agency’s scientists took their vision of computers connected through a worldwide network to Xerox parc.

    “There is still a huge misconception today that big leaps in technology come from companies racing to make money, but they do not,” says Jon Gertner, the author of The Idea Factory, a history of Bell Labs. “Companies are really good at combining existing breakthroughs in ways that consumers like. But the breakthroughs come from patient and curious scientists, not the rush to market.” In this regard, X’s methodical approach to invention, while it might invite sneering from judgmental critics and profit-hungry investors, is one of its most admirable qualities. Its pace and its patience are of another era.

    #innovation #États-Unis #Google_X #Internet #histoire