What do you think?
Rate this book


First published January 1, 2016
"... we must adapt, shape and harness the potential of disruption by nurturing and applying four different types of intelligence:The author elaborates on these, but I found these discussions to be lacking specifics.— contextual (the mind) ...
— emotional (the hear) ...
— inspired (the soul) ...
— physical (the body) ...
1. Implantable Technologies—82%Each of the above anticipated technological advances are thoroughly described in the Appendix along with the above survey results.
2. Our Digital Presence—84%
3. Vision as the New Interface—86%
4. Wearable Internet—91%
5. Ubiquitous Computing—79%
6. A Supercomputer in Your Pocket—81%
7. Storage for All—91%
8. The Internet of & for Things—89%
9. The Connected Home—70%
10. Smart Cities—64%
11. Big Data for Decisions—83%
12. Driverless Cars—79%
13. A.I. & Decision Making—45%
14. A.I. & White-Collar Jobs—75%
15. Robotics and Services—86%
16. Bitcoin & the Blockchain—58%
17. The Sharing Economy—67%
18. Governments & the Blockchain—73%
19. 3D Printing & Manufacturing—84%
20. 3D Printing & Human Health—76%
21. 3D Printing & Consumer Products—81%
22. Designer Beings—vote result not shown
23. Neurotechnologies—vote result not shown
1. The Machine Age (1760-1840): The Steam Engine, RailroadsThe following is not from the book, but it provides a graphic that helps explain the various revolutions:
2. Mass Production (late 19th - early 20th c): Assembly Line Manufacturing, Electricity
3. The Digital Revolution (from mid 1960s-): Computers, Semiconductors, Internet
4. The Fourth IR: Ubiquitous Mobile Internet, Internet of Things (IoT) with Sensors, Artificial Intelligence (AI), Gene Sequencing, Nanotechnology
