Showing posts with label DaVinci Institute. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DaVinci Institute. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Signals: It Gets Worse ... Arab Futures ... Leaders Lend an Ear ... and more

Vol. 2, No. 2 | December 1, 2015 | AAI Foresight

News for the Foresight Community

> Warnings: Worst-Case Scenarios
> Hot Topic: Arab Futures
> Publication: The Suicide of the Jews
> Leaders Lend an Ear: Thomas Frey, Jeremy Rifkin
> Foresight Report: Technology Work 2030
> Appointment: New Editor for World Future Review
> Book Review by Randall Mayes: The Master Algorithm
> Mack Report: Revisiting Wool


Warnings: Worst-Case Scenarios


The most recent rounds of terrorist attacks offer tangible evidence that our worst-case scenarios are getting worse, writes nine-term California Congresswoman Jane Harman, now president and chief executive of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.

In a Reuters blog posted the day of the Paris attacks, Harman writes that the downing of a Russian plane in Egypt, for which members of the Islamic State (ISIS) took credit, “highlights how many national security stories we may be missing—stories that pose at least as much of a threat to the United States as the development of an Iranian nuclear weapon.”

Among the other threats Harman points to are “loose nukes in Pakistan,” long-range rockets in North Korea, radiological weapons for sale on the Russian black market, and a biological attack or full-out germ warfare, a scenario not receiving nearly enough attention, she writes.

“Counterterrorism is a science of worst-case scenarios,” Harman concludes. “The risk of a game-changing plot is always small, but the kind of “black swan” events that could reshape the region look more and more real today. Better to overestimate the threat now than read about it in the papers tomorrow.”

Reference: Worst-Case Scenarios That Are More Likely Than You Think,” Jane Harman. Reuters (November 13, 2015).


Signals: biological weapons, black swans, counterterrorism, worst-case scenarios


Hot Topic: Arab Futures


An ISIS strike outside of the Arab world, as occurred in Paris on November 13, was one of several “wild cards” envisioned by the Arab Foresight Group’s report Arab Futures: Three Scenarios for 2025, published in February by the European Union Institute for Security Studies. The rapidity with which the speculated future can become the realized present renders our consideration of all possibilities more urgent.


The report describes the megatrends affecting the region, poses critical questions about potential game changers, and concludes with descriptions of three scenarios: most likely (“Arab Simmer”), worst-case (“Arab Implosion”), and transformational (“Arab Leap”).

While the megatrend of population growth might be the easiest to connect to the region’s major game changer—youth unemployment—the megatrend of climate change is likely to be dismissed by mainstream observers. But as the report notes, the impacts will be broad: “Climate change will hit the Arab world particularly hard, as it exacerbates already acute challenges of water shortages and desertification, as well as scarcity of resources. In addition, a rise in sea levels will directly affect the densely populated coastal areas.”

As for the rise and spread of the Islamic State (or Daesh), its effect within the Arab world has been to divert political attention and resources from reform to security, leading to laws that “conflate political opposition with terrorist activity” and reinforce the political role of the military.

The report concludes that it is time for Arab states to act together to combat the current and future threats they share: “Cooperation is the only way forward if Arab states want to progress on the economic as well as social front.”

Reference: Arab Futures: Three Scenarios for 2025 edited by Florence Gaub and Alexandra Laban, European Union Institute for Security Studies (February 2015). Signal courtesy of Sohail Inayatullah (via Facebook).

Signals: Arab world, ISIS, megatrends, scenarios, security


Publication: The Suicide of the Jews


The third installment of American-Israeli futurist Tsvi Bisk’s trilogy (following Futurizing the Jews and The Optimistic Jew) is an “imagineered” vision of Israel as told from the year 2099.

In The Suicide of the Jews, Bisk states that current conflicts in Israel stem from two opposing views of Zionism—one whose view of history dictates the creation of a state that claims the entire land of Israel versus one (to which Bisk subscribes) that strives instead for a Jewish state within a portion of Israel.

“The decline of my vision of Zionism and the ascendance of the land-fetishism vision terrifies me and makes me fearful about the future survival of the Jewish people,” Bisk writes.

The Suicide of the Jews, Bisk says, is a cautionary tale, “a manifestation of a wider Jewish and Zionist vision which asserts that: If Israel will not be a light unto the nations it will not be a light unto the Jews and thus will not be able to mobilize the energy and passion needed to survive.”

Reference: The Suicide of the Jews by Tsvi Bisk, Contento Press (2015). Contact Bisk at the Center for Strategic Futurist Thinking.

Signals: alternative scenarios, Israel, Judaism, Zionism


Leaders Lend an Ear: Thomas Frey, Jeremy Rifkin


 


  • The King and Frey: DaVinci Institute Senior Futurist Thomas Frey reports on Facebook that Willem-Alexander, King of the Netherlands, sat in the front row of Frey’s November 4 talk for Dow Benelux. Frey reports that the king is “a very nice guy and even asked for a copy of my slides.” Also in the past year Frey has addressed the Prime Minister's cabinet in New Zealand, as well as leaders from 90 national postal services of the Turkish Post and executive teams for numerous private and nonprofit sector institutions.
  • Rifkin Influences China’s Future: A November 5 Huffington Post editorial credits author Jeremy Rifkin, president of the TIR Consulting Group, for providing the futurist underpinnings—or at least the “buzzwords”—in the announcement of China’s latest five-year plan. “Chinese Premier Li Keqiang has not only read Jeremy Rifkin's book The Third Industrial Revolution and taken it to heart,” writes Nathan Gardels, editor-in-chief of The World Post. Rifkin’s influence might have been more direct than that: He met with Chinese Vice Premier Wang Yang in Beijing in September “to discuss how China can be a global leader in the transition toward a Third Industrial Revolution sustainable economic paradigm.”



Foresight Report: Technology Work 2030


AAI Foresight has published its latest Foresight Report, “2030: How Technology Professionals Will Work” (Fall 2015), by Managing Principal Timothy C. Mack. The report is available as a free PDF download.

Mack describes the impacts of a wide range of trends on the workplace in general and the work environments of the technology workforce specifically. The choices that individuals make for their own career lives will also be influenced by shifts in the global economy, demographics, and values; likewise, these trends will affect the choices employers make for the traits and skills they will seek.

“2030 Technology Professionals” is AAI Foresight’s fifth Foresight Report and the second penned by Mack. Access the series at www.aaiforesight.com/foresight-reports.

Signals: education, foresight report, jobs, technology, trend analysis, workforce


Appointment: New Editor for World Future Review


James Dator, director of the Hawaii Research Center for Futures Studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, has been named the new editor of World Future Review, the journal formerly published by World Future Society for its professional membership program. The journal was recently sold to SAGE Publications, WFS announced.

“We will have a new editorial board, which includes some of the old ones,” Dator says, adding that the journal may also consider producing special issues with guest editors.

WFR was the product of the consolidation of two WFS publications—Futures Research Quarterly, co-edited by Timothy Mack and Kenneth W. Hunter, and Future Survey, edited by Michael Marien with Lane Jennings as production editor. Mack and Jennings served as WFR’s executive editor and managing editor, respectively, since its inception, while Marien continued to contribute substantially to the journal’s content with his unique and comprehensive coverage of futures literature.

“What will distinguish WFR from other futures journals,” Dator writes in his call for submissions “is that (as a rule) it will not have articles about ‘the future’ or ‘the futures of x,’ but rather about futures studies as an academic and consulting discipline—the roots of futures studies, its present state, the preferred futures for futures studies itself. Sage Publishing is very firmly committed to futures studies and their newly-acquired journal. They want WFR to succeed and futures studies to mature, and believe this the way to do both.”

Contact James Dator

Submit articles to World Future Review



Book Review: The Master Algorithm

By Randall Mayes

One of the game-changing projections for the future is the Singularity, the point in time when machine intelligence equals human intelligence. In The Master Algorithm: How the Quest for the Ultimate Learning Machine Will Remake Our World (Basic Books/Perseus, 2015), University of Washington computer scientist Pedro Domingos proposes a novel engineering solution for achieving this milestone.

His premise is that “all knowledge—past, present, and future—can be derived from data by a single, universal learning algorithm,” or master algorithm. “If such an algorithm is possible, inventing it would be one of the greatest scientific achievements of all time,” Domingos writes. “In fact, the Master Algorithm is the last thing we’ll ever have to invent because, once we let it loose, it will go on to invent everything else that can be invented.” So, can we invent it?

AI researchers aim to create superintelligence by developing neuromorphic chips—hardware and software capable of surpassing human intelligence. These machines will contain AI versions of common sense, currently an advantage of human intelligence, combined with advanced computing capabilities, where machines hold the advantage.

Domingos advocates a machine-learning approach—that is, programming computers to do what we want and then having them learn from data. However, currently AI researchers utilizing machine learning are not a homogenous group. Different groups of AI researchers have different methods of achieving the Singularity and superintelligence, and each group is adamant that their approach is the best means to the end.

Domingos identifies five “tribes” of researchers—connectionists, Bayesians, symbolists, evolutionaries, and analogizers—each believing that their method of representing, evaluating, and optimizing data is superior to the others.  For practical applications, each tribe’s algorithms are only capable of artificial narrow intelligence (ANI)—the ability to perform one specialized task. With the current state of AI, if you have two different problems to solve, programmers need to write two different programs.

Reaching the Singularity would require artificial general intelligence (AGI) or multitasking similar to humans. Domingos argues that a metalearning algorithm (the “master algorithm”) is necessary for encompassing the strengths and problem-solving capabilities of all the tribes.

While Domingos believes the master algorithm is the best route to the Singularity and superintelligence, others such as Ray Kurzweil, the director of engineering at Google, and managers of multibillion-dollar government-sponsored research projects advocate mapping the human brain’s neurons and synapses and reverse-engineering our natural brain networks.

Domingos is critical of Kurzweil’s brain-mapping approach for several reasons. Although Domingos agrees that gains in technology are not linear, Kurzweil bases his forecasts on exponential curves, suggesting that technological progress will accelerate on into the distant future. However, developments in technology typically follow S-curves where progress rises, then stagnates and reverses course, and then rises again but sharply or rises then fades for good.

The Master Algorithm is a great read, and Domingos provides an excellent crash course on the enigmatic field of machine learning. He dedicates a chapter to each tribe and provides detailed examples of each tribe’s methods and draws on his experience to educate the reader on challenges that lie ahead for AI practitioners.

Randall Mayes is Field Editor for Digital Economy and Energy & Environment at TechCast Global, www.techcastglobal.com. His article “The Future of Futurists,” published by the World Future Society in The Futurist (November-December 2014), provides a more in-depth discussion of the merits of both sides of this debate. He may be contacted at randy.mayes@duke.edu.

Signals: artificial intelligence, computers, Moore’s law, Singularity


Mack Report: Revisiting Wool


In his latest blog, Tim Mack invites us to rethink an ancient material: Wool’s virtues as an industrial material include its ability to both absorb and repel water and to fight fires. It is also highly sustainable, since it is renewable and, as Mack notes, “only requires a fraction of the production and energy costs of manmade materials put to similar uses.”

The lesson from wool, Mack suggests, is to not let our prejudice for new inventions “pull the wool over” our vision.


Signals: industrial materials, sustainability

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Send us your signals! News about your work and other tips are welcome, as is feedback on Foresight Signals. Contact Cynthia G. Wagner, consulting editor.  

Want more signals from AAI Foresight? Check out the blog! Log in to add comments.

Feel free to share Foresight Signals with your networks and to submit any stories, tips, or “signals” of trends emerging on the horizon that we can share with other stakeholders and the foresight community.

__________

© 2015 AAI Foresight

Foresight Signals is a publication of AAI Foresight

1619 Main Street, #1172
Freeland, WA 98249

Managing Principal: Timothy C. Mack
tcmack333@gmail.com | 202-431-1652

Webmaster and IT Consultant: Tom Warner

Consulting Editor: Cynthia G. Wagner

Designer: Lisa Mathias




Sunday, October 4, 2015

Signals: Risk Radar ... Peak Car? ... Vision 2025 for Arizona ... and more

Vol. 1, No. 23 | October 7, 2015 | AAI Foresight

News for the Foresight Community:

> Signal of the Month: Risk Radar
> Report: Arizona Comes of Age
> Debatable Futures: Peak Car
> Futurists in the News: Genevieve Bell, Ramez Naam
> Upcoming Meetings: Of Living Rooms and Restaurants
> Mack Report: Africa 2030


Signal of the Month: Risk Radar


What’s Next trends report publisher Richard Watson has compiled a matrix for assessing the probability and impact of global risks in a variety of STEEP categories (society, technology, economy, environment, and politics). Among his Risk Radar’s “101 ways the world could change—or possibly end” and how concerned we should be:

1. Don’t Worry: African disunity, weaponization of near-space, moral collapse, decrease in longevity due to sedentary lifestyles.
2. Keep Calm: declining urban air quality, rogue politician, information overload, decline of practical skills.
3. Pay Attention: ocean acidification, robot uprising, globalization backlash, “OMG Kim Kardashian runs for US Presidency” (ranked higher in impact than “Failure of global governance”).
4. Find the Exit: loss of biodiversity, income/wealth polarization, EU collapse, state-sponsored cybercrime, severe water shortages.

Watson assures us that the end of the world (or of humanity) is far from probable, and so he advises us to “drink lots of water, wear sunscreen and try to be a good human.”

Details: Download the high-resolution Risk Radar infographic from Now and Next. Thanks to “signal” spotter Jay Gary.

Signals: risk assessment, STEEP analysis


Report: Arizona Comes of Age


The Center for the Future of Arizona (CFA) has released its report on the major challenges facing the state and approaches to meeting them, starting with more active communications between residents and their government leaders. Citizen participation rates in Arizona are in the bottom quartile nationally, notes the report, titled “Vision 2025: Arizona Comes of Age.”

Describing itself as a “do tank” rather than a “think tank,” CFA focused its report on creating a blueprint for action based on what citizens want for the future of the state: high-quality jobs, high-quality education and training for those jobs, and development to protect the natural environment while improving built infrastructures.

“Arizona has all of the elements right now to come of age,” CFA director Lattie Coor told Arizona Public Media, adding that the state has the characteristics “that will make it one of the most significant, competitive places in the modern economy.”



Debatable Futures: Peak Car


Quoting DaVinci Institute senior futurist Thomas Frey as saying “wealthy economies have already hit peak car,” Manhattan Institute senior fellow Mark Mills dismisses the assessment as “poppycock” in his October 1 Wall Street Journal op-ed.


Frey and other trend watchers have observed the millennial generation’s preference for urban lifestyles that reduce the need for car ownership. Such preferences have made possible the phenomenal rise of car-sharing services like Uber. But Mills cites recent upticks in millennials moving to the suburbs and buying cars, perhaps as a result of simply growing up and getting better-paying jobs.

Mills also argues that, as a society, the United States has not reached peak driving; rather, gasoline demand is approaching a record 9.2 million barrels a day.

Comment: Certainly low prices can account for today’s accelerating demand for gasoline. One wonders whether—when such demand pulls prices back up—the millennials’ robust affection for tech innovation and social networking will fulfill Frey’s forecast in the long run.

What say you? Peak car: now, soon, someday, or never?

Read: We’re a Long Way From ‘Peak Car’” by Mark Mills, Wall Street Journal (October 1, 2015).

Signals: automobiles, millennial generation, sharing economy, urban lifestyle, values


Futurists in the News


“Thank you, technology!” Part 1: Described as the Portland, Oregon, area’s most-famous futurist, Intel’s Genevieve Bell, vice president in charge of "Corporate Sensing & Insights," was interviewed about her work on computer-human relations for Willamette Week (September 22). One surprising moment in her research, she says, came when she found herself thanking a computerized device. “The timer went off, and I asked Alexa [Amazon Echo] to stop the timer,” she says. “The timer stopped and I said, ‘Thanks!’ Then I went out of the house thinking, ‘Oh my God, I’m a complete idiot.’ And then I did it again a half-hour later.” Read Hotseat: Intel Futurist Genevieve Bell.”

“Thank you, technology!” Part 2: Former “Microsoftie” and author Ramez Naam was among the technology futurists offering their views for a recent GeekWire panel on the pros and cons of technology. While acknowledging negative impacts of human progress, such as climate change, Naam said he is optimistic about the future: “In the last few decades we have cut poverty in half, hunger in half, more people live in democracy than ever before,” he said. “It’s undeniable to me that the world is getting much better. My best bet for 2030 is that the world will be substantially better than today.” Read:Asteroids, plagues and why science needs more sex appeal: Our futurists take on the good and bad in tech” by Molly Brown, GeekWire (October 2, 2015).


Upcoming Meetings: Of Living Rooms and Restaurants


The Electronic Living Room: New York Times futurist-in-residence Michael A. Rogers will deliver the opening keynote address at CEDIA Expo 2015, offering insights on the near-term future of home technology. Among the innovations homeowners can expect in their future living rooms, Rogers predicts, are floor-to-ceiling TVs offering virtual reality and telepresence—along with virtual shopping that he describes as the Home Shopping Network “on steroids.”  

CEDIA Expo 2015 will be held October 14-17 at the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas. Details: CEDIA Expo 2015. Also visit CE Pro.

Food Trends on the Menu: The National Restaurant Association will convene in San Diego October 27-28 for the Restaurant Innovation Summit. Among the futurists scheduled to discuss food innovations and trends are Edie Weiner, CEO of Future Hunters, and digital futurist Amy Webb, founder and CEO of Webbmedia Group, who will serve a presentation on the top tech trends for restaurant operators.

The summit will explore innovative on-demand food-delivery services such as PostmatesCaviarDoorDash and delivery.com, as well as data analytics for marketers and mobile-payment systems. And IBM’s famed Watson, or “Chef Watson,” will pair its “knowledge of food chemistry and taste preferences with what it [has] learned about recipes to generate new and unexpected flavor and ingredient combinations,” according to a press statement. Details: National Restaurant Association


Mack Report: Africa 2030


The recent rise (and more recent decline) of China as an economic powerhouse has overshadowed prospects for Africa, observes AAI Foresight managing principal Timothy C. Mack in his latest blog. He writes: “Africa is expected to quadruple in population over the next 90 years, with its greatest economic and political growth likely in North Africa.”

Companies such as Microsoft have thus become more actively engaged in Africa’s development, focusing not only on Africans as consumers but also on developing the population as workers and investment partners. Read Africa 2030.

Signals: Africa, developing economies, education, technology

__________

Send us your signals! News about your work and other tips are welcome, as is feedback on Foresight Signals. Contact Cynthia G. Wagner, consulting editor.  

Want more signals from AAI Foresight? Check out the blog! Log in to add comments.

Feel free to share Foresight Signals with your networks and to submit any stories, tips, or “signals” of trends emerging on the horizon that we can share with other stakeholders and the foresight community.

__________

© 2015 AAI Foresight

Foresight Signals is a publication of AAI Foresight

1619 Main Street, #1172
Freeland, WA 98249

Managing Principal: Timothy C. Mack
tcmack333@gmail.com | 202-431-1652

Webmaster and IT Consultant: Tom Warner

Consulting Editor: Cynthia G. Wagner