16. 2. MANUFACTURING
The line between conventional robotics and intelligent everyday devices
will become increasingly blurred.
Nearly every aspect of global society could become instrumented,
networked, and potentially available for control via the Internet, in a
hierarchy of cyber-physical systems.
17. Management (intangible) Code (tangible)
Employee training Scriptable machine images
Architectural diagrams Assembly line configurations
Internal memos Message passing protocols
Everything is recorded in git logs and database entries
Manager ~ Worker
Factory ~ Datacenter
NO
Human
NO
Hourly restrictions
Minimum wage
Collective bargaining
Union
OSHA
2. MANUFACTURING
24. 1. Hair strand
2. Genome sequencing
3. Request at viral-design site; disguised as vaccine
Online bio-marketplace
4. Synthesis company: 5,984-base-pair blueprint
genetic material
5. Package of 10mg, fast-dissolving microtablets,
dropped in a FedEx envelope, handed to a courier,
disguised as synthetic psychedelic
6. Viral particles crossed paths with cells containing
a very specific DNA sequence, that would act as a
molecular key to unlock secondary functions.
This secondary sequence would trigger a fast-acting
neuro-destructive disease that produced memory
loss and, eventually, death.
4. BIOHACKING
28. 6. VEHICLES
Chevrolet FNR by GM's
Pan Asia Technical
Automotive Center at 2015
Shanghai Auto Show:
1. Roof-mounted sensors
that map out the car's
environment
2. Gesture control system
3. Power comes from a set
of magnetic hubless wheel
electric motors.
4. Wireless auto-charging
system
5. Intelligent personal-
assistance function to plan
routes
34. Supercomputer TH-2 as of June 2014 (33.86 petaflops) is already 3.386
times faster the speed needed to simulate a human brain at molecular
level (10 petaflops).
By 2023 a $1,000 laptop would have the computing power and storage
capacity of a human brain. (Ray Kurzweil)
9. COMPUTING
D-Wave refrigerator to
cool the Vesuvius chip
to 0.02 degrees above
absolute zero
Nuclear physics and medicine, neuroscience and computer, robotics and biologyTechnological fields have matured to the point they touch each other’s boundaries
biophysics, math-physics, nuclear medicine, genetic med, nanobio, cloud robotics