Who is Online

We have 32 guests and no members online

Hi Hal, what's for Dinner?  Has Mary had her baby?

 

Home computer systems are progressively integrating all electronic entertainment, communications and household management functions. Within the next decade this will begin to encompass household energy management, including lighting, heating, cooling and some appliances. In some households this may extend to water consumption, grey water management and possibly to local electricity generation. 

As well as managing entertainment (TV, radio, telephony, wake up alarms and so on), it is expected that integrated home computing environments will mediate interactions with the Internet and its on-line commerce and information repositories to maintain household accounts as well optimising water and energy efficiency. In addition to keeping the social calendars of the householders, it is expected to agree a weekly food menu and order food, groceries and other household needs accordingly.  The new markets thus opened up will include new production methods and specialist equipment for rapidly changing film and TV studios and the new electronic media outlets.

As electronic systems have become faster and able to store ever more data, software has developed to exploit these new capabilities and speed.  In order to deliver IP based video computer CPUs need to be thousands of times faster than those available just a few years ago. Storage for movies is now measured in terabytes (million, million bytes). This vast increase in capability is only beginning to be utilised by new software. Whereas in the early days computers followed a strict linear instruction set, to day this is replaced by the interaction of functional objects, such that the programmer is often unaware of the actual events that will occur in every circumstance. Many programs 'learn on the job' and change their parameters accordingly.  For example the object interactions in many computer games are entirely circumstantial; different for every player and every time they are played. Thus computers are becoming more and more 'human like' in their interactions with the players.

Text to speech facilities have been available on a standard PC for over ten years and recent versions of operating systems software have included progressively improving speech to text (dictation) software built in. This software is taught by the user to recognise their speech patterns grammar and vocabulary. It is expected that within the next decade many people will simply talk to their home computer or entertainment system as if it is another person (like HAL in 2001: A Space Odyssey).  Several GPS navigation devices already incorporate voice recognition to receive destination instructions.  New markets will include new domestic appliances, sport and recreation options and possibly aids for an aging population.

Social networking and online commerce are already ubiquitous.  Social networking and many forms of online commerce and are supported by large, commercially owned, data storage and processing farms connected to the Internet.  These ever expanding server farm environments allow users from all connected locations worldwide to use the Internet to connect to services that meet a wide variety of needs from sharing the trivia of one's life with friends or strangers, to composing a letter or keeping the household accounts.  This vast range of options and possibilities is continually expanding as new products are imagined and offered to a novelty hungry public.  At the present time they are largely, and very profitably, funded by businesses wishing to advertise their products or services.

 

No comments

Travel

China

 

 

I first visited China in November 1986.  I was representing the New South Wales Government on a multinational mission to our Sister State Guangdong.  My photo taken for the trip is still in the State archive [click here].  The theme was regional and small business development.  The group heard presentations from Chinese bureaucrats and visited a number of factories in rural and industrial areas in Southern China.  It was clear then that China was developing at a very fast rate economically. 

Read more: China

Fiction, Recollections & News

The Greatest Aviation Mystery of All Time

 

 

The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 was finally called off in the first week of June 2018.

The flight's disappearance on the morning of 8 March 2014 has been described as the greatest aviation mystery of all time, surpassing the disappearance of Amelia Earhart in 1937.  Whether or no it now holds that record, the fruitless four year search for the missing plane is certainly the most costly in aviation history and MH370 has already spawned more conspiracy theories than the assassination of JFK; the disappearance of Australian PM Harold Holt; and the death of the former Princess Diana of Wales; combined.

Read more: The Greatest Aviation Mystery of All Time

Opinions and Philosophy

Population and Climate Change – An update

 

 

Climate

 

I originally wrote the paper, Issues Arising from the Greenhouse Hypothesis, in 1990 and do not see a need to revise it substantially.  Some of the science is better defined and there have been some minor changes in some of the projections; but otherwise little has changed.

In the Introduction to the 2006 update to that paper I wrote:

Climate change has wide ranging implications...  ranging from its impacts on agriculture (through drought, floods, water availability, land degradation and carbon credits) mining (by limiting markets for coal and minerals processing) manufacturing and transport (through energy costs) to property damage resulting from storms.

The issues are complex, ranging from disputes about the impact of human activities on global warming, to arguments about what should be done and the consequences of the various actions proposed.

Read more: Population and Climate Change – An update

Terms of Use

Terms of Use                                                                    Copyright