Internet of Things & Wearable Technology Insights
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Internet of Things & Wearable Technology Insights
Internet of things and wearable technology insights, research, innovations & product news
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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The future of the IoT job market

The future of the IoT job market | Internet of Things & Wearable Technology Insights | Scoop.it

Nearly 250 years later, in a world defined by technological change, we see the same fears and concerns. As of September 2015, Amazon had 30,000 Kiva robots automating its warehouses, increasing efficiency and reducing the need for pick-and-pack labor. And at the same time, demand for software developers continues to rise, as Marc Andreessen’s famous 2011 statement that “software is eating the world” becomes ever more true.

Over the next decade, we’ll see this pattern play out once more in the nascent Internet of Things (IoT). With an industry defined by “bringing physical things online,” many IoT business models are predicated on improving efficiency by eliminating labor. We see companies connecting garbage cans to the internet to improve the efficiency of deploying waste collectors — which means we’ll need fewer waste collectors. Drones are dramatically reducing the time it takes to survey a plot of land — which means we’ll need fewer surveyors. Every industry that involves electronics or equipment can expect to be disrupted in this way over the next 10 years.

So the same question that was asked in the late 1700s remains: Will this new technology eliminate jobs? No....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Will technology take away our jobs in the future? No, according to this Tech Crunch post.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, June 12, 2016 2:43 PM

Will technology take away our jobs in the future? No, according to this Tech Crunch post.

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Brave new wearable world: Crowdsourcing health, and the coming battle of bio-signals

Brave new wearable world: Crowdsourcing health, and the coming battle of bio-signals | Internet of Things & Wearable Technology Insights | Scoop.it

In the words of Aldous Huxley: “There is only one corner of the universe that you are certain of improving and that is your own self.” Wearables are THE tool for self-improvement....


...During this early experimentation in the wearable space (so early the word itself hadn’t yet been coined), we experienced first-hand the challenge of creating a compelling wearable that turns analog, human-derived signals into meaningful digital data — a deeply intricate exercise, which, turns out, requires a lot more than mere conviction.


That prototype never made it to market.


We have since then continued to chip away at our ignorance. Fast-forward six years — two and a half years after founding OMsignal, with a small but multidisciplinary team of medical and bio-engineering scientists, hardware and software engineers, product design specialists as well as smart-textile engineers and fashion artisans — we now know a great deal more about what it takes to develop the science, technology, and user experience required for a fully integrated consumer wearable product..

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Essential reading on the future of technology and the biggest challenges of bringing products to market.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, April 17, 2014 10:03 AM

Valuable look at wearable technology and the challenges of the human factor in bringing wearable products to market.

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The Future of Consumer Tech Is About Making You Forget It's There

The Future of Consumer Tech Is About Making You Forget It's There | Internet of Things & Wearable Technology Insights | Scoop.it

With the iPad, the notion of technology getting out of the way meant designing a computer so easy to use that the apps took center stage. But the result was in some sense counterproductive; we've become so sucked into our phones and tablets that technology is actually getting in the way of the real world.

It's not going to be like that forever. In talking to leaders from some of the most innovative companies in consumer electronics, it's clear that the next five years will represent an attempt to bring us back to reality. This may seem paradoxical, but a proliferation of wearable devices, smart-home gizmos, smart cameras, and augmented-reality systems will exist largely to save us from our screens....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Not only will it be a smarter world, it will be a simpler one with wearable technology.

Jeff Domansky's curator insight, February 27, 2015 11:18 PM

Not only will it be a smarter world, it will be a simpler one with wearable technology.