Saturday, April 19, 2014

Wearables, Drones Scare Americans, Information Week, 19 April 2014

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4/19/2014
09:06 AM
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Wearables, Drones Scare Americans

Google has some public relations to do. People remain wary of tech breakthroughs including care-giving robots and drones, Pew research finds.
Google's 10 Big Bets On The Future
Google's 10 Big Bets On The Future
(Click image for larger view and slideshow.)
Most Americans think technology will improve society, but they are concerned about specific avenues of research. A survey conducted by the nonprofit Pew Research Center finds doubts about expected technological change, mixed in with the optimism.
For Google, which has struggled to make its Glass computerized eyewear socially acceptable, for Amazon, which has floated the possibility of delivering packages by drone, and for other companies banking on the future, the survey's findings suggest that research budgets should be matched by investments in public relations. The future may be bright but people are more comfortable with the present.
Overall, the 1,001 US adults surveyed by Pew researchers expect technology will make the world a better place. Among the respondents, 59% expressed optimism that coming technological changes will make life better, while 30% anticipated a future where people are worse off.
Eight in ten think society will benefit from lab-grown organs in the next 50 years while half of those surveyed foresee computers that will be able create art that's indistinguishable from what a human can make.
[For a glance at the past, read Web Turns 25: 10 Graphics To See.]
At the same time, a surprisingly large percentage of people anticipate unrealistic scenarios. For example, 39% think scientists will be able to teleport objects within 50 years. That number should be much closer to zero.
Respondents exhibited worry about technologies that have attracted significant recent investment in Silicon Valley. Fifty three percent of Americans believe society will suffer if "most people wear implants or other devices that constantly show them information about the world around them." About 37% disagree and see wearable and implantable devices as a change for the better. Asked whether they would be interested in riding in driverless cars, only 48% would do so given the option.
As far as personal and commercial drones are concerned, 63% of respondents think we'll be worse off if the FAA allows them to operate in commercial airspace. A slightly higher percentage of people, 65%, see the prospect of robot caregivers for the elderly as undesirable. And 66% of those surveyed dislike the idea of parents altering the DNA of their children to make them healthier, smarter, or more athletic.
About 72% rejected the idea of a brain implant to improve mental capacity and 78% expressed disinterest in eating lab-grown meat.
The study also underscores the need for technology companies to pay more attention to income inequality. That's an issue Google has confronted in San Francisco, where the success of technology companies is now often blamed for the shortage of affordable housing and where those outside the industry feel left behind.
Among those surveyed, the likelihood of concern about the future rose as income declined. Thirty-eight percent of respondents with an income of $30,000 or less expected technology would make people's lives worse; for those making $75,000 or more, only 22% believed technology will have a negative impact on society.
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Thomas Claburn has been writing about business and technology since 1996, for publications such as New Architect, PC Computing, InformationWeek, Salon, Wired, and Ziff Davis Smart Business. Before that, he worked in film and television, having earned a not particularly useful ... View Full Bio
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gibsondonald128
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gibsondonald128,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 4:33:01 PM
Good Info For Eveyone 
I get paid over $87 per hour working from home with 3 kids at home. I never thought I'd be able to do it but my best friend earns over 10k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless. Heres what I've been doing

>>>>> www.bay91.com
MedicalQuack
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MedicalQuack,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 2:25:27 PM
Quantified Sol Self 
Welcome to the world of the Quantified Sold Self...interesting with Nike...people don't work that way, it is all about money.

http://ducknetweb.blogspot.com/2014/04/nike-cuts-back-on-wearables-which-opens.html


See how Google has partnered with data brokers too.

http://ducknetweb.blogspot.com/2014/04/google-partnering-with-data-brokers.html
insider77
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insider77,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 12:47:17 PM
Re: Wearables and drones 
Wrong again luddite lol.you sound like the nay sayers back in 2007 that said tiuch screens would never be used...or how about IBM back in the 80's:folks will never have have computers...so much for that.This exponential increase in technology is going to reaarange everything. Its already in motion...all you have to do is look around.Wearables will be huge.dont think so?go out in public today and look around.see all those faces buried in those LCD screens?..its coming like it or not dude.People initally fear what they dont understand.Like everything else I history. They will get over it and move foward.....and btw smartglasses will very shortly look like regular sunglasses.you wont even know.dont say what wont happen.
JCramshaw
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JCramshaw,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 12:47:16 PM
Wearable Drones 
I respect and admire private industries ingenuity and foreware thinking.  I believe that technology can and would help people of all income groups.  However, until We The People are able to trust our government, I would be afraid to see these great technologies implemented.  Our current Administration, Senate and House of Representatives has a lot of work to do to re-build this trust in the United States and around the world.  Without trust, we have nothing that will benefit our wonderful country.
RajaR362
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RajaR362,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 12:06:19 PM
Wearables and drones 
It will never be socially acceptable to run around wearing spywear, perceived or real. It's geekism a bridge too far. As to drone deliveries—a problem that needs no solution.
JakobS797
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JakobS797,User Rank: Apprentice
4/19/2014 | 10:18:17 AM
Wearables, Drones Scare Americans 
Gee, I wonder why. The only thing we have seen relative to drones is footage of a flash of light, a loud explosion, and reports of how many were killed. Add to that Mr. Obama's insistance he can kill Americans any place on the planet with no due process of any kind. Yeah, that scares me. That has to be the worlds worst public relations promotion anyone has ever seen.
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