In times when most electronics are going smart, it not hard to realise that the way of life is changing as well. Communication being the most affected area has experienced what I would aver as an overhaul. In a span of ten years what we had as communication devices have ‘evolved’ to what is in our day ‘smart’ devices.
Whereas smart devices have eased communication and introduced other simpler, better and more interactive forms of interaction, some aspects of life have also been affected negatively. Some of the highly affected areas other than communication include culture and learning.
One of the most common complains parents of nowadays have is their children are too much on their phones or computers. Times when children longed for out of the house play time is long gone. Kids would rather play games on their computers than go play soccer in the field. In as much as the digital experience may be good and way too exaggerated than the actual real play, kids should not be allowed to lose touch with the real world.
There is need to re-paint the demarcation line between fiction and reality. Real play is good, real football is good and healthy, we cannot afford to lose that, no!!
When it comes to the now possible and common online classing, it will take a person with great discipline to be able to keep up. The ability to school without having to step to a class is simply education in another level thanks to technology. But, discipline needs be present. If one can afford to miss an actual class in the presence of a lecturer, how much more are they likely to miss these online ones where the lecturer is not there to monitor you?
Ten years ago, cyber crime was a term not many of us were familiar with, not because we were young but because it was not as rampant as it is today. As much as the governments are taking necessary precautions to curb this, new technology comes with new threats. I do not see a day when we will be cyber-crime free; however, some discipline could help. Training people on the positive use of the internet could help too. Strict rules need be put in place to prosecute those found guilty of this crime.
The Smartphones have turned to the slow killer of social life. While one can connect to the rest of the world from their smartphone, connecting to actual people close-by is slowly becoming a challenge. One can easily spend hours chatting with friends on social media but maintaining a conversation with a person for a few minutes turns out to be a challenge.
Like Albert Einstein once said,”I fear the day that technology will surpass our human interaction. The world will have a generation of idiots”.
One would think Albert was rude in saying this but it’s the truth, if we are not careful with the way social media is slowly taking away human interaction, we might end up on the wrong side of life’s rules of interaction and co-existence.
What technology is doing to our world is good, but it also comes with its downside as well. Establishing good discipline to help deal with the downside of it will make the world a better place I say!
Wednesday, 25 June 2014
Tuesday, 22 April 2014
Evolution continues ...
Air driven cars
We had earlier written of the flying and
sailing cars, one of the greatest innovations happening in the motor
industry. Today, we are looking at cars that can drive themselves, a
possible venture that could in the near future replace what we have
already.
Inasmuch as all these innovations are
being done, others elsewhere seek to develop an alternative fuel for the
cars. Fuel is a global issue as we tend to spend more than we can
produce not forgetting the effects it causes to the environment.
Electricity and hydrogen have been
discovered as alternatives to fossil fuels which are in use in all parts
of the world. The cars are considered environment friendly and are a
solution to global warming resulting from combustion of fuels in
vehicles.
The hydrogen-powered cars are gaining a
lot of popularity in some countries like the United States of America.
They are considered cleaner than the conventional cars and would be the
solution to air pollution in the cities. Hydrogen-powered cars rely on a
fuel cell that takes oxygen from the air and combines it with hydrogen
from a tank to create electricity. The electricity is used to power
electric motors which turn the car wheels. As such, hydrogen-powered
cars can be seen as electric vehicles that are not held back by the
limited range of batteries.
These cars use the hydrogen fuel cell
technology which was first developed in 1839. The cells were mostly used
for back-up of power and in remote places that are inaccessible to the
national grid. They have however been adopted by motor industry and are
being used to power vehicles.
A fuel cell combines hydrogen and oxygen
to produce electricity, heat, and water. Fuel cells are often compared
to batteries. Both convert the energy produced by a chemical reaction
into usable electric power. However, the fuel cell will produce
electricity as long as fuel (hydrogen) is supplied, never losing its
charge.
Different car makers are optimistic
about the technology and are endorsing producing this type of cars.
General Motors surprised observers when the company presented a
fifth-generation fuel cells. Compared to fourth-generation fuel cells,
the weight of the entire unit has been reduced by 100 kilograms, while
the unit takes up 50% less space (and is thus comparable to a
four-cylinder petrol engine). Similar advances are being made by
Daimler, Toyota, Honda, Nissan and Hyundai, with Ford and Volkswagen
following in their tracks.
The cars can only be filled in a
hydrogen station. The stations are normally set at the highways. The
hydrogen fuel dispensers dispense the fuel by the kilogram.
The fuel cell cars are better preferred
than the electric cars which over a long range will need a lot of
batteries. The fuel cells spew out nothing more noxious than water
making them even friendlier to the environment.
More reason to get a laptop
In the beginning, a laptop was viewed as
the best alternative to personal computers. The convenience of a laptop
is the key thing that makes it the choice of many. You can carry it to
wherever and still work. Consumers have however gotten used to this and
now want more than just convenience in portability.
The makers seem to be listening and are
doing very well even as their main target is to make sales. The laptops
have seized to be just a portable computer to a super fast working
gadget and now it’s a gadget to floss with considering the design of it
and what you can do with it. The size of them is also a key point of
competition for the makers as well as the features.
Other than speed and memory size which
many consider before buying a laptop, manufacturers are giving the
consumers another thing to consider, the design! At first, laptops were
just rectangular shaped and you just flipped one side to.Today,there’s
more to that. Companies are coming up with different designs for the
hardware, another reason you want to get a laptop.
Hewlett-Packard, the world's largest
tech company by sales, has its most portable device - the HP Envy x2-
with a design in which its 27.9cm screen can attach to a keyboard dock,
using magnets to guide both parts into place. The model distinguishes
itself from earlier designs by featuring an 8 megapixel camera on the
back of the screen allowing it to be used as a camera and the inclusion
of near field communication (NFC) technology to allow users to easily
share photos, contacts and other content with each other.
HP's two other models both feature touch screens built into a traditional laptop design.
By contrast Toshiba's Satellite U925t
features a screen that can slide over its keyboard. The computer
features a bigger 31.8cm display than has been traditional with this
format.
Dell's XPS Duo 12 takes another
approach, allowing its screen to pivot around its bezel. Once the user
has spun it around the laptop can be closed leaving the display face-up,
ready for use.
The approach by the manufacturers is now
to make the machines suitable for both productivity and fun in-putting a
lot of creativity in making them.You no longer want to own a laptop
just because its a laptop but also for the creativity displayed in its
design.Another reason you want to get a laptop!
New tracking technology
GPS is what most people in these times
of technology use for tracking their way through the city or anywhere
not so familiar with them.GPS has however found a challenger who seems
to offer what GPS is unable to offer, Locata.
While GPS uses satellite signals to
locate, the new positioning technology by Locata uses ground-based radio
transmitters to send radio signals over a certain area. This signal is
reportedly a million times stronger than a GPS signal.
While GPS mainly gives outdoor
locations, Locata's ground tech is tackling indoor locations,locata’s
receivers can be small enough to fit inside a cell phone, so if for
example shoppers are lost in a large mall, they can use Locata on their
smartphone to find a certain area.
Locata's technology could bring the
resolution as far down as 5 centimeters in the future, making location
pinpoints even more precise.Its signal is much stronger because solid
objects like GPS signals don’t block it as easily. However, Locata could
still use some help in urban settings with many buildings packed so
closely together.
Locata's transmitters broadcast signals
over the 2.4GHz radio channel, an openly available frequency used by
Wi-Fi, baby monitors, and other technology. A surveyor must precisely
locate each transmitter, but once that's done, the transmitter
broadcasts its location information so a device can use it for locating
itself.
However,Locata's technology is designed to supplement GPS, not replace it. If a device already knows its location but GPS stops working, Locata can take over in an instant.
“Spoken web” technology could come in handy for Kenya
The country is on a mission to drum up technology and spread it through. This can be traced in the efforts by the government to invest more in the field. The latest is the techno city, Konza whose works were launched earlier this year.
The country however faces illiteracy problems where a large number of Kenyans remain unfamiliar with how to read or write. Technology today demands that users know how to read and write to be able to use it effectively. This however can seize to be a problem thanks to an innovation by IBM’s Indian team in a quest to reach the illiterate via the internet who came up with “spoken web”.
The basic principle of Spoken Web lies in creating a system analogous to the World Wide Web using a technology most of us all have in common - speech. Spoken Web helps people create voice sites using a simple telephone, mobile or landline. The user gets a unique phone number which is analogous to a URL and when other users access this voice site they get to hear the content uploaded there. Interestingly, all these voice sites can be interlinked creating a massive network, which can work like the World Wide Web.
IBM launched this concept in early 2011.The new “digital government” has it in their manifesto to provide laptops to children in lower learning institutions, this technology could come in handy.
Other possible applications for the Spoken Web technology include access to the Web for the disabled, or people who are injured, or when driving a car.
Interactive ATMs, the future of banking
Bid that bank queue good bye
A bank is a human creation for man to safely store money and retrieve it at their own pleasure not forgetting other financial expertise offered. The sad news is that we’ve become enemies of our own. Your money is not safe with you anymore. The bank is our safest alternative to turn to, and so we thought. But is it the safest really?
The banking sector has and continues to embrace new technologies as times goes by. New technologies however certainly come with so many good but bad components. Just as new software provokes malicious minds to come up with a virus to affect the new software, so is the case when it comes to tech-innovations. Every innovation provokes its own ‘enemy’. Let us not focus on the bad side however, let’s look at the positive one.
Of all the innovative creations by the bank, the ATM (Automated Teller Machine) I say stands out. It has saved us from ‘long distance’ queuing which in a way I think largely discourages people from banking their money. That tells you why the new mobile banking is easily becoming a favorite for many.
An ATM is a banking platform that allows you to withdraw or deposit money let alone knowing your account status. In the past, there’s not much you’d have done with the machines, most activity was to be done over the counter. The functions of these money machines however continue to increase as time goes by.
Who would have thought a time would come when you would be able to chat with a bank teller face to face over the ATM machine? Interesting right? Well, this has been made possible.
Bank tellers can now serve their clients from ATM booths thanks to the new video technology that can be installed in the machines. With installed video monitors, banks can now serve their clients better and more interactively. This I say is another way of enhancing customer satisfaction.
Bank customers can speak to a teller if they need to carry out advanced transactions like cashing a check or making a withdrawal in specific denominations. In addition, customers can withdraw money from their account if they left home without their ATM card or simply lost it.
In places where this technology is in use already, the customer places their driver’s license on a scanner attached to the ATM. After verification of the customer’s identity though video chat, they can use the ATM as if they had their bank card.
With the adoption of the new technology, its argued that theft cases are bound to reduce. Any potential theft of money, either during a robbery or by bank employees, is simply eliminated unless someone physically attempts to open the machine.
In Kenya, this kind of technology would come in handy especially in these times when ATM theft cases have become rampant. Though banks have adopted the new electronic chip in a move to curb this, this technology should also be considered. I say it’s also time we bid the queues at the banking halls good bye don’t you think?
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