Speech Technology - October 2008 - (Page 8) > > N E W S > > T R E N D S > > A N A LY S I S HE N TNE: OE SC Keynoter Highlights the Shrinking Technological World beyond, a topic frequently addressed by Kurzweil. “We’ve always used our tools to extend first our physical reach and now our mental reach,” he said. “And we will be making ourselves smarter…with this technology. “If I were to say someday you’ll have blood cell-size devices inside your body keeping you healthy from inside, that sounds very futuristic. At MIT they have a blood cell-sized device that can detect cancer cells…and then block them and then destroy them.” Kurzweil said research indicates that “If you were to replace a portion of your red blood cells with these robotic versions you could do an Olympic sprint in 15 minutes without taking a breath. Or sit at the bottom of your pool for four hours. So, ‘Honey, I’m in the pool’ will take on a whole new meaning.… These [devices] are actually good for your health, lead to better oxygenation of your tissues, slower aging, [and provide] protection from disease. “Technological progress is accelerating,” Kurzweil said. “The power of these information technologies [is] doubling in less than a year, and that, ultimately, will greatly transform who we are.” —Adam Boretz www.speechtechmag.com NEW YORK — Technological progress and the power of information technologies are accelerating in a way that will greatly transform human life, said Ray Kurzweil in his opening keynote address at SpeechTEK 2008 on August 18 at the New York Marriott Marquis. “Let’s talk about where this technology will go,” said Kurzweil, author of The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence and The Age of Intelligent Machines. “Very soon computers are going to start to disappear. Computers are now in our pockets. They’ll make their way into our clothing and our belt buckles.” According to Kurzweil, in the future, people will be online all the time. “We’ll have augmented real reality— we’ll see real reality, but we’ll have virtual reality overlaid on it,” he told an enthusiastic audience. “There are already car prototypes where the navigation system is not on a little display on the right, which is distracting, but actually shows you right on the road with a display built in the windshield where you should be going. These will be built into our eyeglasses, so as you look at someone it will remind you what their name is, that it’s their birthday next week. “And we’ll have a seamless interplay of real and virtual reality—at least visual and auditory,” Kurzweil said. “We’ll have real-time language translation. We’ll have search engines that are like little assistants that won’t wait to be asked—if they see you 8 | Speech Technology OCTOBER 2008 Futurist Ray Kurzweil addresses the crowd. struggling with some information, they’ll pop up information.” Kurzweil—called the “ultimate thinking machine” by Forbes—predicted that by 2029, “We’ll have a deep integration of our biology with our technology. We’ll have millions of devices inside us keeping us healthy from inside. We already have harbingers of that. There are many devices being put inside the human body for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes.” This year’s SpeechTEK focused on technology in the mainstream and http://www.speechtechmag.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Speech Technology - October 2008 Speech Technology - October 2008 Contents Editor’s Letter Industry View Inside Outsourcing Interact Keynoter Highlights the Shrinking Technological World Former Hacker Tackles IVR and Biometrics ‘Press 1’ for Caller Thoughts Soundbytes Voice Vote A New Dragon Emerges Overheard/Underheard An Emotional Mess Emotional Intelligence The Case for Call Recording Unified in Care and Communications An Education in E-Learning Guest Column Standards Speech Solutions Voice Value Forward Thinking Speech Technology - October 2008 Speech Technology - October 2008 - Speech Technology - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Speech Technology - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Contents (Page 1) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Editor’s Letter (Page 2) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Editor’s Letter (Page 3) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Industry View (Page 4) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Industry View (Page 5) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Inside Outsourcing (Page 6) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Interact (Page 7) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Keynoter Highlights the Shrinking Technological World (Page 8) Speech Technology - October 2008 - ‘Press 1’ for Caller Thoughts (Page 9) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Soundbytes (Page 10) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Voice Vote (Page 11) Speech Technology - October 2008 - A New Dragon Emerges (Page 12) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Overheard/Underheard (Page 13) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 14) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 15) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 16) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 17) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 18) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Emotional Mess (Page 19) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 20) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 21) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 22) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 23) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 24) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Emotional Intelligence (Page 25) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 26) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 27) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 28) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 29) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 30) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 31) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 32) Speech Technology - October 2008 - The Case for Call Recording (Page 33) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Unified in Care and Communications (Page 34) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Unified in Care and Communications (Page 35) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Education in E-Learning (Page 36) Speech Technology - October 2008 - An Education in E-Learning (Page 37) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Guest Column (Page 38) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Guest Column (Page 39) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Standards (Page 40) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Speech Solutions (Page 41) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Voice Value (Page 42) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Voice Value (Page 43) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Forward Thinking (Page 44) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Forward Thinking (Page Cover3) Speech Technology - October 2008 - Forward Thinking (Page Cover4)
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