R42) top 10 things that will change your future

top 10 things that will change your future.


Number 10: AI-optimized manufacturing.


Paper and pencil tracking, luck, significant global travel, and opaque supply chains are part of today’s status quo, resulting in large amounts of wasted energy, materials, and time. Accelerated in part by the long-term shutdown of international and regional travel by COVID-19, companies that design and build products will rapidly adopt cloud-based technologies to aggregate, intelligently transform, and contextually present product and process data from manufacturing lines throughout their supply chains. 


Number 9: A far-reaching energy transformation.


In 2025, carbon footprints will be viewed as socially unacceptable, much like drunk driving is today. The COVID-19 pandemic will have focused the public’s attention on the need to take action to deal with threats to our way of life, our health, and our future. Public attention will drive government policy and behavioral changes, with carbon footprints becoming a subject of worldwide scrutiny. Individuals, companies, and countries will seek the quickest and most affordable ways to achieve net zero – the elimination of their carbon footprint. The creation of a sustainable, net-zero future will be built through a far-reaching energy transformation that significantly reduces the world’s carbon emissions, and through the emergence of a massive carbon management industry that captures, utilizes, and eliminates carbon dioxide. 


Number 8: A new era of computing.


By 2025, quantum computing will have outgrown its infancy, and a first generation of commercial devices will be able to tackle meaningful, real-world problems. One major application of this new kind of computer will be the simulation of complex chemical reactions, a powerful tool that opens up new avenues in drug development. Quantum chemistry calculations will also aid the design of novel materials with desired properties, for instance, better catalysts for the automotive industry that curb emissions and help fight climate change. Right now, the development of pharmaceuticals and performance materials relies massively on trial and error, which means it is an iterative, time-consuming, and expensive process. 


Number 7: A healthcare paradigm shift to prevention through diet.


By 2025, healthcare systems will adopt more preventative health approaches based on the developing science behind the health benefits of plant-rich, nutrient-dense diets. This trend will be enabled by AI-powered and systems biology-based technology that exponentially grows our knowledge of the role of specific dietary phytonutrients in specific human health and functional outcomes. After the pandemic of 2020, consumers will be more aware of the importance of their underlying health and will increasingly demand healthier food to help support their natural defenses. Armed with a much deeper understanding of nutrition, the global food industry can respond by offering a broader range of product options to support optimal health outcomes. 


Number 6: 5G will enhance the global economy and save lives.


Overnight, we’ve experienced a sharp increase in delivery services with a need for “day-of” goods from providers like Amazon and Instacart - but it has been limited. With 5G networks in place, tied directly into autonomous bots, goods would be delivered safely within hours.


Number 5: A new normal in managing cancer.


Technology drives data, data catalyzes knowledge, and knowledge enables empowerment. In tomorrow’s world, cancer will be managed like any chronic health condition —we will be able to precisely identify what we may be facing and be empowered to overcome it.


Number 4: Robotic retail.


Historically, robotics has turned around many industries, while a few select sectors - such as grocery retail - have remained largely untouched. With the use of a new robotics application called 'micro fulfillment', Grocery retailing will no longer look the same. The use of robotics downstream at a 'hyper local' level (as opposed to the traditional upstream application in the supply chain) will disrupt this 100-year-old, $5 trillion industry and all its stakeholders will experience significant change. Retailers will operate at a higher order of magnitude on productivity, which will in turn result in positive and enticing returns in the online grocery business (unheard of at the moment). 


Number 3: A blurring of physical and virtual spaces.


One thing the current pandemic has shown us is how important technology is for maintaining and facilitating communication - not simply for work purposes, but for building real emotional connections. In the next few years, we can expect to see this progress accelerate, with AI technology built to connect people at a human level and drive them closer to each other, even when physically they’re apart. The line between physical space and virtual will forever be blurred. We’ll start to see capabilities for global events - from SXSW to the Glastonbury Festival - to provide fully digitalized alternatives, beyond simple live streaming into full experiences. 

Number 2: Putting individuals - not institutions - at the heart of healthcare.


By 2025, the lines separating culture, information technology, and health will be blurred. Engineering biology, machine learning, and the sharing economy will establish a framework for decentralizing the healthcare continuum, moving it from institutions to the individual. Propelling this forward are advances in artificial intelligence and new supply chain delivery mechanisms, which require the real-time biological data that engineering biology will deliver as simple, low-cost diagnostic tests to individuals in every corner of the globe. As a result, morbidity, mortality, and costs will decrease in acute conditions, such as infectious diseases, because only the most severe cases will need additional care. Fewer infected people will leave their homes, dramatically altering disease epidemiology while decreasing the burden on healthcare systems. 


Number 1: The future of construction has already begun.


Construction will become a synchronized sequence of manufacturing processes, delivering control, change, and production at scale. It will be a safer, faster, and more cost-effective way to build the homes, offices, factories, and other structures we need to thrive in cities and beyond. As rich datasets are created across the construction industry through the internet of things, AI, and image capture, to name a few, this vision is already coming to life. Using data to deeply understand industry processes is profoundly enhancing the ability of field professionals to trust their instincts in real-time decision-making, enabling learning and progress while gaining trust and adoption.


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