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FUTURE OF COMPUTER

COMPUTER
A machine or device that performs
processes, calculations and operations
based on instructions provided by a
software or hardware program.

It stores data in discrete units and


performs arithmetical and logical
operations at very high speed
HOW WILL
WE DEFINE
COMPUTER
S IN THE
FUTURE?
ASUS PROJECT PRECOG
Project Precog (likely named after the precognitives from
the film Minority Report) will ship with Microsoft Cortana
and Amazon Alexa built in, and can function in 4 different
configurations: stand mode, book mode, tent mode and flat
mode. It looks like apps can be dragged virtually anywhere
on the two screens to fit the user's preferences.
An array of sensors can predict where your fingers will
rest and adapt input devices accordingly.
Asus is leaning into the laptop's AI functionality and says it
will be encouraging developers worldwide to create
"engaging AI-powered experiences."
Acer’s Swift 7
The 13-inch laptop
will have a thickness of
just 0.35 inches, the
least we've ever seen
on a laptop.
 
The Swift 7 also
weighs just 2.5 pounds
and sports a Core i7 Y
series CPU, 8GB of RAM,
a 1080p screen and a
256GB SSD.
Asus’s NovaGo
NovaGo is a 13-inch
convertible with a screen that
bends back 360 degrees. It
promises up to 22 hours of
battery and the ability to
download emails and other
updates while it's asleep. A
Gigabit LTE modem comes
standard.
The NovaGo is also
extremely thin and light,
measuring just 0.6 inches thick
and tipping the scales at only
3.1 pounds.
DATA STORING
Surely cassette tapes have
had their day? Not according
to Sony. The company recently
developed a new magnetic
cassette tape that can hold
148 GB per square inch of
tape. The new technique uses
a type of vaccum-forming
called sputter deposition;
argon ions are shot at the
polymer film to create a layer
of fine magnetic crystals with
an average size of 7.7
nanometers. However, the
rebirth of cassettes isn’t
intended to replace Blu-rays
and CDs. The tapes are
developed for long term
storage of industrial-sized
data.
SMR Drives Seagate claims
that Shingled Magnetic
Recording (SMR) Technology is
the first step to reaching 20TB
hard drive by 2020. SMR
involves packing a disk’s
tracks closer together;
overlapping the tracks allows
more data to be written on the
same amount of space.
However, despite their larger
capacity, SMR drivers suffer
from slow data rewrites. As a
result of the tracks
overlapping, any data that’s
already on the track has to be
picked up and sequentially
rewritten at a later point.
Helium Drive Technology
in 2013, HGST created the
first 6 TB 3.5 inch hard drive:
apparently, this was made
possible by sealing helium
gas inside the device. Helium
has one-seventh the density
of air, so it dramatically
reduces the friction between
the spinning disks in the
device. As a result, it lowers
the electrical power the hard
drive consumes and allows
more disks to be packed
closer together, hence
increasing the capacity.
Imagine storing your data
on a set of sticky notes the
technology intends to replace
USB – Flash Storage by
offering something that is
cheaper, more convenient
and user-friendly. Data
stickies store data from 4GB
to 32GB on a silver of
graphene between two
protective layers. Monitors
will need to have a special
surface that can interact with
the data stickies. Simply stick
the post-it note device to an
area of the monitor and
access the data
Multi-Cloud Storage
Researchers at IBM are
working on a new
technology that they like to
call “the cloud-of-clouds”.
They claim to have
developed a service that
allows you to move data
between multiple cloud
platforms in real time. The
multi-cloud distribution
storage system links public
and private cloud services
and is intended to help
avoid service outages from
the separate providers.
Instead of storing
information in a solid-
state, metal inside the
hard drive is kept in its
liquid state. However, the
substance isn’t a true
liquid metal like mercury
or gallium; it’s actually a
compound known as
vanadium oxide. It can be
given a positive or
negative charge and be
manipulated to switch
between conducting and
insulating.
Another advancement
in hard drive density is
heat-assisted magnetic
recording (HAMR). In
these drives, a tiny laser
blasts the surface of the
disk platter and heats it
up to change its magnetic
properties. By doing this,
more bits can be stored
per square inch and the
surface becomes easier
to write to.
Holographic storage
works in three dimensions.
DVD’s may be able to use
multiple layers, but the
laser that reads them can
only do so from one angle at
a time. Holographic
technology uses full depth
of the medium and can
store data at multiple levels.
The technology offers long-
term media stability and a
more reliable alternative
discs and tape. Data can be
stored securely for just over
50 years.
When two genomicists
discussed how appropriate
storing data on DNA could
be. Data files are converted
into binary codes and then
into A, T, G, and C code,
which stand for the DNA four
bases. From these letters,
blueprints for the DNA are
drawn and actual strands are
created. To the human eye,
the completed DNA
fragments look like a tiny
amount of dust at the bottom
of a test tube. Data stored on
DNA could be kept for
thousand of years.
Artificial Intelligence (AI)

Sometimes called machine
intelligence, is applied when a machine
mimics "cognitive" functions that
humans associate with other human
minds, such as "learning" and "problem
solving".
A computer will solve problems in exactly the way
it is programmed to, without regard to efficiency,
alternative solutions, possible shortcuts, or possible
errors in the code. Computer programs that learn and
adapt are part of the emerging field of artificial
intelligence and machine learning. Artificial
intelligence based products generally fall into two
major categories: rule based systems and pattern
recognition systems. Rule based systems attempt to
represent the rules used by human experts and tend
to be expensive to develop. Pattern based systems
use data about a problem to generate conclusions.
Examples of pattern based systems include voice
recognition, font recognition, translation and the
emerging field of on-line marketing.
Nano-Technology
The past 70 years have seen the way we live and work
transformed by two tiny inventions. The electronic
transistor and the microchip are what make all modern
electronics possible, and since their development in the
1940s they've been getting smaller.
 
But to keep this progress going we need to be able to
create circuits on the extremely small, nanometre scale. A
nanometre (nm) is one billionth of a metre and so this kind
of engineering involves manipulating individual atoms.
 
If we can master this technology, however, then we have
the opportunity to improve not just electronics but all sorts
of areas of modern life.
Doctors inside your
body

Wearable fitness
technology means we
can monitor our health
by strapping gadgets to
ourselves. There are even
prototype electronic
tattoos that can sense
our vital signs. But by
scaling down this
technology, we could go
further by implanting or
injecting tiny sensors
inside our bodies.
Sensors, sensors, everywhere

These sensors rely on newly-


invented nanomaterials and
manufacturing techniques to
make them smaller, more
complex and more energy
efficient. For example, sensors
with very fine features can now
be printed in large quantities on
flexible rolls of plastic at low cost.
This opens up the possibility of
placing sensors at lots of points
over critical infrastructure to
constantly check that everything
is running correctly.
Self-healing structures
 
If cracks do appear then
nanotechnology could play a further
role. Changing the structure of
materials at the nanoscale can give
them some amazing properties – by
giving them a texture that repels water,
for example. In the future,
nanotechnology coatings or additives
will even have the potential to allow
materials to "heal" when damaged or
worn. For example, dispersing
nanoparticles throughout a material
means that they can migrate to fill in
any cracks that appear. This could
produce self-healing materials for
everything from aircraft cockpits to
microelectronics, preventing small
fractures from turning into large, more
problematic cracks.
Making big data possible
 
All these sensors will
produce more information
than we've ever had to deal
with before – so we'll need
the technology to process it
and spot the patterns that
will alert us to problems. The
same will be true if we want
to use the "big data" from
traffic sensors to help
manage congestion and
prevent accidents, or
prevent crime by using
statistics to more effectively
allocate police resources.
W CAN WE INTERACT WITH FUTURE COMPUTER

VOICE CONTROL
Voice controls are able to
greatly speed up our interactions
with computers, we no longer
have to physically be right in front
of them in order to use them, we
can just converse with them
EMOTION SENSING
Emotion sensing can assist users by
pulling up relevant suggestions based
on how you’re feeling at that precise
moment. With help of this, it will
inform you the optimal time for you to
do work based on your productivity
levels, analyze your typing to
ascertain your mood and pull up the
right apps according to your need.
GESTURAL SENSING
Its goal is t interpret human
gestures via mathematical algorithms.
Gestures can originate from any
bodily motion or state but commonly
originate from face or hand.
TOUCH SURFACES EVERYHWERE
Interacts with the user through
surface of an ordinary object, rather
than through a monitor, keyboard,
mouse, or other physical hardware.
VIRTUAL AND AUGMENTED
REALITY
Virtual reality is an
artificial, computer-
generated simulation or
recreation of a real life
environment or situation.
Augmented reality is a
technology that layers
computer-generated
enhancements atop an
existing reality in order to
make it more meaningful
through the ability to
interact with it
BRAIN INTERFACE
Virtual reality is an artificial,
computer-generated simulation or
recreation of a real life environment or
situation. Augmented reality is a
technology that layers computer-
generated enhancements atop an
existing reality in order to make it
more meaningful through the ability
to interact with it
MEDICAL INDUSTRY
HEALTH
AGRICULTUR RETAILING
E
COMMUNICATIO MILITARY
N
TRANSPORTATIO EDUCATION
N
EXPLORATION
MEDICAL The digital contact lens patented aims to
change the course of diabetes

HEALTH management by measuring blood glucose


levels from tears. While the prototype is
going through vigorous testing,
regulations must prepare to quickly allow
this disruptive technology to enter the
market and benefit patients. Microsoft
Hololens can also change medical
education and how we look at the world
by projecting digital information onto what
Augment we are seeing. A clinic in Germany started
experimenting with an application using
ed augmented reality on iPads in the OR.
During operations, surgeons can see

Reality through anatomical structures such as


blood vessels in the liver without opening
organs therefore they can perform more
precise excisions.
The ‘cyborg-craze’ will eventually
start with a new generation of
hipsters who implant devices and
technologies in their bodies just to
look cooler. Advances in future
medical technology will not just
repair physical disadvantages such
as impaired eyesight but will create
superhuman powers from having the
eyesight of an eagle to having the
Recreational
hearing of a bat. While a patient
wearing implanted defibrillators or
cyborgs
pacemakers can also be added to the
group of cyborgs, I expect to see
more cases when patients ask for the
implantation of a certain device
without having medical problems.
The intelligent surgical knife
(iKnife) works by using
technology where an electrical
current heats tissue to make
incisions with minimal blood loss.
With the iKnife, the vaporized
smoke is analyzed by a mass
spectrometer to detect the Real-time
chemicals in the biological diagnostics
sample. This means it can
identify whether the tissue is
malignant real-time. Surgeons
will love this surgical knife which
can significantly reduce the
length of operations.
Everyone could participate in the
operation in real time through the Medical
Realities website and the VR in OR app. No
matter whether a promising medical
student from Cape Town, an interested
journalist from Seattle or a worried relative,
everyone could follow through two 360
degree cameras how the surgeon removed
a cancerous tissue from the bowel of the
patient.Medical students will study anatomy
on virtual dissection tables and not on Reformed
human cadavers. What we used to learn
from huge textbooks will be transformed
medical
into virtual 3D solutions and models using
augmented reality. We can observe, change
education
and create anatomical models as fast as we
want, as well as analyze structures in every
detail.
It is a biological technique, which
involves the use of light to control
cells in living tissue, typically neurons
that have been genetically modified
to express light-sensitive ion
channels. It is widely speculated that
optogenetics might provide new
solutions in therapies. A recent study
published in Science reported that
scientists were able to create false Optogenetics
memories in the hippocampus of
mice. This is the first time the
memory of fear was generated via
artificial means. When we
understand the placebo effect
clearly; just imagine the outcomes
we can reach when false memories of
taking drugs can be generated in
humans as well. The idea is a bit
futuristic,
Now we wear a FitBit and other
devicesthat measure easily quantifiable
data, but the future belongs to digestible
and wearable sensors that can work like
a thin e-skin. Biometric tattoos such
as VivaLNK’s eSkin Tattoo can transmit
medical information discreetly. RFID or
Radio Frequency Identification chips can
be implanted under the skin and serve as Wearable
an identification device.
s and
These sensors will measure all
important health parameters and vital
beyond
signs from temperature, and blood
biomarkers to neurological symptoms 24
hours a day transmitting data to the
cloud and sending alerts to medical
systems when a stroke is happening real
time. It will call the ambulance itself and
sends all the related data immediately.
It is not just about checking
and monitoring vital signs but
intervention is also the key to
a better health. Imagine tooth-
embedded sensors that can
recognize jaw movements,
coughing, speaking and even
smoking so it records when
Real-time
you eat too much or smoke no data
matter what the doctor told
you. It’s going to be extremely
hard not to follow the doctor’s
pieces of advice. Imagine the
same wireless technology
used in organs providing real-
time data.
AGRICULTURE
The Agriculture and Food industry is
facing huge challenges. It has to feed
a rapidly growing world population
while at the same time. Agriculture
needs Innovation: Learn more facts
and figures regarding the challenges
of future agriculture order to digital
solutions, and modern breeding
methods.
Computers and Electronics in
Agriculture provides international
coverage of advances in the
application of computer hardware.
*Estimation of the soil water
*Nitrous Oxide Contributions to
Greenhouse gases
*Range of surface applied materials
into soil.
COMMUNICATI
ON
the tools we rely upon to
communicate today were only science
fiction. Today, you can purchase a
smartphone and make calls, surf the
web, play games, run applications and
accomplish, more than most
speculative fiction authors dared to
dream.
VoIP(Voice Over Internet Protocol)
Voice internet protocol already play a
large role in several communication
products and services. Sites like
Facebook and Twitter allow users to
communicate with networks of people.
VoIP is also available on many personal
computers and other internet access
devices. Calls and SMS text messages
may be sent over mobile data or Wi-Fi.
Augmented Reality
One way we might see communication
change in the future is through
augmented reality. In an augmented
reality system, you view the world
through a technological overlay. Another
possible application is through a set of
augmented-reality glasses. In either case,
you can view the world around you and se
real time digital information about what
you’re viewing.
Language Translator
Devices that can translate
languages in real time are
allowing people from different
countries and cultures to
communicate without the
need for an interpreter.
Brain-Computer Interface
In the distant future, we may be
able to communicate by sending
our thoughts through a network
directly into someone else brain.
Perhaps 50 years from now we’ll
all use an electronic version of
telepathy.
TRANSPORTATION
Telematics and Fleet Management
Logistics companies have been using GPS systems
to track the location of their trucks for years. What
has changed is the number of new features and
functions that GPS-based fleet management
systems now offer. In addition to seeing truck
locations, managers can now set up geo fences to
enable alerts when a truck is nearing its destination
(or has veered far out of its service area), optimize
routes using real-time traffic data, improve vehicle
utilization, and automatically track driver hours and
fuel tax reporting information.
The telematics functions of
these system also make it possible
to track vehicle maintenance
needs (scheduling serviced based
on miles driven), and generate
alerts if the engine generates a
trouble code.
Drone Delivery and Driverless Cars
Amazon made a big splash when it
announced it planned to use unmanned
flying drones to deliver products to
customers.
While the idea of flying robots dropping
packages from the sky sounds pretty cool,
practical considerations (cost, safety,
regulations, etc.) will likely keep deliver
operations grounded for several more
years.
Driverless vehicles, on the other hand, are an
advancement that may affect the logistics and
transportation industry sooner rather than later.

Even if a driver has to still be inside an autonomous


truck (which is the case under current law), they could
switch the vehicle to autonomous and mode and
theoretically rest while the truck keeps on moving.
There are plenty of regulatory and insurance issues to
sort through, in addition to great leaps in reliability
that would be required of the technology. But the
transportation and logistics industry should start
giving this technology a hard look.
Hyperloop
The most ambitious of all of the
technologies changing transportation is
SpaceX’s Hyperloop. The concept is a
pneumatic tube that uses a series of linear
induction motors and compressors to propel
vehicles at super fast speeds. The first
proposed Hyperloop would connect Los
Angeles and San Francisco and allow
passengers to complete the 350-mile trip in
just more than half an hour.
Flying Car
A flying car is a type of personal air
vehicle or roadable aircraft that provides
door-to-door transportation by both ground
and air. The term "flying car" is also
sometimes used to include hovercars
Many prototypes have been built since the
first years of the twentieth century using a
variety of flight technologies and some have
true VTOL performance, but no flying car has
yet reached production status.
Functional Flying Car
Leng gave "CBS This Morning" a first look
at the secret Silicon Valley facility where the
craft he calls "Blackfly" is being built. He
claims the single-seat aircraft, with eight
small but extremely powerful electric
motors, can fly itself, like a drone. That's
how it was tested before anybody got on
board.
"We first flew 10,000 miles. We did a
thousand-plus flights," Leng said.
"Autonomous. And we had a payload of
2,000 pounds."
CAR ACCESSORIES

HAND GESTURES
WIRELESS
TRANSPARENT
PORTABLE
ON BOARD DIAGNOSTIC
MOTOR ACCESSORIES

WIRELESS VIA BLUETOOTH

REAR CAMERA

BLIND SPOT CHECKING

LAST LONG UP TO 6 HOURS


MORE FEATURES
BIOMETRIC DISPLAY
WIRELESS CHARGER SYNC
NEXT GEN SENSING SOLUTION
IMPERCEPTIBLE START STOP
RAW REFLECTION
CANCELLATION
VIRTUAL GAMING EDUCATION
ACTIVE RADAR AND VISION
SYSTEM
PRECISE SELF-PARKING
INDUSTRY
Future computers that can be used in industries
in year( 2020-2030)

1. Supercomputer will simulate "entire regions" of


the mouse brain
 
Researchers involved in the Blue Brain Project –
which aims to create a digital reconstruction of the
brain – have announced the deployment of a next-
generation supercomputer.
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne (EPFL), the Swiss university and
research institute developing the Blue Brain
Project, has announced the selection of
Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) to build a
next-generation supercomputer. This will
model and simulate the mammalian brain in
greater detail than ever before. The powerful
new machine, called "Blue Brain 5", will be
dedicated to simulation neuroscience, in
particular simulation-based research,
analysis and visualisation, to advance the
understanding of the brain.
Brain disorders are highly complex
phenomena – spanning from genes to circuits to
the whole brain. Establishing an integrated view
of how all these levels work together and are
perturbed by disease is among the biggest
challenges in this area of science. The Blue
Brain Project is pioneering the approach of
reconstructing and simulating digital models of
brains. It systematically releases open-access
data, models and open-source tools to help the
community, such as the European Human Brain
Project, to better understand the brain and its
different levels of organization.
2. World's smallest computer is just 0.3mm wide

Researchers have developed a computing


device that is smaller than anything created
before and includes a processor, photovoltaics
and RAM.
Earlier this year, IBM announced that it was
developing the world's smallest computer – smaller
than a grain of salt, yet more powerful than a
computer from the early 1990s and costing less than
10¢. Despite being only 1mm x 1mm across, it could
feature up to a million transistors, a solar cell and
even a tiny communications module.
Now, a team at the University of Michigan has
revealed an even smaller device, measuring just
0.3mm (0.01 inches) wide. For comparison, the visual
limit of the human eye, below which objects are no
longer resolvable, is around 0.03mm (0.001 inches),
i.e. within an order of magnitude. This machine
includes a processor, RAM and photovoltaics,
alongside wireless transmitters and receivers
.Due to its extreme compactness,
however, it cannot incorporate a
conventional radio antenna, so instead
relies on visible light to receive and
transmit data.
According to the researchers, one of the
biggest challenges in making a computer
of this size was how to run at very low
power when the system packaging had
to be transparent. The light from its base
station – and from the device's own
transmission LED – can induce currents
in its tiny circuits.
3. Brain scan algorithm is 1,000 times faster

MIT has published details of "VoxelMorph", a


new machine-learning algorithm, which is over
1,000 times faster at registering brain scans and
other 3-D images.
 Medical image registration is a common technique
that involves overlaying two images – such as
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans – to
compare and analyse anatomical differences in great
detail. If a patient has a brain tumour, for instance,
doctors can overlap a brain scan from several months
ago onto a more recent scan to analyse small
changes in the tumour's progress.
Unfortunately, this process can often take hours, as
traditional systems meticulously align each of
potentially a million pixels in the combined scans. In a
pair of upcoming conference papers, however,
researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) describe how to overcome this
problem. Their new machine-learning algorithm can
register brain scans and other 3-D images over 1,000
times more quickly.
The researchers'
algorithm, called
"VoxelMorph", is
powered by a
convolutional neural
network (CNN) – a
machine-learning
approach commonly
used for processing
images. These
networks consist of
many nodes, which
process image and
other information
across several layers of
computation.
4. The first "digital pill" is approved by the FDA

The FDA has approved "Abilify MyCite" – the first


drug in the U.S. with a digital ingestion tracking
system. This can record when the medication was
taken, via a sensor embedded in the pill.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has this
week approved the first drug in the U.S. with a digital
ingestion tracking system. Abilify MyCite features an
ingestible sensor embedded in the pill that records when
medication is taken. The product is approved for the
treatment of schizophrenia, acute treatment of manic
and mixed episodes associated with bipolar I disorder
and for use as an add-on treatment for depression in
adults.
The system works by sending a message from the pill's
sensor to a wearable patch. The patch transmits the
information to a mobile application so that patients can
track the ingestion of medication on their smartphone.
The patch also records activity levels, sleeping patterns,
steps taken, activity and heart rate. Patients can permit
their doctor and up to four other people including family
members to access the data through a web-based portal.
"Being able to track ingestion
of medications prescribed for
mental illness may be useful
for some patients," said
Mitchell Mathis, M.D., a
director at the FDA's Center
for Drug Evaluation and
Research. "The FDA supports
the development and use of
new technology in
prescription drugs and is
committed to working with
companies to understand
how technology might
benefit patients and
prescribers."
5. ultra-thin OLEDs
Display tech moves incredibly fast. There will certainly
still be some “antique” LCD monitor screens hanging
around in 2020, but as far as new stock is concerned,
it’s easy to see the entire industry shifting to paper-
thin OLED surfaces, many with touch capability.
Currently, the biggest spectacle of CES is the flat-panel
TVs. The biggest booths — Samsung, LG, Sony, etc. —
are overloaded with massive numbers of high
definition TV panels. At CES 2020, there will be no TVs
on display.
Instead, these TVs will be replaced by OLED panels
that are roughly the thickness of a sheet of vellum. The
screen will be virtually transparent and will have a
miniature chip in one corner that wirelessly connects
to any nearby peripherals and content sources in a
process similar to paring a bluetooth headset.
Retailing
Retail technology
continues to shape the retail
landscape, and small
business retailers must
adapt or fall behind.
However, the 2018 retail
technology trends appear to
be less about discovering
recently-hatched innovations
and more on thoughtfully
redesigning business models
to get the most out of
maturing technologies.
The Unstoppable Rise of Mobile Commerce
Although desktop and in-
store purchases still
outnumber mobile orders,
this is fast changing. More
consumers turn mobile to
buy the things they need.
This growing trend offers
retailers an invaluable
opportunity to create
personalized customer
experiences and have one-
on-one conversation with
customers—anytime,
anywhere.
Hands-Free Experience of Paying On the Go

Not only are consumers


more mobile, they’re
becoming increasingly
hands-free. From Hands-
Free with
Google to ordering your
Starbucks latte via voice
command, the rise of near
field communication (NFC)
technology looks set to
change the way we shop in
2017.
Invisible Point of Sale
As mobile tech continues to evolve at
breakneck speed, in 2017 we may see the
elimination of physical point of sale altogether.
Thanks to a mix of NFC and radio-frequency
identification (RFID) technology, consumers will
no longer need to touch their phones to make a
purchase.
As usual, retail giant Amazon is leading the
way, opening their first convenience store in
Seattle before the close of 2016. This is no
ordinary store. There are no checkouts, no
cashiers, and (this is the big one) no lines.
Customers simply walk into the store, pick up
what they want, and walk out.
An Elevated Retail Experience
All of this tech innovation is
combining toward one future: a more
convenient and personalized shopping
experience. As much as customers want
an effortless retail experience, they want
their shopping experience to be
emotional and entertaining too.

The ability to link online with in-store is


increasingly allowing retailers to create
an immersive brand experience. Smart
marketers can leverage technology—
such as interactive screens and RFID,
plus rich data on customer’s past brand
interactions—to create a personalized
shopping experience. This allows
retailers to target consumers with
engaging and relevant messages directly
on mobile and in-store
MILITARY
Importance of Computers in
Military
Communication

When it comes to
military training,
being able to
communicate with
the in far places is
essential in learning
to work together.
Computer
Simulation

Allows the military to


train soldiers, for
severe combat
situations without
having to put them in
harm’s way.
Military
Testing

Military schools
use computers
for testing the
aptitude of the
students.
Military
Secrecy

Helps them
organize their
files for
safekeeping
and easy
access
Purchasing

Militaries can use


computers to
purchase suppliers
and equipment
such as: foods,
clothes, gears,
gun, weapon,
firearms, etc. from
a more trustworthy
suppliers
Military in the Future

Sensing Change

Military personnel will have little time


to rest in big units in future with long
range sensors on drones and satellites
constantly monitoring movements
Social Weapons

Radio Jamming and Computer hacking


could disrupt transmission, hijack
drones and even turn weapons against
their operators.
Operational Security

Designed to ensure the


preservation of our secrets and the
place where they are kept.
Physiological Warfare

Nothing more than disseminating


misleading information designed to
demoralize the enemy.
Smart Weapons

Auto targeting
would add
efficiency to OODA
(Observe, Orient,
Decide and
Action) loop
decision cycle that
guides terms of
engagement in
combat
Robot Wars

Innovations in
efficiency could
mean soldiers’
presence on the
battlefield is no
longer required.
Facial recognition
could enable them to
detect an individual
and pull the trigger
as soon as they are
authorized
Swarm is Coming

The US department
of defense began
2017 with a
demonstration of a
micro-drone swarm
in California
consisting of 103
drones collaborating
in decision-making,
adaptive formation
flying and self-
healing.
Examples of Weaponry in the Future

Ironman (FRIDAY)

F.R.I.D.A.Y is a natural-language
user interface created by Tony
Stark, designed to work with his Iron
Man armor. She is fully capable of
controlling Iron Man suits as well as
assisting Tony in their operation and
controlling whole vehicles. She can
monitor the entire internet, easily to
hack into government databases.
Black Panther

Uniquely crafted
Vibranium-weave
combat suit that,
like Captain
America’s Shield, is
lightweight, night-
indestructible, and
renders him
immune to most
physical damages,
especially from
collisions and
conventional fire
arms.
EDUCATION
Tutors

Robot Graders

Lectures are broken

Virtual Reality

Campuses don’t make sense


ADVANTAGES
&
DISADVANTA
GES
ADVANTAGES
1. The evolution of modern computers is beneficial
for several reasons. At the medical level, can helpt
treat more sick people and consequently save
many live.
2. Future computers will be very important in terms of
communication. We easily communicate to others
in advance level
3. Future computers increased the productivity of
almost every industry in the world. Like robots,
many companies used robots to easily produce
products in less time
4. In terms of transportation, we can easily travel
because of the advanced computer technology put
in our transportation.
DISADVANTAGES
1. Future computers aim to reduce human effort, it
would imply that more work is done by the
machines and by the robots.
2. Job loss or job rates are decreasing.
3. If future computers comes, people will become
lazy.
4. People will become unhealthy.
5. Relationship and bonding of the family will become
unhealthy.

CONCLUSION
Overall, if future computers comes it will affect our
lifestyle and our industry.
REFERENCES
https:mobile.itbusinessedge.com/slideshows

www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/7-interfaces-of-the-future/amp

www.laptopmag.com

https://www.information-age.com/modern-technology-advantages-disadvantages-
1234567

https://www.techradar.com/news/computing/fast-forward-your-pc-over-the-next-50-
years-588536/2

https://www.makeusof.com/tag/computer-technology-will-transform-schools-future

https://www.pcworld.com/article/218859/the_pc_of_the_future_fast_portable_3d.html

https://www.encyclopedia.com/education/news-wires-white-papers-and-
books/computers-future

https://www.futuretimeline.net/blog/computers-internet-blog.html
THANK YOU!
1. Device that is called the new computer of the
current generation

2. Data files are converted into binary codes and then


into A, T, G, and C code, which stand for the four
bases of this future storage.

3. Sometimes called machine intelligence, is applied


when a machine mimics "cognitive" functions that
humans associate with other human minds, such as
"learning" and "problem solving".

4. A _________is one billionth of a metre.


THANK YOU!
THANK YOU!

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