yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Vivek Wadhwa: Get Ready for The Next Wave of Tech Disruptions | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

Vivek Wadhwa: One of the things that has begun to worry me is the fact that I'm seeing change happening at a scale which is unimaginable before and that it's impacting industry after industry after industry. Every industry I've looked at I've seen a trend of major disruption happening.

Manufacturing is the most obvious. With robotics and 3-D printing, as of this year, it is cheaper to manufacture in the United States than it is in China. It is cheaper to manufacture in Europe than it is in China. Why is that? Because with automated robots that have two arms, that have screens, which show you their emotion, with the sensors they have around them, I'm talking about Baxter from the Rethink Robotics or Universal. These robots have become very sophisticated.

The cost of operation is less than the cost of human labor. So we can now have robots working 24/7 doing the things that human beings did. Give it five years and these robots will become ever more sophisticated. They'll be doing many, many more jobs, which means that the manufacturing industry is going to be disrupted in a very big way. The good news for America is that it's coming back here.

The good news for Europe is that it's coming back there. The good news for Asia is that it's also going to become a local industry. Bad news for China because it's no longer going to happen in China. So, by the end of the decade you're going to see major upheaval in manufacturing, opportunities and problems. Move into the next decade, these robots will probably go on strike because we won't need them anymore.

We'll have 3-D printers now. Within 15 to 20 years we'll be able to 3-D print electronics. So imagine being able to design your own iPhone and print it at home. That is what becomes technically feasible in the 15 to 20 year timeframe. So you're talking about major disruption happening to manufacturing in the short-term and then even greater disruption happening in the long term.

Now look at finance. We're seeing the turmoil that Bitcoin is creating. You now have many parties supporting it. Well, you also have crowdfunding shaking up the venture capital industry that they've become less relevant. We'll soon have crowdfunding for loans that in some countries already they're experimenting with taking out loans by if you want to buy a house, if you want to buy a car you simply get it from a large number of people.

You're now moving into cardless transactions for purchasing goods. We may not need the banks anymore. We may not need financial institutions the way we do right now. So there's going to be disruption happening to financial services whether or not financial services realizes it. In the USA they seem to be complacent because they've got laws protecting them. But the same laws don't apply in other countries.

We may well have major innovations happening abroad which come now to the United States. Look at healthcare. That already we now have Apple putting a stake in the ground saying we're going to be the platform for health. They basically have announced their health platform. What they want is that all of these new sensor devices that are becoming common, which monitors your blood pressure, which monitors your blood oxygenation, which monitors your heart beats, which monitors your temperature, which monitors your activity levels, and soon which will monitor your blood glucose and monitor your internals.

They want all of this data being uploaded to the Apple platform. Do you think Google will be left behind? Do you think Microsoft will be left behind? Do you think Samsung will be left behind? Everyone is jumping into the act. But soon when you have all of this data, we'll be able to transform the healthcare industry because we will be able to predict when someone is about to get sick.

We will have AI based physicians that can advise us when we're about to get sick, that can advise us on what we need to do to get healthy. So, the problem that doctors have right now is that the data that they get back from medical tests is so complicated...

More Articles

View All
A Rare Look at the Secret Life of Orangutans | Short Film Showcase
Something like seven million years ago, there was nothing like a human on Earth. There was not even a pre-human standing upright; there were simply great apes, very much like the ones that live with us today. [Music] I was crossing the river at dawn. It…
What language shows cause and effect? | Reading | Khan Academy
Hello readers! Once upon a time, in the previous century, there lived a cartoonist and engineer named Rube Goldberg, who became well known for his drawings of wacky, over-complicated machines. This is one such machine: the self-operating napkin. You see h…
Gyroscopic Precession
Hey everyone, it’s me, Derek from the channel Veritasium. I’ve been following this series by Destin on Smarter Every Day about helicopters, and gyroscopic precession is just one of those things that still blows my mind, as it did Destin. So, I’m here at t…
Journey Into an Active Volcano | One Strange Rock
Ken Sims doesn’t do nine-to-five. This is his idea of a good day at the office. For over 20 years, he’s ventured into active volcanoes across the globe to collect samples of molten lava. Studying this stuff is one of the best ways to understand what’s hap…
See How Termites Inspired a Building That Can Cool Itself | Decoder
In 1991, architect Mick Pearce had a problem. An investment group in Harare, Zimbabwe, hired him to design the largest office and retail building in the country. But they didn’t want to pay for the expensive air conditioning needed to cool such a large bu…
Eliminate | Vocabulary | Khan Academy
What’s up, wordsmiths? This video is about the word eliminate. [Music] It’s a verb. It means to remove or get rid of something. The word comes to us from Latin, and it’s a combination of two parts: “ex,” which means out or away (think exit), and “limit,”…