Predictions are always a tricky thing — especially for a fast-moving world like technology.
Alina Selyukh and Aarti Shahani spoke with Robert Siegel on All Things Considered about some of the biggest themes in tech and tech policy. You can hear their quick recap on net neutrality, drone regulations, self-driving cars and data breaches in the audio above.
Aarti, Laura Sydell and Elise Hu had a similar conversation as 2014 came to a close,
forecasting a few themes
Elise's 2014-2015 Idea: Voice Activation & Anticipatory Computing
This year we saw Amazon Echo — a digital personal assistant powered by artificial intelligence — become a hot buy during the holiday season. It's vaulted into the Top 10 of Amazon's best-selling electronics, sure. But the behavior of using your voice to boss around inanimate objects (in Echo's case, a cylindrical speaker, but in Siri's or Cortana's case, a smartphone), and then relying on that object to use the wealth of data you've shared with it to anticipate your needs, still isn't as common as I expected it'd be.
I'm surprised. It's been nearly two years now since we reported that anticipatory computing (what Google Now or Echo does) was "the next wave" of computing. We're still going to go that way. What
Om Malik and I talked about in 2014
"The more we add apps and digital functions we need to perform on our devices, the more individually tapping or typing for each function becomes a hassle." 'As we become more digital, as we use more things in the digital realm, we just need time to manage all that. And it is not feasible with the current manual processes. So the machines will learn our behavior, how we do certain things and start anticipating our needs,' Malik says."
Anticipatory computing became more of a thing in 2015. But it still hasn't become mainstream.
Aarti's 2014-2015 Idea: Data Breaches
After all the news of hacks in prior years, you'd think that 2015 would provide respite, but that's not what happened.
This year's mega-breaches were even more dramatic than past ones:
- We had numerous health care data breaches. Anthem, the health insurer, was breached, with roughly one-third of Americans' personal data stolen. Excellus BlueCross BlueShield and UCLA Health, in California, were also health industry targets.
- In the government, there was the IRS breach and of course the Office of Personnel Management. In the case of OPM, files on 22 million individuals
were taken
- Consumer hacks included the toymaker VTech, in which
data on millions of kids
The best expert we could find — one recommended by federal authorities — estimates hackers have taken
60 to 80 percent
Laura's 2014-2015 Idea: Apple Inc.
Last year at this time I commented on how well Apple's stock had done after its record sales of the iPhone 6. The stock has now declined from April's high of more than $134 per share to below $110.
Apple continues to have record sales of its iPhone under CEO Tim Cook. So why is Wall Street so gloomy?
Apple has not released any official sales numbers of its watch, prompting some speculation that it hasn't done that well. Research firms like IDC say next year, the smartwatch market
will grow significantly
The story isn't much different with Apple Pay. So far, the mobile payment system doesn't seem to be widely adopted, though, again, Apple isn't sharing a lot of information about it. According to
a report by Infoscout
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