The last session of the first DellEMCWorld, in Austin, Texas, has been dedicated to innovation and to what may be the future of the World itself.
To be successful, a potential innovator must be willing to “break the rules” and revolutionizing the established order. Malcolm Gladwell, columnist for the New Yorker and the author of several books focusing on new ways of seeing the world, believes that the disruption of technology is also a disruption of the social.
He describes the true and successful innovator as someone who is not afraid to take risks, which does not let you limit by the opinions of others, and that is moved by a “sense of urgency”, that is, by a compulsion to solve as quickly as possible a given problem.
in addition, says that the irreverence and creativity are also essential traits of a good innovator. This must be willing to shatter the “status quo” and to install a new order.
Malcolm Gladwell believes that the disruption technology is not exhausted in the sphere of technology and spills over to the social dimension. A disruptive technology, which creates a new category or introduces a new way of “doing things” affects the lives of everyone and changes the fabric of society.
The world is “radically volatile”, according to the author, and an innovator must be aware of this in order to give response to the needs that arise.
Kevin Kelly was also one of the iconic figures that has been under the focus of the main stage of the Austin Convention Center. The co-founder of Wired, and one of the "prophets" of the world of technology, also spoke of innovation and how all the myriad of emerging technologies is affecting everything and everyone.
He begins by saying that it was the "power of the artificial", as electricity, which has been at the root of the last industrial revolution, and that now is the "artificial intelligence" that will motivate the next.
Kevin Kelly sees the future world as a "super-organism technology, such as a network of streams of unceasing data, similarly to what happens in the synapses between the neurons in the brain.
This network has at its base the Internet of Things, composed of millions of millions of devices that communicate between each other, actively and without interruptions, generating more and more data.
Already today one can see that there is a volume of data is almost immeasurable. Kevin Kelly says that this makes it easier to get answers and that the answers generate even more questions, in a never-ending cycle.
The co-founder of Wired says that the "automation" of the process of getting answers, and making here a reference to the search engines – is to increase the spectrum of human ignorance. Why? Because a good answer gives rise to two new questions.
virtual reality (VR) has also been the target of a reflection. One of the founding members of one of the largest technology publications, Kevin Kelly believes that the virtual reality significantly decreases the distance between Man and Machine. The RV "takes the human mind into the device," he says, and make the human being reach to worlds that otherwise you would be blinded.
"We are faced with the Internet of Experiences," says Kevin Kelly.
Still on this topic, the speaker ensures that we’re moving away from an Era in which the property is the standard by default, and the bring-in of a new Era in which the access is to word order. In other words, the access to a service is each time more important than to hold any kind of property.
in This sense, reminds the largest technological companies of the time did not have physical property. The Facebook is the biggest it company in the media and does not produce any content; the Airbnb is the largest platform rental real estate and do not have homes; Alibaba is the largest entity of the retail and does not have any inventory; the Uber is the largest digital platform of transport and do not have a single car.
it Was with these examples that Kelly described the first days of the Future, the beginning of the dematerialization of everything.
As a note of the shot and to turn "the celulazinhas grey" of the audience, he also said that "the best products of the next 20 years haven’t been invented yet".
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