A computer beats the reigning human champion of Go, a game harder than chess. Another is composing classical music. Labs are creating life-forms from synthetic DNA. A doctor designs an artificial trachea, uses a 3D printer to produce it, and implants it and saves a child's life. Astonishing technological advances like these are arriving in increasing numbers. Scholar and entrepreneur Vivek Wadhwa uses this book to alert us to dozens of them and raise important questions about what they may mean for us. Breakthroughs such as personalized genomics, self-driving vehicles, drones, and artificial…mehr
A computer beats the reigning human champion of Go, a game harder than chess. Another is composing classical music. Labs are creating life-forms from synthetic DNA. A doctor designs an artificial trachea, uses a 3D printer to produce it, and implants it and saves a child's life. Astonishing technological advances like these are arriving in increasing numbers. Scholar and entrepreneur Vivek Wadhwa uses this book to alert us to dozens of them and raise important questions about what they may mean for us. Breakthroughs such as personalized genomics, self-driving vehicles, drones, and artificial intelligence could make our lives healthier, safer, and easier. But the same technologies raise the specter of a frightening, alienating future: eugenics, a jobless economy, complete loss of privacy, and ever-worsening economic inequality. As Wadhwa puts it, our choices will determine if our future is Star Trek or Mad Max. Wadhwa offers us three questions to ask about every emerging technology: Does it have the potential to benefit everyone equally? What are its risks and rewards? And does it promote autonomy or dependence? Looking at a broad array of advances in this light, he emphasizes that the future is up to us to create-that even if our hands are not on the wheel, we will decide the driverless car's destination.
Vivek Wadhwa is a Distinguished Fellow at Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering and a director of research at Duke University's Pratt School of Engineering. He is a globally syndicated columnist for the Washington Post; author of The Immigrant Exodus, which the Economist named a Book of the Year of 2012; and coauthor of Innovating Women, which documents the struggles and triumphs of women in technology. Wadhwa has held appointments at Stanford Law School, Harvard Law School, UC Berkeley, and Emory University and is an adjunct faculty member at Singularity University. Alex Salkever is vice president of marketing communications at Mozilla. He was a technology editor of BusinessWeek, a regular science contributor to the Christian Science Monitor, and a contributor to The Immigrant Exodus.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface vii Introduction ix PART ONE: The Here and Now Chapter 1: A Bitter Taste of Dystopia 3 Chapter 2: Welcome to Moore's World 8 Chapter 3: How Change Will Affect Us Personally, and Why Our Choices Matter 19 Chapter 4: If Change Is Always the Answer, What Are the Questions? 27 PART TWO: Does the technology have the potential to benefit everyone equally? Chapter 5: The Amazing and Scary Rise of Artificial Intelligence 37 Chapter 6: Remaking Education with Avatars and A.I. 50 Chapter 7: We are becoming data; our doctors, software 64 PART THREE: What are the risks and the rewards? Chapter 8: Robotics and Biology-The Inevitable Merging of Man and Machine 85 Chapter 9: Security and Privacy in an Era of Ubiquitous Connectivity 101 Chapter 10: The Drones Are Coming 113 Chapter 11: Designer Genes, the bacteria in our guts, and Precision Medicine 123 PART FOUR: Does the technology foster autonomy, or dependency? Chapter 12: Your Own Private Driver: Self-Driving Cars, Trucks, and Planes 141 Chapter 13: When Your Scales Talk to Your Refrigerator: the Internet of Things 156 Chapter 14: The Future of Your Body Is Electric 167 Chapter 15: Almost Free Energy and Food 179 Conclusion: So will it be Star Trek or Mad Max? 191 Notes 193 Acknowledgments 207 Index 209 About the Author 215
Preface vii Introduction ix PART ONE: The Here and Now Chapter 1: A Bitter Taste of Dystopia 3 Chapter 2: Welcome to Moore's World 8 Chapter 3: How Change Will Affect Us Personally, and Why Our Choices Matter 19 Chapter 4: If Change Is Always the Answer, What Are the Questions? 27 PART TWO: Does the technology have the potential to benefit everyone equally? Chapter 5: The Amazing and Scary Rise of Artificial Intelligence 37 Chapter 6: Remaking Education with Avatars and A.I. 50 Chapter 7: We are becoming data; our doctors, software 64 PART THREE: What are the risks and the rewards? Chapter 8: Robotics and Biology-The Inevitable Merging of Man and Machine 85 Chapter 9: Security and Privacy in an Era of Ubiquitous Connectivity 101 Chapter 10: The Drones Are Coming 113 Chapter 11: Designer Genes, the bacteria in our guts, and Precision Medicine 123 PART FOUR: Does the technology foster autonomy, or dependency? Chapter 12: Your Own Private Driver: Self-Driving Cars, Trucks, and Planes 141 Chapter 13: When Your Scales Talk to Your Refrigerator: the Internet of Things 156 Chapter 14: The Future of Your Body Is Electric 167 Chapter 15: Almost Free Energy and Food 179 Conclusion: So will it be Star Trek or Mad Max? 191 Notes 193 Acknowledgments 207 Index 209 About the Author 215
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